https://en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=feedcontributions&feedformat=atom&user=Chickenspud Wikipedia - User contributions [en] 2024-10-27T03:29:57Z User contributions MediaWiki 1.43.0-wmf.28 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Johan_Georg_Schwartze&diff=1091998187 Johan Georg Schwartze 2022-06-07T16:24:40Z <p>Chickenspud: Link to Georgine Schwartze</p> <hr /> <div>{{short description|Dutch painter}}<br /> <br /> [[Image:Johann Georg Schwartze - Zelfportret.jpg|thumb|Self portrait (1869)]]'''Johann Georg Schwartze''' (20 October 1814 - 28 August 1874) was a painter from the [[Northern Netherlands]] who grew up in [[Philadelphia]] and was trained in [[Düsseldorf]] and the [[Düsseldorf school]]. He was a painter of portraits and historical themes and became the father of painter [[Therese Schwartze]] and the sculptor [[Georgine Schwartze]].<br /> <br /> At the age of three his family left Amsterdam for Philadelphia, where his father began a paint and varnish factory.&lt;ref name=RKD&gt;Johann Georg Schwartze in the [[RKD]]&lt;/ref&gt; There the young Johann was taught by [[Emanuel Leutze]]. In 1838 he returned to Europe and spent six years at the [[Kunstakademie Düsseldorf|Düsseldorf Academy]] under [[Friedrich Wilhelm Schadow|Von Schadow]] and [[Karl Ferdinand Sohn|Sohn]].&lt;ref name=RKD/&gt; At the same time, he took private lessons from the landscape-painter [[Karl Friedrich Lessing|Lessing]].&lt;ref&gt;{{cite book | last = Marius | first = G. Hermine | title = Dutch Art in the Nineteenth Century | publisher = Alexander Moring Ltd | year = 1908 | url = http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Dutch_Art_in_the_Nineteenth_Century }}&lt;/ref&gt; In 1846 in Koblenz he married Maria Elisabeth Therese Herrmann. They had four daughters and a son. Besides the painter Thérèse and the sculptor Georgine, their son George Washington also became an artist. Another daughter, Clara Theresia, became the mother of the artists [[Lizzy Ansingh]] and [[Thérèse Ansingh]] (artist name Sorella). In 1845 he was back in Amsterdam where he became a member of the [[Rijksakademie|Koninklijke Academie]] and in 1847 he became a member of [[Arti et Amicitiae]].&lt;ref name=RKD/&gt; He is known for portraits, landscapes, and genre works. Besides his children he is known as the teacher of the painter [[Maria Vos]].&lt;ref name=RKD/&gt;<br /> <br /> He died in Amsterdam and was buried on 2 September 1874 in the Oosterbegraafplaats, the old cemetery. This cemetery closed before 1900, most bodies removed by 1955 and is now a park and museum with no grave markers. His remains may have been moved to 'De Nieuwe Ooster' where his daughter Theresa is buried.<br /> <br /> ==References==<br /> {{Reflist}}<br /> <br /> {{commons category|Johann Georg Schwartze}}<br /> <br /> {{Authority control (arts)}}<br /> <br /> {{DEFAULTSORT:Schwartze, Johan Georg}}<br /> [[Category:1814 births]]<br /> [[Category:1874 deaths]]<br /> [[Category:19th-century Dutch painters]]<br /> [[Category:Dutch male painters]]<br /> [[Category:Dutch portrait painters]]<br /> [[Category:Painters from Amsterdam]]<br /> [[Category:19th-century Dutch male artists]]<br /> <br /> <br /> {{Netherlands-painter-stub}}</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Masters_of_the_Universe_(disambiguation)&diff=100837818 Masters of the Universe (disambiguation) 2007-01-15T09:05:23Z <p>Chickenspud: Added Hawkwind album.</p> <hr /> <div>&lt;!--##### THIS IS A DISAMBIG PAGE. PLEASE (A) KEEP MEANINGS AS NEAR TO START OF SENTENCE AS POSSIBLE, AND (B) DO NOT LINK NON-SUBJECT ITEMS, EXCEPT WHERE THEY ARE NEEDED FOR DISAMBIG AND/OR INCLUDE A DEFINITION OF THE RELEVANT TERM. See [[Wikipedia:Manual of Style (disambiguation pages)]] for more info. #####--&gt;<br /> [[Masters of the Universe]] is the name of a line of toys produced during the 1980s by Mattel.&lt;!--##### &quot;PRIMARY&quot; MEANING AT TOP IN LINE W/ MoS #####--&gt;<br /> <br /> <br /> '''Masters of the Universe''' may also refer to:<br /> <br /> Directly related to or derived from the '''Mattel toy line''':<br /> *[[He-Man and the Masters of the Universe]], an animation produced from 1983-1985<br /> **[[He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (2002)]], a revival of the 1980s animated series of the same name<br /> *[[Masters of the Universe (film)]]<br /> Other meanings '''not directly related to the toy line''':<br /> *In '''music''':<br /> **[[Masters of the Universe (Hawkwind album)]], an album by Hawkwind.<br /> **[[Masters of the Universe (song)]], a song by Juno Reactor.<br /> **[[Masters of the Universe (Binary Star album)]], an album by Binary Star.<br /> **[[Masters of the Universe (Pulp album)]], an album by Pulp<br /> <br /> {{disambig}}</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Barbarella_(film)&diff=62719351 Barbarella (film) 2006-07-08T13:22:45Z <p>Chickenspud: Music credit</p> <hr /> <div>{{Infobox Film |<br /> name =Barbarella|<br /> image =BarbarellaPoster.jpg|<br /> caption ='' Barbarella '' |<br /> imdb_id =0062711|<br /> writer =[[Jean-Claude Forest]]&lt;br&gt;[[Claude Brulé]]&lt;br&gt;[[Clement Wood]] |<br /> starring =[[Jane Fonda]]&lt;br&gt;[[David Hemmings]] |<br /> producer =[[Dino De Laurentiis]]|<br /> director =[[Roger Vadim]]|<br /> distributor =[[Paramount Pictures]] (USA) |<br /> released =[[October 10]], [[1968]] (USA) |<br /> runtime =98 min. |<br /> music = [[Bob Crewe]]|<br /> awards = |<br /> language =English |<br /> budget =$9,000,000 |<br /> }}<br /> '''''Barbarella''''' is a 1968 erotic science fiction film, based on a [[French language|French]] [[Barbarella (comic book)|comic book]] created by [[Jean-Claude Forest]]. The comic and film both feature Barbarella, a young woman who has numerous adventures, often involving [[sexual intercourse|sex]], while journeying around the [[galaxy]], c. 40.000 A.D.<br /> <br /> ==Style==<br /> [[Image:BarbarellaPromo.jpg|thumb|110px|left|[[Jane Fonda]] in a ''Barbarella'' promotional still]]<br /> ''Barbarella'' is famous for a sequence in which the title character, played by [[Jane Fonda]], performs a [[striptease]] in [[weightlessness|zero gravity]] during (and inadequately concealed by) the opening credits.