Peep Show (TV series)

Peep Show
Genre Sitcom
Black comedy[1][2]
Cringe comedy[3][4]
Created by Andrew O'Connor
Jesse Armstrong
Sam Bain
Written by Jesse Armstrong &
Sam Bain (48 episodes)
Simon Blackwell (4 episodes)
Tom Basden (1 episode)
Jon Brown (1 episode)
Additional material from
David Mitchell
Robert Webb
Callum Blades
Directed by Jeremy Wooding (series 1)
Tristram Shapeero (series 2-3)
Becky Martin (series 4-9)
Starring David Mitchell
Robert Webb
Matt King
Paterson Joseph
Olivia Colman (series 1–7, 9)
Neil Fitzmaurice
Isy Suttie (series 5–9)
Opening theme "Pip Pop Plop" by Daniel Pemberton (series 1)
"Flagpole Sitta" by Harvey Danger
(series 2–9)
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 9
No. of episodes 54 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Andrew O'Connor
Jesse Armstrong
Sam Bain
Producer(s) Phil Clarke
Camera setup Single camera (sometimes head-mounted)
Running time 24 mins
Production company(s) Objective Productions
Distributor All3Media
Release
Original network Channel 4
Picture format PAL (576i) (series 1–5)
HDTV (1080i) (series 6–9)
Audio format Stereo
Original release 19 September 2003 (2003-09-19) – 16 December 2015 (2015-12-16)
External links
Website www.channel4.com/entertainment/tv/microsites/P/peep_show/index.html

Peep Show is a British sitcom starring David Mitchell and Robert Webb. The television programme is written by Jesse Armstrong and Sam Bain, with additional material by Mitchell and Webb, among others. It was broadcast on Channel 4 from 2003 until 2015. In 2010 it became the longest-running comedy in Channel 4 history.[5]

Peep Show follows the lives of Mark Corrigan (Mitchell) and Jeremy "Jez" Usborne (Webb), two dysfunctional friends who share a flat in Croydon, London.[6][7] Mark is a socially awkward and despondent loan manager with a cynical outlook on life, while Jeremy is a juvenile slacker and talentless unemployed musician who lives in Mark's spare room.[8] Stylistically, the show utilises point of view shots, with the thoughts of main characters Mark and Jeremy audible as voice-overs.

Though it never achieved great commercial success, the show received consistent critical acclaim and became a cult favourite. In September 2013, Channel 4 announced that the show's ninth series would be its last.[9][10] Series 9 was filmed throughout August and September 2015 and premiered on 11 November 2015.[11] The final episode aired on 16 December 2015.[12]

Plot summary

In the first series, Mark and Jeremy start out with similar aims of bedding their next-door neighbour Toni (Elizabeth Marmur), which Jeremy does. Mark is also obsessed with his workmate Sophie (Olivia Colman), who is more interested in the manly Jeff. Both endure awkward situations: Mark admires his boss, Alan Johnson, and can't work out whether or not he's sexually attracted to him. Jeremy remembers having oral sex with Super Hans (Matt King) during a drug binge. Mark and Jeremy desperately team up to prank call Sophie and launch a pepper spray attack on Super Hans, who has begun a relationship with Toni. By the end of the series, Mark nearly succeeds in having sex with Sophie, but this chance is ruined by Jeremy's apparent overdose. Shortly after, Jeremy claims to Toni that he has a terminal illness in order to receive sexual favours from her.

In series 2, Jeremy meets, falls in love with and starts a relationship with Nancy (Rachel Blanchard) - an attractive and happy-go-lucky American. He briefly appears to be having some success with his music career with Super Hans. Meanwhile, Mark's life is falling apart. Sophie plans to move in with Jeff. Mark forges a short friendship with a colleague, whom he discovers is a neo-Nazi. He later falls for a nervous, attractive student in a shop and makes an ill-judged visit to his old university, which she is a student at. Mark finds out from Jez that Jeff has been cheating on Sophie - and Mark informs Sophie of that - after which Sophie ends the relationship. The tables turn once more at the end of the series when Jeremy admits to Nancy — now his wife (for visa documentation) — that he cheated on her with Toni, leaving their marriage a husk. Super Hans develops a crack cocaine addiction.

A view of Apollo House, in Croydon, the location of Jeremy and Mark's flat.

