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{{Infobox British television|
| show_name = Mock the Week
| image = Image:Mocktheweeklogo.JPG
| size = 180px
| caption =
| format = [[Television comedy|Quizshow Comedy]]
| runtime = 30 [[minute|min]] per episode
| creator = Dan Patterson and Mark Leveson
| starring = [[Dara Ó Briain]]<br> [[Frankie Boyle]]<br>[[Rory Bremner]] (Series 1-2)<br>[[Hugh Dennis]]<br>[[John Oliver (comedian)|John Oliver]]<br>[[Jo Brand]]<br>[[Andy Parsons]]
| channel = [[BBC Two]]
| first_aired = June [[2005]]
| last_aired = present
| num_episodes = 20
| producer =
| related =
}}

'''''Mock the Week''''' is a [[United Kingdom|British]] topical [[panel game]], hosted by [[Dara Ó Briain]]. It is made by independent production company Angst Productions and made its debut on [[BBC Two]] in June, [[2005]].

Created by Dan Patterson and Mark Leveson, the same people responsible for the comedy game show ''[[Whose Line is it Anyway?]]''. ''Mock the Week'' is usually described as a cross between ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?'' and ''[[Have I Got News For You]]''. There are two teams of three, with [[Hugh Dennis]] and [[Frankie Boyle]] on one side, and guest comedians, such as [[Jo Brand]], making up the numbers. The late [[Linda Smith (comedian)|Linda Smith]] also appeared on the show on occasion.

Although Hugh Dennis is ''in effect'' a team captain (and is sometimes referred to as such in publicity material), such a distinction is never actually made on the programme itself. For the first two series [[Rory Bremner]] was considered to be the other team captain, but since series 3 he left the show and was replaced by a changing guest.

Although each episode has a winning and losing team, questions and games exist mainly to provide starting points for improvised comedy routines rather than to function as a serious competition and specific scores are never referred to. It is common for rounds to be contested with only members from the same team participating and for Dara O'Briain to end rounds by declaring simply "points for everyone."

The show's theme music is ''[[News of the World (song)|News of The World]]'' by ''[[The Jam]]''.

Following the [[7 July 2005 London bombings]], the last programme in the series, scheduled for [[10 July]] [[2005]], was replaced at short notice by a selection of highlights from previous shows. This was mainly because the recording of the programme was due to take place on the evening of 7th July but the closedown of London's transport system meant that many audience members, as well as some of those due to appear on the programme, couldn't make it. However, the [[Channel 4]] topical comedy ''[[8 Out of 10 Cats]]'' which was being recorded in another studio at [[BBC Television Centre]] did go ahead but made use of panellists and production team members from ''Mock the Week'' who turned up to fill the panel and audience.

A second series began in January 2006, ending in March. The previous clip show actually rated well, so the second series ended in the same way.

A third series of the weekly show began on BBC Two on Thursday [[14 September]] 2006, for six episodes, followed by another clip show on [[24 December]] 2006.

The fourth series began on Thursday [[11 January]] 2007

== The Studio ==
The Studio is divided into several areas. Hugh's team sits to Dara's right, with Frankie sitting on Hugh's right hand side. The opposing team (formerly Rory's team) sit to Dara's left.

Next to Hugh's team is the ''Press Pit'', which is basically a large desk where they play ''Between the Lines''. Next to this is the ''Performance Area'' which is a much larger area with a large TV monitor, which is normally used for stand-up challenges such as ''Dating Videos'' and ''Scenes we'd like to see''.

== The Games ==
=== Main Games ===
These rounds appear the most often.

==== Headliners ====
This round is played by all the players. In this round, a photo of someone famous in the news is given, along with the initial letters of a newspaper headline. The players have to guess what the headline is.

==== Between the Lines ====
This game takes place in the ''Press Pit'' and for the first two series was normally played by the team captains. In series 3, when Rory Bremner left, Frankie Boyle took his place, despite the fact that both Hugh and Frankie are on the same team. In this round, one player tries to impersonate someone in the news that week giving a press conference. The other player (normally Hugh) tells us what the person is ''really'' saying. The best performance wins.