<br /> <br /> ''Barbarella'' is one of the few [[science fiction erotica]] films and includes an [[Orgasmatron|erotic torture device]].<br /> <br /> The whole film is played in a very tongue-in-cheek manner&amp;mdash;especially when it comes to the frequent (but non-explicit) sex scenes. To modern viewers, the film's special effects look cheaply-made and unconvincing, but they were ambitious by the standards of the day. <br /> <br /> The film was simultaneously shot in French and [[English language|English]]. In the French version, Fonda performs her own lines in French. In the English version, the character Pallenberg's lines are dubbed by [[Fenella Fielding]], at least according to the region2 [[DVD]] booklet notes, although others have claimed that the voice actually belongs to [[Joan Greenwood]]. Marcel Marceau's lines are also dubbed into English.<br /> <br /> De Laurentiis returned to camp science fiction (but without the erotica) with [[1980]]'s ''[[Flash Gordon (film)|Flash Gordon]]''.<br /> <br /> It was rumored that [[Drew Barrymore]] had obtained the rights to ''Barbarella'', and was planning to play the title role in a remake. However, in May of [[2005]], sources at the [[website]] ''Cinescape'' claimed that [[Lindsay Lohan]] has signed on to play the character in a remake. [http://www.cinescape.com/0/editorial.asp?aff_id=0&amp;this_cat=Movies&amp;action=page&amp;type_id=&amp;cat_id=270338&amp;obj_id=48836]<br /> <br /> ==Primary cast==<br /> * [[Jane Fonda]]: Barbarella <br /> * [[John Phillip Law]]: Pygar <br /> * [[Anita Pallenberg]]: The Great Tyrant <br /> * [[Milo O'Shea]]: Concierge/Durand Durand <br /> * [[Marcel Marceau]]: Professor Ping <br /> * [[Claude Dauphin]]: President of Earth<br /> * [[David Hemmings]]: Dildano<br /> <br /> ==Trivia==<br /> [[Image:Barbarella.jpg |150px|thumb|left|[[Jane Fonda]] as ''Barbarella'']]<br /> *[[Virna Lisi]] was cast in the title role in ''Barbarella'' , but she turned it down and returned to Italy.<br /> *Star Jane Fonda was married to director Roger Vadim during the production and distribution of ''Barbarella''.<br /> *The [[psychedelic]] &quot;blob&quot; patterns that form much of the special effects in the film are created using an [[oil wheel projector]], a popular visual effects device also used in many other '60s movies, as well as in many anti-drug educational films.<br /> *The band [[Duran Duran]] takes its name from Dr. Durand Durand (O'Shea), a [[mad scientist]] who appears in the film as one of the [[villain]]s. O'Shea repaid the compliment by appearing (as an older version of Durand Durand) in ''[[Arena (An Absurd Notion)|Arena]]'', the band's [[1985]] [[concert film]]. Some of the band's early appearances were at a [[nightclub]] called ''Barbarella's'', in their home town of [[Birmingham]], [[England]]. The band continued the homage to its roots with their 1997 US single, &quot;Electric Barbarella&quot; (released in the UK in 1998). The band has continually used sound clips from the film in their songs, most notably 1989's &quot;Burning The Ground&quot; and the remixes for 1990's &quot;Violence Of Summer&quot;.<br /> *As the 1980s girl group [[We've Got A Fuzzbox And We're Gonna Use It|Fuzzbox]] could not get permission to use [[Thunderbirds (TV series)|Thunderbirds]] for their song ''[[Thunderbirds (TV series)|International Rescue]]'' they spoofed ''Barbarella'' with [[Adrian Edmondson]] playing the Durand Durand character.<br /> *Another famous singer to use the iconography of ''Barbarella'' in a pop video was [[Kylie Minogue]] who recreated the infamous zero-gravity striptease in her award winning video for &quot;[[Put Yourself in My Place (song)|Put Yourself in My Place]]&quot;<br /> *The band [[Matmos]] takes its name from the underground fluid creature in the film, as does the [[lava lamp]] manufacturer [[Mathmos]].<br /> *[[Techno]] producers [[Sven Väth]] and [[Ralf Hildenbeutel]] recorded an album entitled ''[http://www.discogs.com/release/67647 The Art of Dance]'' under the alias Barbarella. The singles from this album, a few of which were very popular among electronic music enthusiasts, took their inspiration from the film, and included titles such as ''The Future'', ''The Spaceship'', ''The Mission'', and ''The Secret Chamber of Dreams'', as well as 5 tracks that were named for some variation on the name Barbarella.<br /> *In 1998, front man Scott Weiland of the bands Stone Temple Pilots and Velvet Revolver released a solo album entitled &quot;12 Bar Blues.&quot; The hit song from that album which spawned a music video was titled &quot;Barbarella.&quot; The lyrics of the song pay homage to several science fiction television shows and movies.<br /> *The manga artists collectively known as [[CLAMP]] parodied ''Barbarella'' in one chapter of their [[Miyuki-Chan In Wonderland]], the chapter titled ''TV no Kuni no Miyuki-chan (Miyuki-chan in TV Land)'' shows several of the characters (including some female versions) trying to seduce the main character. The manga contains heavy lesbian overtones.<br /> *The techno-dance band Jamiroquai mentions a &quot;baby Barbarella&quot; in their hit song &quot;Cosmic Girl.&quot;<br /> <br /> ==See also==<br /> *[[List of counterculture films]]<br /> <br /> ==External links==<br /> {{wikiquote|Barbarella}}<br /> * {{imdb title|id=0062711|title=Barbarella}}<br /> * {{rotten-tomatoes|id=barbarella|title=Barbarella}}<br /> * [http://www.scifi.com/sfw/issue126/classic.html Review by ''Science Fiction Weekly'']<br /> * [http://www.hollywoodcomics.com/forestbbd.html Jean-Claude Forest &amp; Barbarella comics page] <br /> * [http://barbarella.mon-oueb.com/index.php A French language site with many pictures of the 1968 movie]<br /> <br /> &lt;!