Series 3 sees Big Suze (Sophie Winkleman) re-enter Jeremy's life. Meanwhile, Mark and Sophie have finally become a couple, but Mark is left alone once again when their employer relocates her to Bristol. Jeremy seduces Mark's sister, while Mark falls in love with Big Suze. Jeremy and Super Hans attempt to run a pub. Jeremy serves on a jury and has a fling with the female defendant. In the last episode, Mark plans to propose to Sophie but changes his mind upon realising that they have nothing in common. Nonetheless he ends up agreeing to marry her to avoid "embarrassment" after she accidentally finds his engagement ring and accepts a proposal which he has not actually made. Meanwhile, Jeremy's efforts to get back together with Suze are hindered somewhat by Super Hans' attempts to go cold turkey.

During series 4, Mark and Sophie visit Sophie's parents after their engagement, and Jeremy has sex with Sophie's mother. Big Suze breaks up with Jeremy once again after he tries to prostitute her to Johnson, with whom she subsequently starts a relationship instead. In an attempt to get away from Sophie, Mark joins a gym and discovers that Nancy is working there, after which Jeremy tries to win her back. Sophie leaves on a foreign business trip, leaving Mark to consider a fling with a woman who he recently met at his school reunion. Jeremy finds some highly paid work as a handyman for 'The Orgazoid', one of his musical heroes - but discovers that his new employer expects Jeremy to give him "a hand". Mark and Jeremy spend a weekend on a canal boat for Mark's stag do, where Mark meets a businessman with contacts in India and attempts to secure a job there as a means of escaping his impending wedding. However, the plan falls apart when Jeremy accidentally kills the businessman's daughter's beloved dog and attempts to avoid her finding out by eating the remnants of the dog. In the final episode, as the wedding approaches, Jeremy is having difficulty juggling a hungover Super Hans, the wedding, Nancy and his desperate need to urinate. After several attempts to get out of marriage, including proposing marriage to a cafe employee, jumping out in front of a car and hiding in the church, Mark, with visible reluctance, ends up marrying Sophie. However, realising he was trying to get out of marrying her by hiding, she runs out on him after the ceremony, planning to seek a divorce or annulment because Mark is "horrible".

Much of series 5 revolves around Mark's search for "the one". His first date since his wedding is a double date which goes wrong due to going to a boring play, then returning to the house to find a burglar. He asks out the new IT girl, Dobby (Isy Suttie), although the date ends badly when they find a vomiting Sophie in the toilets. Dobby remains interested, even when Mark is forced to reject her offer to be his date at his upcoming birthday party as he takes an Australian he met while speed dating. Jeremy runs out of money and goes on a mini crime spree stealing from Johnson's credit card and is temporarily evicted by Mark. Jez asks Big Suze if he can stay with her and Johnson, but is turned down. He tries to obtain money from his mother after his great aunt dies, which reveals their strained relationship. Mark, however, thrives in her company and is given the job of writing her boyfriend's military biography. Jealous, Jeremy ruins Mark's ambitions by revealing how Mark was raped by the veteran's daughter, after she had sex with him while he was asleep. In the final episode, Mark fails to ask Dobby out and she finally moves on. He is promoted to Senior Credit Manager by Johnson but doesn't fire Sophie as ordered, after she reveals that she is pregnant with what may be his child. In the closing moments of the series, it is revealed that Jeff and Jeremy have also recently had sex with Sophie and that her baby might be either of theirs.

Series 6 begins with JLB Credit closing down and the mystery of who the father is being solved, as Sophie reveals that Mark is the baby's father. Meanwhile, Jeremy meets Elena, a beautiful Russian woman and occasional marijuana dealer who lives in their building. Jeremy quickly falls in love with her, but things deteriorate when it is revealed that Elena has a long-term partner, Gail, who is returning to London. Mark looks for work, starting a company with a recession-frazzled Johnson, almost landing his dream job as a guide for historic walks, and finally becoming a waiter in Gail's Mexican-themed restaurant, all the while trying (and failing) to get anywhere with Dobby. To resolve their woman troubles, Jeremy and Mark host a party, which ends in Jeremy rekindling his love for Elena, Mark vomiting on a snake in a bin, and Gail and Elena deciding to enter into a civil partnership. In the final episode, Mark pledges to take driving lessons in order to drive Sophie to the hospital when the baby arrives, but lies to her when he fails his test. Jeremy spirals into depression over losing Elena especially after she reveals that she is moving to Quebec with Gail. Sophie goes into labour early, and with Mark forced to reveal he cannot drive, a drunk Jeremy attempts to drive Sophie to the hospital and nearly runs down Gail. Jeremy then admits that he and Elena were having an affair, and the series ends with Sophie driving herself to the hospital with the two boys in the back seat.

