TV Offal
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TV Offal | |
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TV Offal logo |
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Genre | Comedy |
Creator(s) | Victor Lewis-Smith, Paul Sparks |
Starring | Victor Lewis-Smith |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of episodes | 7 |
Production | |
Running time | 25 min |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | Channel 4 |
Original run | October 1997 – June 1998 |
TV Offal was a British television comedy sketch/archive series that ran on Channel 4, from October 1997, to June 1998, it was written and narrated by comedian and writer Victor Lewis-Smith, who shared writing duties with Paul Sparks. It ran for only seven episodes (including the pilot), and is probably best known for first airing the uncensored Rainbow sketch on national television, as well as the "Gay Daleks" sketches.
The series covered generally obscure, rare or offensive excerpts of television footage from numerous media archives, usually accompanied by Lewis-Smith's biting commentary and cynical approach to what was being shown. Lewis-Smith used a variety of categories on the show to accompany a particular selection of programme footage. The show was also characterised by its musical score of campy jingles introducing the regular segments. These were produced in the 1980s style by the Dallas-based radio ID company JAM Creative Productions, who created a great number of the jingles used by BBC Radio.
The programme was made by Associated Rediffusion, the name of a TV company formerly serving the London area from 1955 to 1964 (and continuing as Rediffusion London until 1968). Lewis-Smith bought the name for his own production company when he discovered that it was dormant.[1]
TV Offal has never been fully repeated, although a "best of" series entitled TV Offal Prime Cuts was aired in November 1999.
[edit] Regular segments
The opening to each episode involved a guest appearance from Professor Stephen Hawking.
Honest Obituary: A humorous look at the death of either a current or generally obscure celebrity personality's "demise" followed by a satirical account of his/her contributions to the viewing public (which usually derails them) before revealing the exaggerated cause of death. The first few lines of the obituary are a list of very harsh criticisms, usually followed by "his/her critics were less kind". The deaths are usually announced using a piece of dubbed dialogue of the celebrity's name over a BBC News segment taken from the day Princess Diana died, so the newsreader in the footage (Michael Buerk) always sounds and looks bitter and traumatized. Obituaries included Noel Edmonds, Andrew Lloyd-Webber, Melvyn Bragg, Nigel Kennedy, Jeremy Clarkson, Vanessa Feltz, the Two Fat Ladies (though Jennifer Patterson would eventually die for real a year after TV Offal's cancellation) and Jeremy Beadle.
Kamikaze Karaoke: Usually involves Lewis-Smith imitating various musicians to interpret how they sound "to him", usually mocking them in the process
Assassination Of The Week: This segment usually had two parts, with one part leading to the commercial breaks, challenging the viewer to depend on their memory to guess the outcome of a genuine assassination attempt aired on the show, and the second part resolving the outcome and whenever or not the victim survived or was killed ("did they live or are they worm food"). Victor's answer was not always truthful, once revealing "what really happened" on the day that John F Kennedy was assassinated. In between the setting of the question and the reveal of the answer, we were usually treated to a bizarrely outdated television advertisement, such as an ad for the Daily Mirror produced in about 1960 (using the slogan "the Daily Mirror backs the young!" and ridiculing the "old guard" of British society) and an advert for the now discontinued Diocalm which now seems extremely racist.
Crappy TV Logo Of The Week: A piece mocking the most under budget and mismanaged of obscure television studios, produced by students or otherwise.
Fantasy Programme Of The Week: A "What If..." segment pondering aloud what certain celebrities would be doing if they chose a different action to affect the outcome of their productions, ranging from Roy Walker creating dirty versions of Catchphrase (a commentary on the infamous "Snake Charmer" outtake) to Richard Baker being drunk on the last night of the proms (which of course...he wasn't)
The Pilots That Crashed: Rare and unaired pilots produced for possible series. Included such gems as "The Development of the Test Card" and "It'll All End In Tiaras", which seemingly took great stride in mocking the British monarchy and wanting to see the Queen Mother dead.
The Gay Daleks: A series of crass interactions between two gay Daleks, traveling in a space/time machine called "The Turdis" (a play on the TARDIS), during the sketches, the pair treat their relationship with an argumentative, tense approach which often is ridden with their addressing relationship problems, crude bickering, and finally becoming so turned on by their arguing, that they begin to orgasm, leading to a variation of the classic Dalek catchphrase "Exterminate", now "Exsperminate". In the pilot episode, dubbed clips from the 1979 serial Destiny of the Daleks were used. A later attempt at reviving the Gay Daleks as an animated series was blocked by the Terry Nation Estate.
Satirical Song in the '80s Genre: Each episode would contain a song about a celebrity, with the exception of one song about 'Selling God'. "Its nice being [NAME]" The tune itself was always the same, but the lyrics were changed depending on the celebrity. The song would always end with the line: "..but now we must stop as our lawyer says that [NAME] will sue". Ironically one of the songs ("It's Nice Being Esther") was edited on legal advice when included as part of TV Offal Prime Cuts in 1999. Celebrities targeted included Esther Rantzen, Sir David Attenborough, Dale Winton, Loyd Grossman, Carol Vorderman, Chris Evans, and 'Selling God' which featured a variety of 'has-been celebs'.
The show would close with Lewis-Smith prank calling a variety of people with initial good graces, before becoming more and more rude as the conversation continued.
[edit] Trivia
- In every episode Lewis-Smith made at least one bizarre reference to the town of Crawley, West Sussex.
[edit] External links
- TV Offal spoof jingles (MP3), produced by JAM Creative Productions
- TV Offal on BBC Comedy Guide