--Split film/book article intentional - Please do not remove this comment--&gt;<br /> <br /> [[Category:1968 films]]<br /> [[Category:Adventure films]]<br /> [[Category:Cult films]]<br /> [[Category:Fantasy films]]<br /> [[Category:Science fiction film characters]]<br /> [[Category:French films]]<br /> [[Category:Science fiction films]]<br /> [[Category:Films based on comics]]<br /> <br /> [[de:Barbarella (Film)]]<br /> [[fr:Barbarella]]<br /> [[it:Barbarella]]<br /> [[ja:バーバレラ]]<br /> [[nl:Barbarella]]<br /> [[ru:Барбарелла (фильм)]]<br /> [[fi:Barbarella]]<br /> [[sv:Barbarella (film)]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_IT_Crowd&diff=62530008 The IT Crowd 2006-07-07T10:00:39Z <p>Chickenspud: </p> <hr /> <div>{{Infobox British television|<br /> | show_name = The IT Crowd<br /> | image = Image:Itcrowd.png<br /> | size = 267px<br /> | caption = The IT Crowd logo.<br /> | format = Sitcom<br /> | runtime = 22 minutes<br /> | creator = [[Graham Linehan]]<br /> | starring = [[Chris O'Dowd]]&lt;br&gt;[[Richard Ayoade]]&lt;br&gt;[[Katherine Parkinson]]<br /> | channel = [[Channel 4]]<br /> | first_aired = [[3 February]] [[2006]]<br /> | last_aired = <br /> | num_episodes = 6 (Series 1)<br /> | producer = [[talkbackTHAMES]]<br /> }}<br /> <br /> '''''The IT Crowd''''' (pronounced &quot;it&quot; rather than &quot;eye tee&quot;) is a [[Channel 4]] [[sitcom]] written by [[Graham Linehan]] (''[[Father Ted]]'', ''[[Black Books]]'') and produced by [[Ash Atalla]] (''[[The Office]]''). Currently, only one series of six episodes has been produced, but a second series of eight episodes has been commissioned by Channel 4{{ref|SecondSeriesCommission}}. The show was filmed in front of a live audience at [[Teddington Studios]]. The first two episodes were broadcast by Channel 4 on Friday [[3 February]] [[2006]].<br /> <br /> In a first for Channel 4, each episode was available for download via the station's web site for the seven days preceding its initial TV broadcast. Downloads are only available for UK viewers and are supplied in [[Windows Media Video]] format. Each download was encoded with [[Digital Rights Management|DRM]] restrictions, however there was no DRM on the first two episodes. This caused a minor uproar from the internet [[fanbase]]. It has been nominated for best [[sitcom]] for the 2006 [[Rose d'Or]].<br /> <br /> ==Situation and plot==<br /> {{spoiler}}<br /> ''The IT Crowd'' is set in the offices of Reynholm Industries, a fictional British corporation in central [[London]]. It focuses on the shenanigans of the three-strong IT support team located in a dingy, untidy and unkempt basement - a stark contrast to the shining modern architecture and stunning London views enjoyed by the rest of the organisation.<br /> <br /> Moss and Roy, the two technicians, are portrayed as socially inept [[geek]]s. Despite the company's utter dependence on their services, they are despised by the rest of the staff. Roy's exasperation is reflected in his support techniques of ignoring the phone in the hope it will stop ringing, and using reel-to-reel tape recordings of stock IT suggestions (&quot;Have you tried turning it off and on again?&quot;, &quot;Are you ''sure'' it's plugged in?&quot;). Moss's wide and intricate knowledge of all things technical is reflected in his extremely accurate yet utterly indecipherable suggestions, while demonstrating a complete inability to deal with practical problems like extinguishing fires and removing spiders.<br /> <br /> Jen, the newest member of the team, is hopelessly non-technical, despite claiming on her CV that she has &quot;a lot of experience with computers&quot;. As Denholm, the company boss, is equally tech-illiterate, he's convinced by Jen's interview bluffing and appoints her head of the I.T. department. Her official title is &quot;relationship manager&quot;, yet her attempts at bridging the gulf between the technicians and the business generally have the opposite effect, landing Jen in situations just as ludicrous as those of her team-mates.<br /> <br /> ==Cast==<br /> [[Image:Theitcrowd.jpg|thumb|Jen, Moss and Roy]]<br /> * '''Roy''' - [[Chris O'Dowd]]: Roy is a laid back, lazy IT engineer who goes to great lengths to avoid performing his role within the organisation. He constantly eats [[junk food]] and has a low regard for his career in technology, despite signs that he is more than capable. He is a big fan of [[comics]] and often reads them when he is supposed to be working. He also wears a new geek related t shirt every episode.<br /> * '''Maurice Moss''' or '''&quot;Moss&quot;''' - [[Richard Ayoade]]: Moss (Age 32) is a typical computer nerd, and displays characteristics of [[Asperger's Syndrome]] in his personality. The humour in his character is derived from his Aspergers-like comments and his intricate and detailed knowledge.<br /> * '''Jen''' - [[Katherine Parkinson]]: Jen is a woman who enters the department in episode one as a new starter, placed there seemingly at random by boss Denholm, despite her lack of technical or technology management experience. Her role is that of a relationship manager. She has admitted to a propensity for telling lies in order to further her own goals.<br /> * '''Denholm Reynholm''' - [[Chris Morris (satirist)|Chris Morris]]: Denholm is a director of Reynholm Industries, and is a parody of modern earnest upper management, always ready with a new and often ridiculous initiative (mixed-gender lavatories in the office, stress-busting seminars, and so forth) to boost performance in a company he openly boasts as employing attractive people who do very little work and are all having affairs. Denholm is very easily distracted however, and often pays little attention to the people he is talking to.<br /> * '''Richmond Avenal''' - [[Noel Fielding]]: A rather cheerful [[goth]] whose new-found love for [[Cradle of Filth]] instigates his downfall from being Denholm's second-in-command. He works behind the red door all on his own, shunned by the rest of the department.<br /> <br /> ===Guest appearances===<br /> * '''Daniel Carey''' - [[Oliver Chris]]: Daniel is the security guard that Jen falls for, but unfortunately her plans for romance go pear-shaped after he needs her help on ''[[Who Wants to be a Millionaire?]]''<br /> * '''Rebecca''' - [[Hannah Bourne]]: Rebecca goes on a date with Roy after he puts in a classified ad online which made him sound like a psycho.