Exceptions to this come when [[Sandi Toksvig]] took over to impersonate [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]]. Rory Bremner has played [[Tony Blair]], [[George W. Bush]], and [[Michael Howard]]. Frankie Boyle has played [[Saddam Hussein]], Sir [[Menzies Campbell]] and [[Mahmoud Ahmadinejad]].

==== Newsreel ====
This round is played by two players, one from each side. In this round, a piece of news footage is played with no sound. The players have to act out what each person is saying, normally having no relationship to what the incident really is. The best performance wins.

==== Spinning the News ====
This game takes place in the ''Performance Area''. In the first series all six players took part, but in the second only four did, with usually the captains not playing. On the TV is a,
"Random News Generator," with several topics on it. A topic (such as the Olympics, the police, Scotland, the health service, etc) is picked at random, and one of the players has to perform a piece on the topic it has landed on. If Dara judges that he/she has got a big enough laugh, then he/she gets to sit down again. The first team to have all their players sitting down wins. If one player from each team is left, then it goes to sudden death. A random topic is picked and both players have to perform on that piece. The one who gets the biggest laughs wins. In series 3, it was changed so that the last player was given a different topic which they would have to speak on.

Since series two, the name of round changed in every show (For example, "Round and round and round it goes, where it lands, do some jokes", and "Stand up and Joke off"). The last show in the series 2 gave the round with its name in French.

==== If this is the answer, what is the question? ====
This round is played by all the players. In this round, a set of six categories is given to the players, covering topics such as sport, health, home affairs, world news, and the environment. Behind each topic is an answer, and the players have to try and guess what the question was.

This is similar to the American game show ''[[Jeopardy!]]'' where players have to respond in the form of a question.

==== Scenes we'd like to see ====
Traditionally the final round in the show. This game takes place in the ''Performance Area'', and is played by everyone. In this round, the players are given a scenario for an event which is almost certain never to happen, and the players give their suggestions to the scenario if it were to happen.
Examples of this round include:
*"''Things you don't expect a TV announcer to say''" ("Tonight's episode of "[[Songs of Praise]]" contains strong language and scenes of a sexual nature" - [[Frankie Boyle]]).
*"''T.V shows that never made it to air''" ("Welcome to Blind Date, with me - [[Stevie Wonder]]" - [[Frankie Boyle]])
*"''Rejected first lines for the next [[Harry Potter]] book''" ("I've made more money than the Queen, I can't be arsed - [[Andy Parsons]];
"I'm sorry" said [[Ron Weasley|Ron]] to [[Harry Potter|Harry]]. " I thought you felt the same way about me" - [[Hugh Dennis]])
*"''Things you'd never expect to hear a Frenchman say''" ("I've just bought a lovely little holiday home in the south of [[Birmingham]]" - [[Frankie Boyle]]).
*"''Lines that you'd never hear in a [[James Bond|Bond]] film''" ("I hope you're not going to be one of those Russian agents whose name is just a cheap sexual pun, Miss Suckmeov" - [[Hugh Dennis]]; It's not just a baseball bat Bond, it's a baseball bat with a nail through it. - [[Frankie Boyle]]; Your new car bond ... a [[Ford Focus]]. - [[Andy Parsons]])
*"''Exam questions that were rejected''" ("All P.E. teachers are paedophiles; discuss" [[Frankie Boyle]]; "Tick box A, B, or C to receive the grade A, B, or C" [[Frankie Boyle]])
*"''Famous last words''" ("Oi! Zidane! Your mum's a slag!" [[Gina Yashere]]; "[[Stingrays]] Love [[Foreplay]] - [[Frankie Boyle]]; "(Looking up) The funny thing is, the closer it gets, the more it looks like a [[piano]]" - [Frankie Boyle]
*"''Unhelpful things to say in a crisis''" ("I know, let's get the UN involved" - [[Ed Byrne]]; "AAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHH". - [[Andy Parsons]])
*"''Things a sports commentator would never say''" ("and for those who missed them earlier, here are next week's Italian football results" - [[Hugh Dennis]])
*"''Commercials that never made it on TV''" ("In 2020, we will rule the world...[[Tesco]], every little helps." - [[Frankie Boyle]]; Have you been injured at work ... don't drive a jet car at over 300 miles an hour - [[Hugh Dennis]])
*"''Bad things to say at Prime Minister's Question Time''" ("Can I ask the Prime Minister......are you paying too much for car insurance?" - [[Hugh Dennis]])
*"''Ill-Advised things to say in court''" (I shall now present my own defence - through the medium of dance! - ''Frankie Boyle''; "How could she have seen my face, I was wearing a balaclava" - [[Andy Parsons]])
*"''Things that would never be said on a driving test''" ("When I smack the dashboard with my forehead, I would like you to crawl out of the wreckage and fetch help!"- [[Frankie Boyle]])
*"''Things the Queen didn't say in her Christmas message''" ("This year, I am in an unusual location. I am in a cave with [[Osama Bin Laden]]."- [[Hugh Dennis]]; I have had a few medical problems this year. I am now so old that my pussy is haunted."- [[Frankie Boyle]])
*"''Unexpected line to see in the [[bible]]''" (He's not the messiah, he's a very naughty boy."- [[Andy Parsons]]; And God said let there be light - sponsored by Powergen."-[[Hugh Dennis]]); "And God said 'right thats the 14 commandments, now will you remember all of those?" - [[Mark Watson]])
*"''Bad things for a teacher to say''" ("Fight, fight, fight, fight, fight" - [[Andy Parsons]]. "It turns out you're not dyslexic, you're just really, really stupid" - [[Frankie Boyle]])