Series 7 introduces Zahra and Ben, whom Jeremy meets while Sophie is giving birth. Jeremy is instantly attracted to Zahra and is selfishly pleased when he discovers that Ben, her boyfriend, is in intensive care, potentially making Zahra single. However, Ben recovers fully, and, as thanks for being so friendly to Zahra, offers Jeremy a job with his record company, which Jeremy accepts as he hopes it will allow him to get closer to Zahra. The job itself does not go well, and his attempts to sign up his and Super Hans's band fails badly and ends up with him being fired from the band. Meanwhile, Mark beats off competition from Gerrard to finally become Dobby's boyfriend, although he continues to behave awkwardly in her company. Jeremy sleeps with Zahra, and when Mark comes to meet him the next morning the two find themselves locked in Zahra's flat, causing Ben to discover them and Mark to miss his son's christening. At the end of the series, after discovering that Ben and Zahra have split, Jeremy resolves to leave the flat and move in with Zahra, while Mark needs to salvage his relationship with Dobby, and determines to ask her to move in with him. Dobby agrees to move in with Mark, but Zahra rejects Jez after she learns he has been flirting with Super Hans's girlfriend, leaving him on his own at the end of the series.

Series 8 opens with Mark waiting for Dobby to move in, while Dobby waits for Jeremy to move out. Mark suspects that Dobby will never actually move in, and that Gerard is trying to steal her from him; however, Gerard dies after contracting a flu virus. Jeremy and Super Hans amicably end their band, and this causes Jeremy to contemplate his life so far—Jeremy eventually agrees to undertake therapy sessions that are paid for by Mark. Impressed by the therapy, Jeremy decides to become a life coach, but he fails a course of questionable value. Mark then gives Jeremy a fake life coach certificate and he begins "coaching" anyone who will let him, causing emotional and personal harm. Jeremy also begins to fall in love with Dobby and considers declaring his feelings, but Mark declares his love for her first. While Mark and Jeremy fight, Dobby leaves the scene and is presumably on her way to New York.

Series 9 opens with Mark and Jez meeting for the first time in six months, with Mark still bearing a grudge over the role Jez played in his break-up with Dobby. Jez is living in Super Hans' bathroom while Mark has a new flatmate. After reconciling, the two get back into their old ways. Jeremy begins a relationship with a younger man while Mark seeks out April (Catherine Shepherd - previously seen only in a single episode in series 2), who he always thought to be his perfect woman, despite her now being married. Dobby has moved to New York and has a new boyfriend who assaults Mark when he discovers Mark had been tracking Dobby's movements. Sophie is discovered to be a depressed alcoholic who is in a relationship with a man who it is suggested is having an affair. She offers Mark a chance to give their relationship another go (which he initially accepts) but Mark decides to try and break up April's marriage and start a new life with her. In the final episode, all the duo's past lies and selfish decisions catch up with them. Mark loses his job at a bank because of a loan he gave Jeremy (ironically, to exploit him) previously without asking for correct identification paperwork, and he is replaced by his bitter rival Jeff. Jeremy's boyfriend Joe leaves him after his lies about being popular and young are caught out, and he claims he is tired of partying all the time. Super Hans' wife Molly is upset because he can't stop his old wild lifestyle either, and after kidnapping and threatening April's husband, she finally leaves him. Super Hans ends up leaving for Macedonia to open a moped hire business and leaves Mark and Jeremy right back where they always end up due to their selfishness, with Mark losing his newest relationship (and job), while Jeremy remains a loser who is stuck in a rut with no prospects. It ends with the two watching TV, asking and answering idiotic questions, with Jeremy thinking to himself how they both "love each other really" and Mark reminding himself that he "really must get rid of him".