<br /> * '''Paul, Denholm's cultural adviser''' - [[Danny Wallace (writer)|Danny Wallace]]: Fired by Denholm for his choice of gift to the Japanese, but regains his position after a quick hand on the &quot;Profanity Buzzer&quot;<br /> * '''Bill Crouse''' - [[Adam Buxton]]: Goes on a date with Jen and after being told by Moss that she'd subsequently died, told the entire office that he was the last person to sleep with her. Nicknamed, &quot;The News,&quot; because he is always talking about who he slept with.<br /> * '''Dr. Julian Holmes''' - [[Toby Longworth]]: A stress expert who visits the company to give a presentation, and ends up very stressed himself due to Roy and Moss.<br /> * '''Dr. Mendall''' - [[Frances Barber]]: The company psychiatrist who has a crush on Moss. Roy claims that she looks exactly like his mother.<br /> * '''Judie''' - [[Cheryl Fergison]]: A horribly ugly woman that Roy gets entangled with. Roy claims she has hair on her eyes and three rows of teeth.<br /> <br /> ==Episodes==<br /> ===Series 1===<br /> ====Episode 1 - Yesterday's Jam====<br /> The un-technical boss is fooled by Jen's techno-bluffing, and appoints Jen as the manager of the IT support office. She has no idea what she is doing with computers. Roy and Moss want to get rid of her. She does not want to work in a basement, and Roy and Moss do not want a manager at all (each one thought he was in charge) but they accept her in the end.<br /> <br /> ====Episode 2 - Calamity Jen====<br /> Denholm declares a &quot;War on Stress&quot;. Moss and Roy attend a seminar on stress while Jen buys a pair of shoes she falls in love with, but which are two sizes too small, causing plenty of stress in the basement. A fire breaks out after a soldering iron is used, causing many problems.<br /> <br /> ====Episode 3 - Fifty-Fifty====<br /> Jen impresses the security guard Daniel by correctly guessing the answers to some of his musical questions. Roy and Moss invent a dangerous persona in an attempt to solicit people on an online dating site in order to win a bet. However, things go horribly wrong when Daniel realizes that Jen was just guessing as he loses at ''[[Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?]]'' This episode stars [[Graham Linehan]] and [[Chris Tarrant]] as himself.<br /> <br /> ====Episode 4 - The Red Door====<br /> While Roy becomes stuck under a desk with Moss attempting to rescue him, Jen investigates the strange red door in the basement, leading to her discovery of Richmond, a lonely Goth. Jen discovers Richmond's fall from grace through a series of flashbacks and tries to help him, while Roy tries not to become a &quot;desk rabbit&quot;.<br /> <br /> ====Episode 5 - The Haunting of Bill Crouse====<br /> Moss tells an extraordinary lie to help Jen escape the attention of Bill Crouse - he tells him that she is dead. Meanwhile, Roy is trying to escape the attention of a woman of his own.<br /> <br /> ====Episode 6 - Aunt Irma Visits ====<br /> Jen's [[menstrual cycle]] has unexpected consequences for the office, with her colleagues all directly suffering from the associated effects. Roy, Moss, even Richmond is gloomy. Furthermore, Moss has sent an email to many people in the IT community, causing &quot;Aunt Irma&quot; riots and the &quot;Ladyproblems.com&quot; website to be devoted to them, bearing an image of them wearing women's lingerie and handbags. The only cure is to have a big girly night out with scented candles, and ''[[Steel Magnolias]]'' saves the day. However they then all go to the company's &quot;Thank-You&quot; party, and get extremely drunk, resulting in Jen waking up naked in bed, first denying it, then seeing Moss in a very small gown coming into the room, greeting her with a sly &quot;Hello&quot;, an she then screams in horror. Roy also is woken up by the psychiatrist, wearing a somewhat larger gown, bringing Roy a cup of tea. Roy thanks her (still half-asleep), saying &quot;Oh thanks, Mom.&quot; When the psychiatrist suqestions his calling of her &quot;Mom&quot; and then Roy wakes up, realising the awful truth (that they had intercourse), and screams, ending the episode, &quot;to be continued.&quot;<br /> <br /> ==Cultural references==<br /> Despite its deliberate traditional sitcom format, the density of the show's geek cultural references quite possibly exceeds anything previously seen on TV. While clearly exaggerated for effect, many of the iconic props and dressings are commonly found in IT departments:<br /> <br /> * The [[Slashdot]] and [[Boing Boing]] websites appear on Roy's monitor.<br /> * Endless old computers, including a [[Commodore pet|Pet]], [[Sinclair ZX81|ZX81]], [[BBC Micro]] and [[Mac Plus]] are strewn around the basement.<br /> * Posters for retro computer games [[Elite (computer game)|Elite]], [[Underwurlde]] and [[Alien 8]].<br /> * Posters of old 8-bit computers, including the [[Atari 8-bit family]] and the [[Commodore 64]].<br /> * Great Quantities of [[Atari 2600]] cartridges.<br /> * Boxed versions of discontinued PC software - [[Xara|Xara Studio]]; [[Starship Titanic]]; [[The Lost Treasures of Infocom]].<br /> * Walls and desks are covered with [[alternative comics|Indie comics]] swag, including plastic action figures and posters of [[Jim Woodring]]'s [[Frank (comics)|Frank]] and Pulque, [[Chris Ware|Jimmy Corrigan]], [[Daniel Clowes]]'s [[Eightball]], and others.<br /> * A poster of [[Matthew Gast]]'s [[IEEE 802.11|802.11]] [http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/wireless/2005/05/20/80211map.html Protocol Map]<br /> * The office is plastered with [[Electronic Frontier Foundation|EFF]] stickers, including '[[Mp3]] is not a Crime' and '[[Fair Use]] has a posse'.<br /> * A menagerie of [[O'Reilly Media]] animals - including the Perl camel and a moth mug - occupy the office.<br /> * Warning/information signs are used decoratively - 'Emergency Exit' on Moss's desk; a WIFI hotspot; 'Beware of the bull'.<br /> * The [[title sequence]] animation includes a [[Judge Dredd]] poster and a [[Linux kernel]] version 2.6.11 [[Kernel panic|panicking]] during a [[Fedora Core|Fedora Core 4]] installation on Moss's PC.<br /> * Artwork includes [[Kozyndan]]'s '[http://www.kozyndan.com/assets/March_illus/GR_28_cover.jpg Uprisings]' - a tribute to Japanese artist [[Hokusai]]'s ''The Great Wave'' - and the [[Flying Spaghetti Monster]].