=== Other games ===
These rounds are played less often than the others.

==== Dating Videos ====
This game takes place in the ''Performance Area''. Normally two rounds are played, with one player from each team performing in the ''Performance Area''. The player is given the name of a famous person and has to record a lonely hearts ad in the style of that person. The other players have to try and guess who they are.

==== Ask the Politicians ====
This is ''Mock the Week's'' tribute to the current affairs program ''[[Question Time]]''. Normally two or three players go into the studio audience, and others stay in their seats. Dara acts as the host of the show, with the other players (normally the team captains and one or two other guests) playing politicians. Dara tells the players who they will be pretending to be. Former team captain [[Rory Bremner]] was normally a famous Labour politician, and Hugh was normally a Conservative spokesman. The players in the audience give questions to the players acting, and they have to answer the questions given to them in their roles. The best performance wins.

So far, guest [[Al Murray]], most noted for playing his famous ''Pub Landlord'' character, has appeared twice as "The Voice of the Silent Majority," where he adopts a right-wing persona, normally [[xenophobic]] and with a harsh line on crime, using amusing phrases such as "speaking for the people who would have shot that burglar a third time...".

==== Prime Minister's Questions ====
This round is played by all the players. In this round, Dara plays the [[Speaker of the House of Commons]]. Rory plays the Prime Minister, and the rest of his team being front-bench MPs. Hugh's team play the opposition party. In this round, the teams are given a rather trivial news story, but treat it as it was the heavyweight issue of the day. The best performance wins.

In series one, [[Mark Steel]], who was playing on [[Rory Bremner]]'s team, did a very good impersonation of [[John Prescott]].

==== Bombshell Phone Calls ====
This round is played by two players, one from each side. In this round, the two players play famous people having a telephone conversation (normally Rory and Frankie). During the conversation, one of them will drop a bombshell, which the other player has to react to. The best performance wins.

