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TV Review: Tonightly, Channel 4, Friday 1 August, 11.10pm

Comments (12)

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In an era of copy-cat shows (I'm looking at you, ITV) and more food and lifestyle shows than anyone could possible keep up with, any channel and production team attempting a new format is absolutely to be applauded. And a nightly comedy show looking at the news, recorded a few hours before transmission, is a rare beast indeed here in the UK.

As I said in my Set The Video post, BBC Four have tried it relatively successfully with The Late Edition, but that is a very left-wing, Guardian-reading affair (mainly, you presume, down to the sensibilities of the of the presenter Marcus Brigstocke), appealing mainly to people who are already interested in the news, so it is especially laudable that Tonightly is aimed at Channel 4's usual, young, Friday night audience.

At first, however, I had mixed feelings. Jason Manford is a confident host who has clearly been ready to front a show for some time, and confidence is certainly needed when delivering long monologues to camera as Manford is required to do for much of the first half of the show. He wasn't helped, unfortunately, by a strangely subdued audience, and while co-presenter Andi Osho's little ad-libbed asides were funny, it seems that she needs to have a bit more faith in herself to believe that that's the case. I was also slightly perturbed by the fact that there was an A-Team reference and a piece about Big Brother within the first few minutes, as this suggested that the show was going to pander to its target audience, rather than challenging it a little.

*But* things picked up very quickly, and I was especially happy to see that the show worked best when dealing with news stories that were bang up to date. Manford's list of things that the man cleared of Jill Dando's murder needs to know now he's out of jail (Lost goes downhill, Britney's gone wrong, don't turn on your gas unless you really need it) was great fun, and the best joke came out of that poor beached whale's plight. He imagined the phone call to the fire brigade: "There's a whale stuck in a field" "[beat] Is it on fire?"

As for the new comedians that this show, as a part of the Generation Next season, is meant to promote, the skits were hit and miss. But then that goes with the territory - even the daddy of the genre, The Daily Show, has to deal with the fact that not all of its contributors are as uniformly brilliant as John Oliver, say, or Demetri Martin. Steve Lipschitz's report, for example, about all foods being dangerous was a pitch-perfect parody of those ridiculously intense reports with far too many graphics that you get on rolling news channels, but it has to be said that it was short on jokes.

Overall, this was a confident start to a project that I was admittedly predisposed to support. As long as the show really engages with whatever's in the newspapers, adds a bit of bite to the satire, (as one of our commenters has already suggested) and doesn't get tempted into retreating into the relatively safe environment of celebrity culture too often, then I'll be happy to follow the rest of Tonightly's 16-night run.

Have to say I was fairly unimpressed. Manford's bits were okay but did seem to be catering to the lowest common denominator a bit. The fire brigade/whale thing just didn't work for me as my mind goes: whale on land, biggest problem is it not being able to 'breathe' due to lack of water, so obviously you call the people who specialise in getting large amounts of water to places. Maybe I'm over-thinking it but it was one of a few of these 'false observations' that just didn't work. Like the Lost one, though that might be a matter of taste.

All the stuff from the outside reporters had the stench of student-revue about it too. Not that that's inherently a bad thing, just the raw talent is there but it's not developed enough to really work well. Lipschitz's bit was right out of The Day Today with no attempt at adding anything to the formula. Even down to the use of made-up compound words.

And my jaw literally dropped when they pulled out those funny exam papers which have been making the rounds of the internet for about 3 years now. It's as bad as when Have I Got News For You went through its phase of showing the funniest video from YouTube every week.

I'll probably watch it again, there's potential there, and it's nice to see a show clearly aimed at a Big Brother audience even mentioning politics but I was rather un-impressed.

New format? It's pretty much the same format The 11 O'Clock Show used ten years back.

Subdued audience? The reason they weren't laughing is because it wasn't funny. Manford is dreadful in everything he does. I really don't know how he has got this far. He just tries to emulate peter kay all of the time as so many new comedians do these days.

Maybe I am the wrong type of audience though, as I am a guardianista with an interest in current affairs who enjoyed the late edition. Maybe you have to have less than 10 brain cells to enjoy this SHIT!!!

I liked it tonight mostly

Better. I liked the Barry George stuff - reall funny putting his head on those things. Really good that they took the balls to cover the story I think.

Like Ken Livingstone and Andi today.

The Consuella Spanish woman was good and the Hollywood guy was excellent.

I also liked the Olympics man in the smog.

I din't like the jokes all the time but as long as Jason don't get too big for his boots i will still like watching him anyway. He's a cutie pie but he should swear more, it's funny! I'll love him even more

Freds x

How did this get on T.V??
Who writes this sh*t and thinks its funny?

Are you aware that Gemma Dobson at the Lancashire Telegraph has ripped off your review, by copying chunks of it?

Its online. Have a look

Ha that's hilarious! Thanks for pointing it out for all to see on the site!
Anna

its ok... just put the daily show on channel instead. its much better.

It's fu***** sh**e. End of.

This show is really bad. I mean really REALLY bad. It's got a team of 11 or so writers and the best they can do is churn out swearing and buttplug references? Come on guys. I was looking forward to watching something a bit cleverer, but...no. And how many cans of laughter did they have to add in post-production? Surely that kind of over-consumption's going to up the cost of canned laughter worldwide?

It was embarrassing to watch, and to hear people comparing it to the Daily Show? Seriously. Get a grip. Look how many Emmys TDS has won and then ask how many awards of any kind Tonightly will win.

Honestly? I'm kind of insulted that Channel 4 expect us to watch this trash.

Mark Oliver? Who's Mark Oliver? The name you're after is John Oliver. Nice to know that people reviewing TV are so well-informed. And un-biased.

The most recent show poorly copied The Day Today a fair bit... ('the gay desk' and 'speak your brains' for anyone who's actually seen TDT) but its like they didnt understand it.. or like they didnt wanna go thru with completely satirising news shows. poor imitation.
Manford is the only saving grace (and im using that phrase in the lightest possibly sense) to what is, at-the-moment, a poor show.
Needs a hell of a lot of work to stop this becoming a great comedy for people with no sense of humour.

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