<br /> * There is a poster for the book [[The Monkey]] on the wall.<br /> * A [[lava lamp]] appears atop the filing cabinet; shelves display a [[Rubik's Cube]], [[Rubik's Clock|Clock]] and the [[Galvanic skin response|GSR]] game 'Open Secrets'.<br /> * Roy has worn t-shirts showing &quot;[[RTFM]]&quot;, an alien from ''[[Space Invaders]]'', the [[Flash Comics|Flash]]'s lightning bolt, the 256th level of [[Pac-Man]], and the number [[The Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything|42]] (one of many [[Douglas Adams]] references that appear in the show).<br /> * A poster saying [[Open Source]], written in what seems to be [[Google|Google's]] livery can been seen behind Roy's desk.<br /> * Roy's bedroom include several references to comics as well. They include an action figure from the [[manga]] series ''[[Ghost in the Shell]]''.<br /> * The slideshow at the end of &quot;Yesterday's Jam&quot; is a stock [[iPhoto]] slideshow, using the notorious [[Ken Burns#Ken Burns Effect|Ken Burns effect]] and even playing the supplied stock music, ''[[Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring]]'', in the background<br /> * A poster for the [[Boards of Canada]] album ''[[The Campfire Headphase]]''.<br /> * Moss can be seen playing [[F.E.A.R. (computer game)|F.E.A.R.]] on his computer.<br /> <br /> Like the physical props, the dialogue (both technical and cultural) contains authentic references. Any [[technobabble]] is likely to be an in-joke for geek viewers, and most episodes contain both film and music references:<br /> <br /> * [[Cradle of Filth]], as mentioned in episode 4 (The Red Door), do exist, however 'Coffin Fodder' as mentioned during the funeral scene, is not track four on any of their albums, but actually track nine of ''[[Nymphetamine]]''. Furthermore, the band are referred to by Richmond as a [[darkwave]] band, which is incorrect. They are, in fact, a [[black metal]] band.<br /> * The first episode's subplot with Denholm, in which he's told his computer is now voice-activated, becomes an immediate parody - including dialogue - of the scene in ''[[Star Trek IV]]'' in which [[Scotty]], stuck in 1986 with &quot;ancient&quot; technology, tries to work an original [[Apple Macintosh]] by talking into its mouse.<br /> *The title of episode 5, &quot;The Haunting of Bill Crouse&quot; is a reference to ''[[The Haunting of Hill House]]''.<br /> * Jen's scream at the end of 'The Haunting of Bill Crouse' is a direct reference to the final shot of [[Philip Kaufman]]'s [[1978]] remake of ''[[Invasion of the Body Snatchers]]''<br /> * The [[title sequence]] music by [[The Divine Comedy (band)|The Divine Comedy]]'s [[Neil Hannon]] draws heavily from [[Gary Numan]]'s ''[[Are 'Friends' Electric?]]'' and &quot;Everyday I Die&quot;.<br /> * During the first episode, Moss is heard having a telephone conversation explaining the dangers of unloading driver code in a preemptive kernel. The dialogue is very similar to a passage in [http://www.sysinternals.com/blog/2005_10_01_archive.html a blog entry] by Windows programmer [[Mark Russinovich]], then referring to [[First4Internet]]'s [[XCP]] copy protection software.<br /> <br /> Another cultural reference occurs in Episode 2, with a clip relating to the new emergency phone number for Britain. The commercial states it has been changed from the normal 9-9-9 to 0-1-1-8-9-9-9-8-8-1-9-9-9-1-1-9-7-2-5-3. Moss suggests the reason for this is that people are constantly mixing the number up with the American 9-1-1, as Roy does seconds later when he tries to downplay the changes. This joke is a reference at the recent change of [[Directory Enquiries]] from 192 to various 118 xxx numbers.<br /> <br /> ==DVD==<br /> Play.com and Amazon.co.uk are listing the Series 1 DVD with a release date of October 9th, 2006.<br /> <br /> ==References==<br /> * {{note|SecondSeriesCommission}} [http://www.channel4sales.com/news/news-article.aspx?year=2006&amp;id=33 The IT Crowd to Return for Second Series]<br /> <br /> ==External links==<br /> * [http://www.channel4.com/itcrowd The IT Crowd] Channel 4 minisite.<br /> * [http://www.tv.com/the-it-crowd/show/54188/summary.html TV.com Program Site]<br /> * ''[[tviv:The IT Crowd|The IT Crowd]]'' episode guide at [[TV IV|The TV IV]]<br /> * {{Imdb title|id=0487831|name=The IT Crowd}}<br /> * [http://theitcrowd.co.uk The original IT Crowd site]<br /> <br /> <br /> [[Category:British television sitcoms|IT Crowd]]<br /> [[Category:Channel 4 television programmes|IT Crowd]]<br /> <br /> [[de:The IT Crowd]]<br /> [[fi:The IT Crowd]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_IT_Crowd&diff=29508702 The IT Crowd 2005-11-28T18:58:21Z <p>Chickenspud: /* Guest Appearances */</p> <hr /> <div>'''The I.T. Crowd''' is an upcoming [[Channel 4]] [[sitcom]] written by [[Graham Linehan]] ([[Black Books]], [[Father Ted]]) and produced by [[Asha Atalla]] ([[The Office]]). There is currently one series (six episodes) which have been filmed in front of a live audience at [[Teddington Studios]]. The program is due for broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2006]].<br /> <br /> ==Plot Outline==<br /> The I.T. Crowd is a joyous and surreal look at the underclass of every company. ''Jen'' ([[Katherine Parkinson]]), a career gal, finds herself working with two socially inept geeks in an I.T. department. This is located in the basement of ''Reynholm Industries''. The I.T. guys are roundly despised by everyone who works above ground. ''Jen'' is new to the company and, through some sort of horrible administrative error, has found herself in the post of 'Relationship Manager' for the department.<br /> <br /> This puts her in direct contact with ''Roy'' ([[Chris O'Dowd]]) and ''Moss'' ([[Richard Ayoade]]) two men who share a love of technology, pizza, science fiction and very little else. They are not used to being around women. Hilarity ensues!<br /> <br /> ==Cast &amp; Credits==<br /> * '''Moss''' - [[Richard Ayoade]]<br /> * '''Roy''' - [[Chris O'Dowd]]<br /> * '''Jen''' - [[Katherine Parkinson]]<br /> * '''Denham''' - [[Chris Morris (satirist)|Chris Morris]]<br /> ===Guest Appearances===<br /> * '''Jen's creepy date''' - [[Adam Buxton]]<br /> * '''Richmond''' - [[Noel Fielding]]<br /> * '''Rebecca''' - [[Hannah Bourne]]<br /> <br /> ==External Links==<br /> * [http://www.theitcrowd.co.uk/ The I.T. Crowd] A site dedicated to the show.