== Appearances ==
=== Series 1 ===
* [[Hugh Dennis]]
* [[Rory Bremner]]
* [[Frankie Boyle]]
* [[John Oliver (comedian)|John Oliver]]
* [[David Mitchell (actor)|David Mitchell]]
* [[Andy Parsons]]
* [[Al Murray]]
* [[Linda Smith (comedian)|Linda Smith]]
* [[Jo Brand]]
* [[Jeremy Hardy]]
* [[Mark Steel]]

=== Series 2 ===
* [[Hugh Dennis]]
* [[Rory Bremner]]
* [[Frankie Boyle]]
* [[Jo Brand]]
* [[Al Murray]]
* [[Greg Proops]]
* [[John Oliver (comedian)|John Oliver]]
* [[David Mitchell (actor)|David Mitchell]]
* [[Gina Yashere]]
* [[Jeremy Hardy]]
* [[Andy Parsons]]
* [[Sandi Toksvig]]

=== Series 3 ===
* [[Hugh Dennis]]
* [[Frankie Boyle]]
* [[Gina Yashere]]
* [[Clive Anderson]]
* [[Russell Howard]]
* [[Andy Parsons]]
* [[Jo Brand]]
* [[Ed Byrne]]
* [[Robin Ince]]
* [[Jon Culshaw]]
* [[Mark Watson (comedian)|Mark Watson]]
* [[Adam Hills (comedian)|Adam Hills]]
* [[Mark Steel]]
* [[Ian Stone]]

=== Series 4 ===
* [[Hugh Dennis]]
* [[Frankie Boyle]]
* [[Russell Howard]]
* [[Andy Parsons]]
* [[Mark Watson (comedian)|Mark Watson]]
* [[David Mitchell (actor)|David Mitchell]]
* [[Ian Stone]]

==External links==
{{wikiquote}}

*[http://www.mocktheweek.tv Official Mock The Week website]

*[http://www.ukgameshows.com/index.php/Mock_The_Week UK Gameshows Page: ''Mock the Week'']
*[http://epguides.com/MocktheWeek/ epguides.com] Episode guide for Mock the Week.

[[Category:Panel games]]
[[Category:BBC television comedy]]
[[Category:Satirical television programmes]]
[[Category:2000s TV shows in the United Kingdom]]

Revision as of 18:58, 23 January 2007

Mock the Week
File:Mocktheweeklogo.JPG
Created byDan Patterson and Mark Leveson
StarringDara Ó Briain
Frankie Boyle
Rory Bremner (Series 1-2)
Hugh Dennis
John Oliver
Jo Brand
Andy Parsons
No. of episodes20
Production
Running time30 min per episode
Original release
NetworkBBC Two
ReleaseJune 2005 –
present

Mock the Week is a British topical panel game, hosted by Dara Ó Briain. It is made by independent production company Angst Productions and made its debut on BBC Two in June, 2005.

Created by Dan Patterson and Mark Leveson, the same people responsible for the comedy game show Whose Line is it Anyway?. Mock the Week is usually described as a cross between Whose Line Is It Anyway? and Have I Got News For You. There are two teams of three, with Hugh Dennis and Frankie Boyle on one side, and guest comedians, such as Jo Brand, making up the numbers. The late Linda Smith also appeared on the show on occasion.

Although Hugh Dennis is in effect a team captain (and is sometimes referred to as such in publicity material), such a distinction is never actually made on the programme itself. For the first two series Rory Bremner was considered to be the other team captain, but since series 3 he left the show and was replaced by a changing guest.

Although each episode has a winning and losing team, questions and games exist mainly to provide starting points for improvised comedy routines rather than to function as a serious competition and specific scores are never referred to. It is common for rounds to be contested with only members from the same team participating and for Dara O'Briain to end rounds by declaring simply "points for everyone."

The show's theme music is News of The World by The Jam.

Following the 7 July 2005 London bombings, the last programme in the series, scheduled for 10 July 2005, was replaced at short notice by a selection of highlights from previous shows. This was mainly because the recording of the programme was due to take place on the evening of 7th July but the closedown of London's transport system meant that many audience members, as well as some of those due to appear on the programme, couldn't make it. However, the Channel 4 topical comedy 8 Out of 10 Cats which was being recorded in another studio at BBC Television Centre did go ahead but made use of panellists and production team members from Mock the Week who turned up to fill the panel and audience.