Main and recurring cast

Production

Writers Jesse Armstrong and Sam Bain met actors/writers Mitchell and Webb during a failed attempt to complete a team-written sitcom for the BBC. They had an old, unproduced script that they wanted to revive called All Day Breakfast and brought in Mitchell and Webb to help out. The show did not work out but the four developed as a partnership,[13] and one idea eventually evolved into Peep Show for Channel 4.[14] Peep Show was originally conceived as a sitcom in the style of Beavis and Butt-head revolving around two characters watching and discussing television. However, the idea was dropped due to the large expense that airing clips from other shows would bring as well as Mitchell and Webb's fear that, because their characters would only be watching television, "[they] wouldn't be in the show".[15]

Instead Armstrong and Bain opted to produce a more story-based sitcom with an unconventional filming style. The events of the two main characters' lives are seen almost exclusively from their own points of view with a voice-over providing their internal thoughts.[15] Scenes in the show are sometimes filmed using cameras strapped to the actors' heads, or attached to a hat,[16] to give the viewer a point of view identical to that of the protagonists.[17] The quality of footage captured with this method is sometimes poor and the technique has been used less and less in recent series.[18] When head-mounted cameras are not used, scenes are filmed with the camera being held over the actor's shoulder, or directly in front of their face; each scene is therefore shot multiple times from different angles.[16][19] Armstrong and Bain's choice of the style was influenced by the 2000 Channel 4 documentary Being Caprice about the model Caprice Bourret which featured a similar technique that had in turn been copied from the 1999 film Being John Malkovich.[20] Bain noted: "So it's a third-hand steal, really. We thought it would be great for comedy, hearing someone else's thoughts. The voices give you a whole other dimension in terms of jokes."[15] The idea for using voice-overs came from a scene in the Woody Allen film Annie Hall in which the true feelings of the characters are conveyed by subtitles.[20] The POV technique separates Peep Show from other sitcoms and Mitchell claims that without it Peep Show would be similar to shows like Spaced and Men Behaving Badly.[15]

Two pilots were filmed for the show which allowed Armstrong and Bain to firmly develop and finalise the style of the show. Armstrong said: "on the run of doing those two pilots we really created the show in the way that you couldn't if you hadn't tried it out." In the original pilot Olivia Colman's character Sophie Chapman had a voice-over as well as Mitchell and Webb's characters Mark and Jeremy. The POV technique was also restricted solely to the character thinking at the time; it was later expanded so that the view could come from a third party.[15] Bain and Armstrong are the show's principal writers and Mitchell and Webb provide additional material.[21] Many storylines come from experiences in the writers' lives,[13] particularly Bain's.[20] For example, the series 5 episode "Burgling" sees Mark apprehend a burglar by sitting on him, something Bain once did in a video shop before he was told to get off as he was scaring the customers.[20] The writing for each series takes place seven to eight months before filming begins; once each episode is mapped out scene by scene they must be approved by the producer Andrew O'Connor and Channel 4. Rehearsals take two weeks and filming lasts for six to seven weeks.[16]

For the first two series the scenes set in Mark and Jeremy's flat were filmed in a real property in Croydon, where the show takes place. The flat's owners did not allow it to be used for series 3 and so a replica was constructed in a carpet warehouse in Neasden.[19]

The theme tune for the first series was an original composition by Daniel Pemberton and is featured on his TVPOPMUZIK album, and can be heard on his Myspace page.[22] From the second series onwards the theme music is the song "Flagpole Sitta" by the American band Harvey Danger[21] which had previously been briefly heard in the series one episode "On the Pull" (although the original first series composition was still heard briefly during scene changes). A working title for the program was POV, as noted by David Mitchell on the DVD commentary for the first episode of the first series.

Spike TV commissioned its own version in 2008, originally to be written and directed by Robert Weide, who is the executive producer of Curb Your Enthusiasm.[23] It was to be written by Armstrong and Bain,[24] but it never went to series.

Other media

A book entitled Peep Show: The Scripts and More, which featured the scripts of every episode from the first five series as well as an introduction from Mitchell and Webb, was released in 2008.[15] To celebrate the show, Channel 4 aired a Peep Show Night on Christmas Eve in 2010, which included the documentary Peep Show and Tell and the fan selected episodes "Wedding" and "Shrooming".[25][26]

Reception

The series was met with critical acclaim,[27] and is considered to be a cult television show.[13][28] Early previews called it "promising"[29] and noted it had "the sniff of a cult favourite";[30] Jane Simon of the Mirror claimed that Peep Show in years to come will "be seen as the pinnacle of comedy it obviously is."[31]

Peep Show won the titles "The Best Returning British TV Sitcom 2007" and "Comedy of the Year 2008" in The Comedy.co.uk Awards.[32][33]

The Guardian newspaper described it as "the best comedy of the decade".[34] Ricky Gervais has been cited as saying "the last thing I got genuinely excited about on British TV was Peep Show, which I thought was the best sitcom since Father Ted".[35] While presenting an award at the 2005 British Comedy Awards, Gervais called it "the best show on television today" and said it was a "debacle" that it did not win an award.[36] The Times praised the show's "scorching writing" and named it the 15th best TV show of the 2000s.[37]

