TMC
10-24-2022, 07:55 PM
https://www.theringer.com/tv/2022/10/20/23413278/british-tv-piracy-history-torrents-vpn
Off-beat shows such as No Heroics, which concerns a world where superheroes were real and spent a lot of time at the pub; Toast of London, which along with Darkplace was an early showcase for the rapier wit of What We Do in the Shadows star Matthew Berry; and the surreal comedy The Mighty Boosh were produced by the BBC’s younger-skewing sister channels BBC Two and Three, as well as by Channel 4 and ITV2. These stations “saw reaching younger adults with cutting-edge humor as part of their mandate. The programs were often made for a late evening slot so the 18-to-35-year-olds had something to watch when they came home from the pub on a Friday evening,” says Cull, who adds that many performers had roots in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival or radio comedy. While the shows could vary wildly in approach, a common undercurrent, Cull says, is the feeling that British shows are scrappy underdogs compared to Hollywood fare. “We have so many U.S. shows in the U.K. that sometimes we feel at the edge of our own world.”
Cull says the U.S. version of The Office was a tipping point, which was reinforced by the success of Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg’s zombie-comedy Shaun of the Dead and its action-movie spoof follow-up Hot Fuzz. Eventually, the pair’s popularity inspired enough interest to precipitate an American box set release of their late-’90s Britcom Spaced, a sort of proto-version of Community in which a bunch of sci-fi-loving slackers hang out and get into mischief. “Simon Pegg is an interesting case in point,” Cull says. “Amazing how he has morphed from joking about fan favorites in Spaced to appearing in them with his roles in reboots of Star Trek and Star Wars.”
Some Britcoms were full-on genre affairs; some, like Spaced, merely reflected a love of sci-fi and comic books. “It’s interesting that the U.S. audiences liked the shows that were implicitly about the experience of living in the presence of U.S. culture through the sci-fi or horror genre.” Cull theorizes that, like himself, many creators grew up loving classic British sci-fi shows like Thunderbirds and Doctor Who, and because they didn’t have the resources to compete on a large scale, they got weirder instead. “The bottom line was that British TV couldn’t match the production values of U.S. network TV’s output, but it could mock it and create an imaginative space for comment in the process.”
But it wasn’t only the genre stuff that caught on with U.S. audiences. Future Veep creator Armando Iannucci’s acid black satire of the British government, The Thick of It, as well as Nathan Barley, Chris Morris and pre–Black Mirror Charlie Brooker’s ruthless skewering of Vice-era hipsters, were far more caustic than anything even HBO would produce at the time. This of course made them irresistible to viewers who felt that, give or take Arrested Development or The Sopranos, most TV was just too safe, and Bush-era American culture was just too stupid. “I think that audiences crave novelty and authenticity, and that comes from the edge,” says Cull. “The U.K. loves material from Ireland and Australia; the U.S. looks to the U.K.”
Off-beat shows such as No Heroics, which concerns a world where superheroes were real and spent a lot of time at the pub; Toast of London, which along with Darkplace was an early showcase for the rapier wit of What We Do in the Shadows star Matthew Berry; and the surreal comedy The Mighty Boosh were produced by the BBC’s younger-skewing sister channels BBC Two and Three, as well as by Channel 4 and ITV2. These stations “saw reaching younger adults with cutting-edge humor as part of their mandate. The programs were often made for a late evening slot so the 18-to-35-year-olds had something to watch when they came home from the pub on a Friday evening,” says Cull, who adds that many performers had roots in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival or radio comedy. While the shows could vary wildly in approach, a common undercurrent, Cull says, is the feeling that British shows are scrappy underdogs compared to Hollywood fare. “We have so many U.S. shows in the U.K. that sometimes we feel at the edge of our own world.”
Cull says the U.S. version of The Office was a tipping point, which was reinforced by the success of Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg’s zombie-comedy Shaun of the Dead and its action-movie spoof follow-up Hot Fuzz. Eventually, the pair’s popularity inspired enough interest to precipitate an American box set release of their late-’90s Britcom Spaced, a sort of proto-version of Community in which a bunch of sci-fi-loving slackers hang out and get into mischief. “Simon Pegg is an interesting case in point,” Cull says. “Amazing how he has morphed from joking about fan favorites in Spaced to appearing in them with his roles in reboots of Star Trek and Star Wars.”
Some Britcoms were full-on genre affairs; some, like Spaced, merely reflected a love of sci-fi and comic books. “It’s interesting that the U.S. audiences liked the shows that were implicitly about the experience of living in the presence of U.S. culture through the sci-fi or horror genre.” Cull theorizes that, like himself, many creators grew up loving classic British sci-fi shows like Thunderbirds and Doctor Who, and because they didn’t have the resources to compete on a large scale, they got weirder instead. “The bottom line was that British TV couldn’t match the production values of U.S. network TV’s output, but it could mock it and create an imaginative space for comment in the process.”
But it wasn’t only the genre stuff that caught on with U.S. audiences. Future Veep creator Armando Iannucci’s acid black satire of the British government, The Thick of It, as well as Nathan Barley, Chris Morris and pre–Black Mirror Charlie Brooker’s ruthless skewering of Vice-era hipsters, were far more caustic than anything even HBO would produce at the time. This of course made them irresistible to viewers who felt that, give or take Arrested Development or The Sopranos, most TV was just too safe, and Bush-era American culture was just too stupid. “I think that audiences crave novelty and authenticity, and that comes from the edge,” says Cull. “The U.K. loves material from Ireland and Australia; the U.S. looks to the U.K.”