A second series began in January 2006, ending in March. The previous clip show actually rated well, so the second series ended in the same way.

A third series of the weekly show began on BBC Two on Thursday 14 September 2006, for six episodes, followed by another clip show on 24 December 2006.

The fourth series began on Thursday 11 January 2007

The Studio

The Studio is divided into several areas. Hugh's team sits to Dara's right, with Frankie sitting on Hugh's right hand side. The opposing team (formerly Rory's team) sit to Dara's left.

Next to Hugh's team is the Press Pit, which is basically a large desk where they play Between the Lines. Next to this is the Performance Area which is a much larger area with a large TV monitor, which is normally used for stand-up challenges such as Dating Videos and Scenes we'd like to see.

The Games

Main Games

These rounds appear the most often.

Headliners

This round is played by all the players. In this round, a photo of someone famous in the news is given, along with the initial letters of a newspaper headline. The players have to guess what the headline is.

Between the Lines

This game takes place in the Press Pit and for the first two series was normally played by the team captains. In series 3, when Rory Bremner left, Frankie Boyle took his place, despite the fact that both Hugh and Frankie are on the same team. In this round, one player tries to impersonate someone in the news that week giving a press conference. The other player (normally Hugh) tells us what the person is really saying. The best performance wins.

Exceptions to this come when Sandi Toksvig took over to impersonate Queen Elizabeth II. Rory Bremner has played Tony Blair, George W. Bush, and Michael Howard. Frankie Boyle has played Saddam Hussein, Sir Menzies Campbell and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Newsreel

This round is played by two players, one from each side. In this round, a piece of news footage is played with no sound. The players have to act out what each person is saying, normally having no relationship to what the incident really is. The best performance wins.

Spinning the News

This game takes place in the Performance Area. In the first series all six players took part, but in the second only four did, with usually the captains not playing. On the TV is a, "Random News Generator," with several topics on it. A topic (such as the Olympics, the police, Scotland, the health service, etc) is picked at random, and one of the players has to perform a piece on the topic it has landed on. If Dara judges that he/she has got a big enough laugh, then he/she gets to sit down again. The first team to have all their players sitting down wins. If one player from each team is left, then it goes to sudden death. A random topic is picked and both players have to perform on that piece. The one who gets the biggest laughs wins. In series 3, it was changed so that the last player was given a different topic which they would have to speak on.

Since series two, the name of round changed in every show (For example, "Round and round and round it goes, where it lands, do some jokes", and "Stand up and Joke off"). The last show in the series 2 gave the round with its name in French.

If this is the answer, what is the question?

This round is played by all the players. In this round, a set of six categories is given to the players, covering topics such as sport, health, home affairs, world news, and the environment. Behind each topic is an answer, and the players have to try and guess what the question was.

This is similar to the American game show Jeopardy! where players have to respond in the form of a question.

Scenes we'd like to see

Traditionally the final round in the show. This game takes place in the Performance Area, and is played by everyone. In this round, the players are given a scenario for an event which is almost certain never to happen, and the players give their suggestions to the scenario if it were to happen. Examples of this round include:

  • "Things you don't expect a TV announcer to say" ("Tonight's episode of "Songs of Praise" contains strong language and scenes of a sexual nature" - Frankie Boyle).
  • "T.V shows that never made it to air" ("Welcome to Blind Date, with me - Stevie Wonder" - Frankie Boyle)
  • "Rejected first lines for the next Harry Potter book" ("I've made more money than the Queen, I can't be arsed - Andy Parsons;

"I'm sorry" said Ron to Harry. " I thought you felt the same way about me" - Hugh Dennis)