<br /> <br /> [[Category:British television sitcoms]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_IT_Crowd&diff=29050766 The IT Crowd 2005-11-23T11:42:29Z <p>Chickenspud: /* External Links */</p> <hr /> <div>'''The I.T. Crowd''' is an upcoming [[Channel 4]] [[sitcom]] written by [[Graham Linehan]] ([[Black Books]], [[Father Ted]]) and produced by [[Asha Atalla]] ([[The Office]]). There is currently one series (six episodes) which have been filmed in front of a live audience at [[Teddington Studios]]. The program is due for broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2006]].<br /> <br /> ==Plot Outline==<br /> The I.T. Crowd is a joyous and surreal look at the underclass of every company. ''Jen'' ([[Katherine Parkinson]]), a career gal, finds herself working with two socially inept geeks in an I.T. department. This is located in the basement of ''Reynholm Industries''. The I.T. guys are roundly despised by everyone who works above ground. ''Jen'' is new to the company and, through some sort of horrible administrative error, has found herself in the post of 'Relationship Manager' for the department.<br /> <br /> This puts her in direct contact with ''Roy'' ([[Chris O'Dowd]]) and ''Moss'' ([[Richard Ayoade]]) two men who share a love of technology, pizza, science fiction and very little else. They are not used to being around women. Hi-jinks ensue!<br /> <br /> ==Cast &amp; Credits==<br /> * '''Moss''' - [[Richard Ayoade]]<br /> * '''Roy''' - [[Chris O'Dowd]]<br /> * '''Jen''' - [[Katherine Parkinson]]<br /> * '''Denham''' - [[Chris Morris (satirist)|Chris Morris]]<br /> ===Guest Appearances===<br /> * '''Jen's creepy date''' - [[Adam Buxton]]<br /> * '''Richmond''' - [[Noel Fielding]]<br /> <br /> ==External Links==<br /> * [http://www.theitcrowd.co.uk/ The I.T. Crowd] A site dedicated to the show.<br /> <br /> [[Category:British television sitcoms]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chris_Morris_(satirist)&diff=29050289 Chris Morris (satirist) 2005-11-23T11:30:57Z <p>Chickenspud: /* Upcoming work */</p> <hr /> <div>[[Image:Chrismorris.jpg|thumb|right|Chris Morris in ''[[Brass Eye]]'']]<br /> <br /> '''Chris Morris''' (born [[June 15]], [[1962]]) is an [[England|English]] comedy writer, [[satire|satirist]] and radio [[disc jockey|DJ]].<br /> <br /> Morris was born in [[Cambridgeshire]]; both his parents were doctors. He was educated at [[Stonyhurst College]], a [[Jesuit]] boys' boarding school in [[Lancashire]]. He is a vegetarian and studied [[zoology]] at [[Bristol University]].<br /> <br /> ==Early career==<br /> <br /> On graduating, Morris took up a traineeship with [[BBC Radio Cambridgeshire]], where he took advantage of the free access to editing and recording equipment to create elaborate [[spoof]]s and [[parody|parodies]]. On leaving Radio Cambridgeshire he worked at [[BBC Radio Bristol]] and [[Greater London Radio]] (GLR). He was fired by Radio Bristol, with varying accounts claiming that he had either been excessively abusive to a caller or had talked (and possibly eaten) over a news broadcast. However, the legendary incident in which he supposedly released helium into a news studio was part of a prepared 'sketch' item and never led to a suspension or dismissal. Also, despite rumours to the contrary, he was never fired or suspended from GLR and continued to broadcast with the station sporadically until his television career took off.<br /> <br /> In 1991 Morris largely gave up work as a mainstream disc-jockey and devoted himself to comedy with his radio project ''[[On the Hour]]''. Working with [[Armando Iannucci]], [[Patrick Marber]], [[Richard Herring]], [[Stewart Lee]], [[Steve Coogan]] and others, he created a highly original spoof news show which was broadcast on [[BBC Radio 4]].<br /> <br /> ==Move into television==<br /> <br /> In 1994 a television series based on ''On the Hour'' was broadcast under the name ''[[The Day Today]]''. ''The Day Today'' made a star of Morris, and also helped to launch the careers of [[Patrick Marber]] and [[Steve Coogan]]. 1994 proved to be Morris's most critically successful year, as he presented a [[BBC Radio 1]] series similar in content to, but sharper than, the [[Greater London Radio]] broadcasts, and teamed up with comedy legend [[Peter Cook]], as [[Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling]], in a series of improvised conversations for Radio Three, entitled ''Why Bother?''. Morris followed this with ''[[Blue Jam]]'', a late-night [[ambient music]] and sketch show broadcast on Radio 1, which was later reworked for television as [[Channel 4]]'s ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''.<br /> <br /> The &quot;sick comedy&quot; which had bubbled under in ''On the Hour'' and ''The Day Today'' found full release, however, with ''[[Brass Eye]]'', another spoof current affairs television documentary show, shown on Channel 4. The station remit allowed for more shocking material, and Morris took full advantage of this freedom, exploring such [[taboo]]s as infant mortality, [[incest]], [[anal sex]], [[rape]], [[suicide]] and [[sadomasochism]]. In 2001 a reprise of ''Brass Eye'' on the subject of [[pedophilia|paedophilia]] led to record numbers of viewer complaints, and a great deal of hysterical discussion in the press. Many complainants, some of whom later admitted to not having seen the programme (notably [[Beverley Hughes]], at the time a government minister), felt the satire was directed at the victims of paedophilia, which Morris denies. Most critics, however, felt that the programme's target was actually media coverage of the subject. It is interesting to note that the government's criticism appeared at a period of a rather severe worsening of the [[2001 UK foot and mouth crisis]].