Ratings

Despite the critical acclaim, Peep Show never garnered consistently high viewing figures.[27][38] At the beginning of 2006 there were rumours that the show would not be commissioned for a fourth series due to insufficient ratings of just over a million viewers.[39][40] However, due to the large DVD revenues of the previous series, a fourth series was commissioned.[41] The premiere of the fourth series showed no improvement on the ratings of the previous, continuing to attract its core audience of 1.3 million (8% of viewers).[42] Despite the low viewing figures, the fifth series of the show was commissioned prior to the broadcast of series 4. Channel 4's decision to commission the show for a fifth series was said to be for a variety of reasons, including again the high DVD sales of the previous series (400,000 to date),[43] the continued high quality of the show itself,[44] and the rising profile of Mitchell and Webb due to the success of their BBC sketch show That Mitchell and Webb Look, their advertisements for Apple, and their feature film Magicians.[45] The fifth series showed no improvement with 1.1 million viewers.[46] Producer Andrew O'Connor cited the POV filming style as the reason for the low ratings: "It made it feel original and fresh and got it commissioned for a second series, but it stopped it from being a breakout hit and stopped it finding a bigger audience."[38] Bain and Armstrong agreed that the POV style stopped it from becoming mainstream.[13]

The first episode of series 6 – the first to be shown in its new earlier time slot of 10pm – attracted Peep Show's highest ratings to date, with 1.8 million viewers (9.2% audience share), with a further 208,000 (1.8%) watching it on Channel 4 +1.[47]

Awards and honours

Peep Show won several awards:

