W1A press clippings - Page 2 - British Comedy Guide (original) (raw)
Page 2
Press clippings Page 2
Was the BBC Me debacle a fitting end?
Was this bittersweet finale the right way for W1A to bow out? At least according to those following along on Twitter, the answer was definitely yes (no, exactly).
Justin Harp, Digital Spy, 24th October 2017
John Morton on ending W1A
This current series of the BBC comedy about itself is almost certainly going to be the last - and the writer has his heart set on a very different project next.
Ben Dowell, Radio Times, 20th October 2017
A note to the writers of W1A; having your characters spitting out the words "yeah", "no", "right" or, in poor Sarah Parish's case, "yes exactly" over and over and over again in staccato fashion is neither witty or endearing. Rather, it's migraine-inducingly irritating, maddening beyond all reason and it makes consuming the show a gruelling, mirthless chore. This week, if you're willing to chew through it, the renewal team discuss the BBC's orchestras.
Ben Arnold, The Guardian, 2nd October 2017
W1A, episode 3 review
Three series in, this one-time funny sitcom is just irritating.
Rupert Hawksley, The Telegraph, 2nd October 2017
BBC presenter 'annoyed' that W1A got rescheduled in NI
Opening his Radio Foyle show yesterday, Sean Coyle said he had been excited to find out the programme would be on BBC2 on Monday evening - only to tune in to see Cumhacht an Cheoil on the small screen instead.
Jonathan Bell, Belfast Telegraph, 27th September 2017
The latest dispatch from the frontline of unnecessary meetings finds Ian Fletcher deciding what to do about Ryan Chelford. Judged purely in punditry terms, the cross-dressing ex-footballer's appearance on Match of the Day didn't go well, but he has been trending heavily on social media where "reaction ... has been almost universally divided". David Tennant's narration neatly skewers Auntie's dilemma: "The problem for the BBC is that they don't know what to do."
Jonathan Wright, The Guardian, 25th September 2017
W1A review
W1A's mix of physical, visual and verbal slapstick is as pin-sharp as ever.
Michael Hogan, The Telegraph, 25th September 2017
W1A (BBC2, Monday), the witty mockumentary about the BBC, returned for another series and felt closer and closer to the real thing. I can't make up mind whether this is good or bad. By the end of the season let's have BBC boss Tony Hall doing a cameo in which he shuts down the production.
BBCMe, the Corporation's fictional version of YouTube, sounded ludicrous enough to actually happen. But you've got to laugh, because these types of meetings happen everywhere, only the jokes aren't as good. I loved the "more of less" initiative but the best line found an open goal at Match Of The Day.
When it was suggested that trans football pundit Ryan Chelford was too dull for the show, one PR queried: "Too dull for Match Of The Day?"