<br /> <br /> ==A controversial figure==<br /> <br /> Morris has also covered other controversial subjects. He once [[List of premature obituaries|falsely suggested]] on the radio that [[Jimmy Savile]] and [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative]] [[Member_of_Parliament|MP]] [[Michael Heseltine]] had died; had a show faded mid-broadcast when he played a scurrilous [[cut-up]] of the [[Archbishop of Canterbury]]'s funeral oration for [[Diana, Princess of Wales]], although Radio 1 had previously cleared this for broadcast and this was an error on their part as they mistook it for another censored sketch on a similar theme; and performed a song in the style of [[Pulp]] lead singer [[Jarvis Cocker]] about notorious child-murderer [[Myra Hindley]] with the following lyrics: &quot;Every time I see your picture, Myra/I have to phone my latest girlfriend up and fire her/And find a prostitute who looks like you and hire her/Oh, me oh Myra.&quot;<br /> <br /> In 1994 Morris portrayed a fictional rapper, Fur-Q for a sketch satirising hip hop's glamourising of guns and violence (signature track - &quot;Uzi Lover&quot;). He would visit similar territory in ''[[Brass Eye]]'', with JLB8 (Jailbait), an [[Eminem]] clone who openly worked paedophile themes into his work and thus had a huge following of preteen girls.<br /> <br /> In [[2002]] Morris ventured into [[film]] with the [[short film|short]] ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'', a version of a ''Blue Jam'' sketch about a man looking after a sinister talking dog. It was the first film project of [[Warp Films]], a branch of [[Warp Records]]. In [[2003]] this won the [[BAFTA]] for best short film. <br /> <br /> Morris' most recent television project was a sitcom entitled ''[[Nathan Barley]]'', based on the character created by [[Charlie Brooker]] for his website [[TVGoHome]]. Co-written by Brooker and Morris, the series was broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2005]]. Recent efforts have tended to stray away from obvious 'jokes' and into more artistically ambiguous areas, dividing his once-loyal fanbase.<br /> <br /> ==Upcoming work==<br /> <br /> Soon to appear in &quot;[[The I.T. Crowd]]&quot;, a new [[Channel 4]] [[situation comedy|sitcom]] focusing on the office and home lives of two geeks who work in an IT department. The series is written and directed by [[Graham Linehan]] ([[Father Ted]], [[Black Books]] writer) and produced by [[Ash Atalla]] ([[The Office]]). Morris plays the insane boss of the fictional company ''Reynholm Industries'' and the series is set in the dingy basement. He appears regularly throughout the series and although this is the first time he has accepted a role that he hasn't written himself, his anarchic style sings through. The series is currently set to appear on [[Channel 4]] around January or February of [[2006]].<br /> <br /> ==Other information==<br /> <br /> A significant feature of Morris's output is his music. He often composes and performs incidental music for his television shows, notably with ''Jam'' and the 'extended remix' version, ''Jaaaaam''. His parodies of musical performances (such as the Pulp spoof mentioned above and an [[Eminem]] in the Paedophilia special) are very accurate. This is due not only to his musical ability, but also to his understanding of the way in which the original artist created their music.<br /> <br /> In [[2003]] he was listed in [[The Observer]] as one of the [[Observer's 50 funniest|50 funniest]] acts in British comedy. In [[2004]], [[Channel 4]] aired a show called ''[[The Comedian's Comedian]]'' in which foremost writers and performers of comedy ranked their 50 favourite acts. Chris Morris was at number eleven, above many acclaimed comedians including [[Bill Hicks]], [[Peter Sellers]] and [[Eddie Izzard]].<br /> <br /> Morris is widely regarded as someone reluctant to discuss his work, although he has given interviews, albeit rarely. He is currently said to be eager to return to radio - news welcomed by a large part of his considerable fanbase. Morris lives in [[Brixton]] with wife [[Jo Unwin]].<br /> <br /> == Works ==<br /> <br /> * ''[[No Known Cure]]'' (August [[1987]]- March [[1989]], BBC Radio Bristol)<br /> * ''Miss Marple'' ([[1988]]-[[1993]], BBC GLR)<br /> * ''[[Loose Ends (radio)|Loose Ends]]'' ([[1989]], [[BBC Radio 4]])<br /> * ''[[Up Yer Loose One]]'' ([[1990]], [[BSB]])<br /> * ''[[The Chris Morris Christmas Show]]'' ([[25 December]] [[1990]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[On The Hour]]'' ([[1991]]-[[1992]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[White Brother?]]'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 3)<br /> * ''[[The Day Today]]'' ([[1994]], BBC 2)<br /> * ''The Chris Morris Music Show'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye]]'' ([[1997]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Blue Jam]]'' ([[1997]]-[[1999]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Swatman Follies]]'' ([[1998]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[Big Train]]'' ([[1999]], BBC 2) Various sketches.<br /> * ''[[Second Class Male/Time To Go]]'' ([[1999]], newspaper column for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''/''[[Jaaaaam]]'' ([[2000]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye Special]]'' ([[2001]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The Smokehammer]]'' ([[2002]], website)<br /> * ''[[Absolute Atrocity Special]]'' ([[2002]], newspaper pullout for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Bushwhacked MP3|Bushwhacked]]'' (2002)<br /> * ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'' ([[2002]], [[short film]])<br /> * ''[[Nathan Barley]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The I.T. Crowd]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> <br /> ==External links==<br /> *[http://www.thesmokehammer.com/ The Smokehammer] - A site by Chris Morris<br /> *{{imdb name|id=0606439|name=Christopher Morris}}<br /> *[http://www.cookdandbombd.co.uk Cook'd and Bomb'd] - A site devoted to the work of Chris Morris and his collaborators<br /> *[http://thepiratebay.org/details.php?id=3391502 Pure Morris] - Morris downloads<br /> *[http://www.trashbat.co.ck/ trashbat.co.ck] - This site is referred to in ''Nathan Barley'' throughout and, notionally, is the creation of the titular character. The [[.co]][[.ck]] domain is as a result of the second level UK domain for ''company'' and the top level domain for the ''[[Cook Islands]]''.