References

  1. Hudson, Laura. "10 British Shows You Need to Stream on Netflix This Thanksgiving". Wired.
  2. Fullerton, Huw. "Peep Show's David Mitchell and Robert Webb say Twitter is making comedy more difficult". Radio Times.
  3. http://www.slate.com/blogs/browbeat/2013/09/24/peep_show_best_episode_of_mitchell_and_webb_sitcom_is_on_the_pull_season.html
  4. https://thefilmautopsy.wordpress.com/2016/09/23/peep-show-the-balancing-act-of-cringe-comedy/
  5. "Frankie Boyle heads new Channel 4 season". BBC News. 26 August 2010. Retrieved 27 August 2010.
  6. "Peep Show – Jeremy Usborne". Channel 4. Channel 4. 2013. Retrieved 5 June 2013.
  7. "Peep Show – Mark Corrigan". Channel 4. Channel 4. 2013. Retrieved 5 June 2013.
  8. "Peep Show". 'TV.com'.
  9. Adam Sherwin (25 September 2013). "Peep Show star David Mitchell defends panel shows after attack by Fast Show co-creator Charlie Higson". The Independent. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  10. Sam Masters (25 September 2013). "Peep Show to end next year after ninth series". The Independent. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  11. "Peep Show - Episode 9.1. The William Morris Years - British Comedy Guide". www.comedy.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-03-30.
  12. "Peep Show - Episode 9.6. Are We Going To Be Alright? - British Comedy Guide". www.comedy.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-03-30.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Sam Delaney (7 April 2007). "Comedy rules". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  14. Ross, Deborah (18 November 2006). "Peep Show's David Mitchell and Robert Webb". The Independent. London. Retrieved 4 April 2007.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Linda Gibson (29 April 2008). "Peep Show: Meet the writers and stars". The Stage. Retrieved 19 August 2009.
  16. 1 2 3 Mitchell, David; Webb, Robert; Bain, Sam; Armstrong, Jesse; Shapeero, Tristram (2005). Behind the Scenes Documentary (DVD). Objective Productions, 4DVD.
  17. 1 2 "British Sitcom Guide — Peep Show". British Sitcom Guide. 2007. Retrieved 1 February 2007.
  18. Norton, Graham; Mitchell, David (18 May 2008). "Episode 5". The Graham Norton Show. Series 3. Episode 5. BBC 2.
  19. 1 2 Sam Wollaston (10 November 2005). "Inside the sordid world of Jeremy and Mark: A new series of Peep Show starts tomorrow. Sam Wollaston has a close encounter with the odd couple behind C4's slow-burn hit". The Guardian.
  20. 1 2 3 4 Armstrong, Jesse; Bain, Sam (24 June 2008). "Sam Bain and Jesse Armstrong". The Culture Show. Season 5. Episode 4. BBC 2.
  21. 1 2 "Peep Show – Production Details & Cast and Crew – British Comedy Guide". British Comedy Guide. 19 September 2003. Retrieved 5 September 2009.
  22. "Pip Pop Plop". Myspace. 8 August 2006.
  23. "News — Peep Show to be re-made in America". British Sitcom Guide. 4 May 2007.
  24. "US producers 'to make Peep Show'". BBC News. 30 September 2008. Retrieved 30 September 2008.
  25. "Peep Show's nine lives". Chortle. 17 December 2010. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  26. "Peep Show Night and Whistle and I'll Come to You: Friday's TV picks". Metro. 23 December 2010. Archived from the original on 7 January 2011. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  27. 1 2 Staff (13 July 2009). "53: David Mitchell". London: MediaGuardian.co.uk (Guardian News & Media). Retrieved 13 July 2009.
  28. Pettie, Andrew (7 April 2007). "Who are those guys?". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 28 April 2007.
  29. Barry Davies (14 September 2003). "Friday: Channel 4 Peep Show, 10.35 PM". The Guardian.
  30. Martin James, Jim Irvin & Brian Smyth (14 September 2003). "Critics' choice – Television". The Sunday Times. p. Culture 80.
  31. "Peep Show". comedy.co.uk.
  32. "The Comedy.co.uk Awards 2007". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 7 March 2009.
  33. "The Comedy.co.uk Awards 2008". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 7 March 2009.
  34. Pollock, David (16 April 2007). "Peep Show is the best comedy of the decade". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 17 February 2008.
  35. Rampton, James (13 September 2006). "Robert Webb and David Mitchell: The Peep Show duo's new pain game". The Independent. London. Retrieved 4 April 2007.
  36. Stephen Armstrong (19 December 2005). "No prizes for Peep Show? You're having a laugh: Last week's British Comedy Awards brought little cheer for Channel 4. But the underrated sitcom and the return of an old hit have kept a smile on the face of the network's comedy boss". The Guardian.
  37. Andrew Billen; David Chater; Tim Teeman; Caitlin Moran (19 December 2009). "The top 50 TV shows of the Noughties". The Times. London.
  38. 1 2 John Plunkett (26 August 2007). "Why Peep Show's not bigger". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 19 August 2009.
  39. "That's all, Peeps". BBC. 20 May 2007. Archived from the original on 23 August 2007. Retrieved 21 June 2007.
  40. Neil Wilkes (29 January 2006). "Fourth series of 'Peep Show' "unlikely"". Digital Spy. Retrieved 21 June 2007.
  41. Neil Wilkes (1 March 2006). "New series for 'Peep Show', 'IT Crowd'". Digital Spy. Retrieved 21 June 2007.
  42. Leigh Holmwood (16 April 2007). "Winning combination back on BBC". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  43. "Eureka!: Peep Show — a real-life Beavis and Butthead". Broadcast Now. 19 May 2007.
  44. "Peep Show gets a 5th series". British Sitcom Guide. 21 March 2007.
  45. Armstrong, Stephen (19 May 2007). "How the tide turned for Mitchell and Webb". The Times. London. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  46. Fitzsimmons, Caitlin (19 May 2008). "TV ratings — May 16: Travel insurance show claims 4m viewers". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  47. McMahon, Kate (21 September 2009). "Brown and Peep Show bump C4's ratings". Broadcast Now. Retrieved 1 October 2009.
  48. "Merchant takes top comedy honour". BBC News. 14 December 2006. Retrieved 14 December 2006.
  49. "The Comedy.co.uk Awards 2007". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  50. "The Comedy.co.uk Awards 2009". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  51. "The Comedy.co.uk Awards 2010". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  52. "The Comedy.co.uk Awards 2008". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  53. "News — British Comedy Awards — full results". British Sitcom Guide. 5 May 2007. Retrieved 6 February 2008.
  54. "Programme Awards 2007: Winners". Royal Television Society. 19 March 2008. Archived from the original on 28 March 2008. Retrieved 20 March 2008.
  55. "Bafta TV Awards 2008: The winners". BBC News. 20 April 2008. Retrieved 11 May 2008.
  56. "RTS Programme Awards winners 2009 in full". The Guardian. London. 18 March 2009. Retrieved 18 March 2009.
  57. "Television Awards Winners in 2009". BAFTA. Retrieved 27 April 2009.
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Peep Show
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.