This Morning With Richard Not Judy

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This Morning With Richard Not Judy
Genre Comedy
Running time 45 mins
Executive producer(s) Jon Plowman
Starring Stewart Lee
Richard Herring
Country of origin UK
Original channel BBC Two
Original run 15 February 199813 June 1999
No. of episodes 18
IMDb profile

This Morning With Richard Not Judy or TMWRNJ was a British comedy television programme, written by and starring Lee and Herring (the comedians Stewart Lee and Richard Herring), made and broadcast by the BBC. Two series were broadcast in 1998 and 1999 on BBC2. The name was a satirical reference to ITV's This Morning which was at the time popularly referred to as This Morning with Richard and Judy.

The show was a reworking of old material from their previous work together (radio and tv) along with new characters. The show was hosted in a daytime chat show format in front of a live studio audience, although it featured a small proportion of pre-recorded location inserts. It was structured by the often strange obsessions of Richard Herring, examples include his rating of the milk of all creatures and attempting to popularise the acronym of the show (TMWRNJ) (in the style of Tiswas). The show featured (and acknowledged its use of) repetition, with regular and vigilant viewers being rewarded by jokes that would make no sense to casual viewers. The show seemed to oscillate between the intellectual and puerile, however irony was often used, even though the citing of irony as an excuse was mocked by the show's stars in one of many self-referential jokes.

Kevin Eldon also reprised two of his characters from the earlier Lee & Herring series Fist of Fun, Simon Quinlank (the "King of Hobbies") and his portrayal of "the false Rod Hull" as a jelly fanatic with a false arm and giant chin. A run of sketches featuring Eldon as the false Rod Hull was filmed for the second series, but dropped when the real Rod Hull died just prior to the start of the series. A new sketch was filmed as a tribute and featured as the closing item of the last programme in the series. (Rod Hull had taken this in good humour and had featured in one episode of Fist of Fun as a guest, pouring scorn on the false Rod Hull.)

TMWRNJ gained many complaints on Points of View, largely due to the surprisingly adult content for a programme shown at Sunday lunchtime. The Jesus sketches were much remarked on in Points of View due to the time of broadcast and uncertainty as to whether they were making fun of Jesus or people's take on the scriptures themselves. Like Fist of Fun it remains a cult series well-remembered by fans. Despite rumours that the original tapes had been misplaced by the BBC, the series does in fact exist in full in the BBC archives, however the chances of it receiving either a commercial release or a repeat run are slim.