  • "Things you'd never expect to hear a Frenchman say" ("I've just bought a lovely little holiday home in the south of Birmingham" - Frankie Boyle).
  • "Lines that you'd never hear in a Bond film" ("I hope you're not going to be one of those Russian agents whose name is just a cheap sexual pun, Miss Suckmeov" - Hugh Dennis; It's not just a baseball bat Bond, it's a baseball bat with a nail through it. - Frankie Boyle; Your new car bond ... a Ford Focus. - Andy Parsons)
  • "Exam questions that were rejected" ("All P.E. teachers are paedophiles; discuss" Frankie Boyle; "Tick box A, B, or C to receive the grade A, B, or C" Frankie Boyle)
  • "Famous last words" ("Oi! Zidane! Your mum's a slag!" Gina Yashere; "Stingrays Love Foreplay - Frankie Boyle; "(Looking up) The funny thing is, the closer it gets, the more it looks like a piano" - [Frankie Boyle]
  • "Unhelpful things to say in a crisis" ("I know, let's get the UN involved" - Ed Byrne; "AAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHH". - Andy Parsons)
  • "Things a sports commentator would never say" ("and for those who missed them earlier, here are next week's Italian football results" - Hugh Dennis)
  • "Commercials that never made it on TV" ("In 2020, we will rule the world...Tesco, every little helps." - Frankie Boyle; Have you been injured at work ... don't drive a jet car at over 300 miles an hour - Hugh Dennis)
  • "Bad things to say at Prime Minister's Question Time" ("Can I ask the Prime Minister......are you paying too much for car insurance?" - Hugh Dennis)
  • "Ill-Advised things to say in court" (I shall now present my own defence - through the medium of dance! - Frankie Boyle; "How could she have seen my face, I was wearing a balaclava" - Andy Parsons)
  • "Things that would never be said on a driving test" ("When I smack the dashboard with my forehead, I would like you to crawl out of the wreckage and fetch help!"- Frankie Boyle)
  • "Things the Queen didn't say in her Christmas message" ("This year, I am in an unusual location. I am in a cave with Osama Bin Laden."- Hugh Dennis; I have had a few medical problems this year. I am now so old that my pussy is haunted."- Frankie Boyle)
  • "Unexpected line to see in the bible" (He's not the messiah, he's a very naughty boy."- Andy Parsons; And God said let there be light - sponsored by Powergen."-Hugh Dennis); "And God said 'right thats the 14 commandments, now will you remember all of those?" - Mark Watson)
  • "Bad things for a teacher to say" ("Fight, fight, fight, fight, fight" - Andy Parsons. "It turns out you're not dyslexic, you're just really, really stupid" - Frankie Boyle)

Other games

These rounds are played less often than the others.

Dating Videos

This game takes place in the Performance Area. Normally two rounds are played, with one player from each team performing in the Performance Area. The player is given the name of a famous person and has to record a lonely hearts ad in the style of that person. The other players have to try and guess who they are.

Ask the Politicians

This is Mock the Week's tribute to the current affairs program Question Time. Normally two or three players go into the studio audience, and others stay in their seats. Dara acts as the host of the show, with the other players (normally the team captains and one or two other guests) playing politicians. Dara tells the players who they will be pretending to be. Former team captain Rory Bremner was normally a famous Labour politician, and Hugh was normally a Conservative spokesman. The players in the audience give questions to the players acting, and they have to answer the questions given to them in their roles. The best performance wins.

So far, guest Al Murray, most noted for playing his famous Pub Landlord character, has appeared twice as "The Voice of the Silent Majority," where he adopts a right-wing persona, normally xenophobic and with a harsh line on crime, using amusing phrases such as "speaking for the people who would have shot that burglar a third time...".

Prime Minister's Questions

This round is played by all the players. In this round, Dara plays the Speaker of the House of Commons. Rory plays the Prime Minister, and the rest of his team being front-bench MPs. Hugh's team play the opposition party. In this round, the teams are given a rather trivial news story, but treat it as it was the heavyweight issue of the day. The best performance wins.

In series one, Mark Steel, who was playing on Rory Bremner's team, did a very good impersonation of John Prescott.

Bombshell Phone Calls

This round is played by two players, one from each side. In this round, the two players play famous people having a telephone conversation (normally Rory and Frankie). During the conversation, one of them will drop a bombshell, which the other player has to react to. The best performance wins.

Appearances

Series 1

Series 2

Series 3

Series 4

External links