Categorised | News

Tags | None

More on 'Little Britain US' and a new series from Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais

Posted on August 25, 2006 | 2 comments |

Broadcast (normally subscription only, but free for everyone while the Edinburgh Festival is running) has an interview with Simon Fuller about various things, including his bust up with Simon Cowell and the proposed 'Little America' or 'Little Britain US' (or whatever it is they're doing).

“We are on the brink of confirming something rather special,” he confirms. “Comedy of that quality always crosses the Atlantic. Think back to Monty Python. Who would have thought that would have been such a big hit in America?”

The Times has more info. Maybe. It might be reading too much into the Broadcast interview, though.

For those with an appreciation of classic comedy, there's more good news from Fuller. He's cajoled Ian La Frenais and Dick Clement, who wrote The Likely Lads, Porridge and Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, into creating a new series, too:

“It's a music drama with a bit of comedy in it. It has the flavour of a very contemporary version of The Commitments for TV.”

Sounds a bit like one of their few flops, Over the Rainbow, doesn't it? But only a bit. Let us wait and see.

Subscribe to the daily news by RSS or email

2 Comments For This Post

  1. Rosby wrote:
    August 26, 2006 | Reply

    Honestly; what IS it with Americans constantly stealing our ideas? First it's Red Dwarf, then Coupling, then The Office, and now Little Britain? Can't they just sit back and acknowledge that this is OUR acheivement, rather than trying to copy it?

    OK, rant over. For now...

  2. Rob Buckley wrote:
    August 26, 2006 | Reply

    Nah. It's a lot easier for a TV executive in the US to say, "Let's make this - it's popular in Britain," than to green light a completely original idea. If it all goes wrong, they have an excuse as well.

    But it's not like our schedules are completely free of US programming or US formats: the Price is Right is coming back, as is Family Fortunes. Plus we've tried our best to remake US comedies like Golden Girls, That 70s Show and others but it's always backfired. And then there were things like Friday/Saturday Night Live which lasted for ages but are no longer with us.

    We seem to be better at nicking other countries' ideas instead: Pop Idol (Australian), Deal or No Deal (Australian), Big Brother (Dutch), Countdown (French), etc.

    Still, at least we're not as bad as the Germans, who'll fill their schedules with just about any country's format except their own: Big Train, Monty Python, Saturday Night Live (again), to name but a few - all shunted over to Germany.

Leave a comment

Your comment
You can use HTML tags for style. To hide a spoiler, put <span class="spoiler"> before it and </span> after it.


Comment preview

Subscribe to comments
You can subscribe by email to any further comments on this entry by checking the box below.

Featured Articles

The Sarah Jane Adventures 2x10

Is this a TARDIS I see before me?

Read the article

Asides

  • Mon 24 Nov: I'm going to be very busy until Thursday so chances are I won't be doing much reviewing of Survivors, 24: Redemption et al. Sorry!
  • Tue 18 Nov: Does it count in the CSI: Miami drinking game if David Caruso and Emily Procter are apparently in the same scene together, but they never speak to each other and you never see both their faces at the same time?
  • Sat 15 Nov: The Ascent of Money "sponsored by Cayman Islands". Huh. What's going on there then?
RSS feed