Contents

[edit] Regular features

  • The Curious Orange - Questions about life from Richard Herring's illegitimate orange son, played by Paul Putner. The name is derived from the album I Am Kurious Oranj by The Fall, which was used to introduce each Curious Orange segment. The Orange was crushed to death at the end of the first series but later reconstituted by a mad scientist. For a while during the second series he was replaced by The Curious Alien (due to Putner's commitments elsewhere). By the final episode, the Curious Orange had mutated into a character reminiscent of Doctor Who's Davros, albeit that the resemblance was stated to be not exact enough to invite litigation.
  • Histor's Eye - Ostensibly a Sky TV children's television programme featuring two pirate crows: the titular Histor and his young uninformed friend Pliny (pronounced 'Plinny'). Histor's ability to transport himself and Pliny through time would be used to satirise current affairs, and the script would be peppered with deliberately weak but dense bird-related multiple puns, which would increase in volume and weakness as the series progressed. (For example, Pliny would say 'Egg feather bird oeuf tit' in place of 'I've never heard of it', or 'Feather me wingers' in place of 'Shiver me timbers'.) Pliny's idiocy drives Histor to insanity and, eventually, he murders him by stuffing him with eggs until he burst (only for Histor to be subsequently haunted by his ghost).
  • Extra Final Scene - This would take the form of a tacked-on ending for a different film each week, such as the one for Blues Brothers 2000 which saw Dan Aykroyd and John Goodman laughing and urinating on the grave of John Belushi before driving off in the Bluesmobile. Another was Titanic, in which Leonardo Dicaprio's character swims to the surface after Kate Winslet is rescued to celebrate finally escaping her clutches.
  • Sunday Heroes - In one sketch per week a disciple would pose a question to Jesus, usually on a topic of importance that would split Christianity (eg Transubstantion vs Transignification). Instead of answering directly He would make a vague comment (such as instructing them to "consider the lily") and say "ah" in a mysterious manner, causing all but Matthew to "ah" along with Him and leading him to become frustrated with the evasion. Judas would also laugh at words which were different out of context. Stewart Lee played Jesus; the disciples were Carlton Dixon (Peter), Richard Herring (Matthew), Paul Putner (Thomas), Trevor Lock (Thaddaeus), Kevin Eldon (Judas Iscariot) and Emma Kennedy (Ian). These sketches tended to cause some controversy given the time of the show and the day of its broadcast.
  • Pause for Thought for the Day - The Unusual Priest, played by Kevin Eldon, would present moral dilemmas, dealing with them in increasingly ridiculous fashion throughout the two series.
  • The Ironic Review - a fly-on-the-wall documentary about a so-called cutting edge magazine such as The Modern Review, featured in the first series.
  • The Lettuce Family - a bizarre sitcom in which the main characters were lettuce leaves.
  • Men of Achievement 1974 - A short item in which the details of an entry in the book of the same name would be read out.
  • When Insects Attack - A parody of the show When Animals Attack, with a voice-over supposedly by actor Greg Evigan (actually Mark Gatiss). The last episode of this segment, in the first series, saw The Lettuce Family attacked by a slug - technically not an insect. In the second series this was replaced by When Things Get Knocked Over but as each week progressed, the segment's subject would vary, eventually the title became When Things Get Knocked Over, Spill, or Fall Out Of Cupboards.
  • Roger Crowley - the self-styled most evil man alive, played by Roger Mann. During the first series he would regularly break into the programme to outline his latest absurd plan for world domination. Based on Aleister Crowley (evident in the costume's triangular hat).
  • The Organ Gang (TOG, in keeping with Richard's unhealthy abbreviation obsession) - A spoof children's series, drawn by Joseph Champniss and narrated by Brian Cant, in which the characters were all organs of the human body, they would have some adventure and end up "laughing for a whole five minutes." It bore some resemblance to the real children's series The Munch Bunch in which all the characters were fruit and vegetables.
  • Nostradamus and his horse David Collins - A regular feature in the second series, medieval seer Nostradamus (played by Emma Kennedy with a false beard) would give his predictions for the week ahead, which would often be either completely absurd or extremely vague. The start of the segment would look at the previous week's predictions, if they were not correct Nostradamus would be punished by a nipple cripple, or something similarly pseudo-sexual, by Richard.
  • King (or Queen) of the Show - in each edition, a member of the audience would be crowned "King or Queen of the Show", either at random or as a reward for sending in an especially entertaining letter. After being crowned, they would be offered various items from a trolley. A running joke was that the items would often include a box of Golden Grahams and later Cinnamon Grahams. The crown and trolley would be brought on by the normally mute ("we can't afford to pay you to speak") Trevor and Natalie (Trevor Lock and Natalie Brandon) who would always be dressed in outlandish costumes. At this point Trevor would invariably be mocked by Stew for having "a small face".
  • Rubbish Sitcoms - Lee and Herring brainstormed sitcom ideas for the BBC. Their ideas would always include characters called Ian. For example:
    • Roll Reversal - Ian Roll is a driving instructor, Ian Reversal is a baker. They swap jobs, with hilarious consequences.
    • Chalk and Cheese - Ian Chalk and Ian Cheese are two men. They are very different. However, they eventually become friends and realise they are not so different after all.
    • Bent Coppers - Ian and Iain Bent are brothers who are policemen. One is corrupt and the other is homosexual. They both suffer from curvature of the spine, and they're made of copper.

[edit] Quotes

"Curse you God for making me this way!" - A feature of a recurring theme in the series, where someone would be laughed at (in a surreal fashion) due to a misfortune. The victim of the ridicule would always say this.

[edit] Transmission details

  • Number of episodes: 18
  • Running-time: 45 minutes
  • Series 1 (8 episodes): 15 February - 5 April 1998 – BBC2, Sundays at 12.15
  • Series 2 (10 episodes): 21 March - 13 June 1999 – BBC2, Sundays, mostly at 12.15
  • Shortened (30-minute) repeats of the programmes were aired by BBC2 on the Friday following each original broadcast

[edit] External links