<br /> *[http://www.theitcrowd.co.uk/ The I.T. Crowd] - A site dedicated to the upcoming show [[The I.T. Crowd]].<br /> <br /> [[Category:1965 births|Morris, Chris]]<br /> [[Category:English comedians|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:Satirists|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:University of Bristol Alumni|Morris, Chris]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_IT_Crowd&diff=29048627 The IT Crowd 2005-11-23T10:46:33Z <p>Chickenspud: /* Cast &amp; Credits */</p> <hr /> <div>'''The I.T. Crowd''' is an upcoming [[Channel 4]] [[sitcom]] written by [[Graham Linehan]] ([[Black Books]], [[Father Ted]]) and produced by [[Asha Atalla]] ([[The Office]]). There is currently one series (six episodes) which have been filmed in front of a live audience at [[Teddington Studios]]. The program is due for broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2006]].<br /> <br /> ==Plot Outline==<br /> The I.T. Crowd is a joyous and surreal look at the underclass of every company. ''Jen'' ([[Katherine Parkinson]]), a career gal, finds herself working with two socially inept geeks in an I.T. department. This is located in the basement of ''Reynholm Industries''. The I.T. guys are roundly despised by everyone who works above ground. ''Jen'' is new to the company and, through some sort of horrible administrative error, has found herself in the post of 'Relationship Manager' for the department.<br /> <br /> This puts her in direct contact with ''Roy'' ([[Chris O'Dowd]]) and ''Moss'' ([[Richard Ayoade]]) two men who share a love of technology, pizza, science fiction and very little else. They are not used to being around women. Hi-jinks ensue!<br /> <br /> ==Cast &amp; Credits==<br /> * '''Moss''' - [[Richard Ayoade]]<br /> * '''Roy''' - [[Chris O'Dowd]]<br /> * '''Jen''' - [[Katherine Parkinson]]<br /> * '''Denham''' - [[Chris Morris (satirist)|Chris Morris]]<br /> ===Guest Appearances===<br /> * '''Jen's creepy date''' - [[Adam Buxton]]<br /> * '''Richmond''' - [[Noel Fielding]]<br /> <br /> ==External Links==<br /> * [http://www.theitcrowd.co.uk/ The I.T. Crowd] A site dedicated to the show.</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Noel_Fielding&diff=29048227 Noel Fielding 2005-11-23T10:36:46Z <p>Chickenspud: </p> <hr /> <div>'''Noel Fielding''' is a [[United Kingdom|British]] [[comedian]] and [[actor]] born in [[1973]], best known for playing Vince Noir (and other characters) opposite [[Julian Barratt]] (Howard Moon) and brother [[Michael Fielding]] (Naboo) in the cult comedy series ''[[The Mighty Boosh]]''. Fielding attended [[Croydon Art College]], and is a skilled visual artist (responsible for much of ''Boosh's'' distinctive sets and characters). The name of the series itself is said to derive from a haircut Fielding once sported, referred to as &quot;The Mighty Bush&quot; by friends.<br /> <br /> ===Filmography===<br /> '''2006''' <br /> *''[[The I.T. Crowd]]'' TV Series (episode 1.6) - Richmond<br /> '''2005''' <br /> *''[[Nathan Barley]]'' TV Series - Jones<br /> *''[[28 Acts in 28 Minutes]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2004''' <br /> *''[[AD/BC: A Rock Opera]]''(TV) - Shepherd<br /> *''[[The Mighty Boosh]]'' TV Series - Vince Noir<br /> *''[[Garth Marenghi's Darkplace]]'' TV Series - The Pissing Monkey in 'The Apes Of Wrath'<br /> *''[[British Comedy Awards|The British Comedy Awards]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2003''' <br /> *''[[Melbourne International Comedy Festival|Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2002''' <br /> *''[[Brain Candy]]'' (TV) - Himself<br /> '''2001''' <br /> *''[[Melbourne International Comedy Festival|Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2000''' <br /> *''[[Melbourne International Comedy Festival|Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> *''[[Sweet]]'' - Pete Sweet<br /> '''1999''' <br /> *''[[Plunkett &amp; Macleane]]'' - Brothel Gent<br /> <br /> ===Awards===<br /> *'''2003''' Time Out comedy award winner for outstanding achievement.<br /> *'''2002''' Solo Edinburgh show Voodoo Hedgehog nominated for a Perrier<br /> *'''2001''' The Boosh, first on London Live, then on Radio 4. Won the inaugural Douglas Adams award for [[radio comedy]] writing [http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/oct01/boosh2.html]<br /> *'''2000''' Arctic Boosh won the Barry Award at the [[Melbourne International Comedy Festival]]<br /> *'''1999''' Perrier nominee with Julian Barratt as Arctic Boosh<br /> *'''1998''' Perrier Best Newcomer winner with [[Julian Barratt]] as the double act [[The Mighty Boosh]] <br /> <br /> ===External Links===<br /> *[http://www.theitcrowd.co.uk The I.T. Crowd] - Site dedicated to the TV series.<br /> *[http://www.themightyboosh.com/ The Mighty Boosh] - Official web site<br /> <br /> {{comedian-stub}}<br /> <br /> [[Category:1973 births]]<br /> [[Category:British comedians]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Noel_Fielding&diff=29047973 Noel Fielding 2005-11-23T10:30:18Z <p>Chickenspud: /* Filmography */</p> <hr /> <div>'''Noel Fielding''' is a [[United Kingdom|British]] [[comedian]] and [[actor]] born in [[1973]], best known for playing Vince Noir (and other characters) opposite [[Julian Barratt]] (Howard Moon) and brother [[Michael Fielding]] (Naboo) in the cult comedy series ''[[The Mighty Boosh]]''. Fielding attended [[Croydon Art College]], and is a skilled visual artist (responsible for much of ''Boosh's'' distinctive sets and characters). The name of the series itself is said to derive from a haircut Fielding once sported, referred to as &quot;The Mighty Bush&quot; by friends.<br /> <br /> ===Filmography===<br /> '''2006''' <br /> *''[[The I.T. Crowd]]'' TV Series (episode 1.6) - Richmond<br /> '''2005''' <br /> *''[[Nathan Barley]]'' TV Series - Jones<br /> *''[[28 Acts in 28 Minutes]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2004''' <br /> *''[[AD/BC: A Rock Opera]]''(TV) - Shepherd<br /> *''[[The Mighty Boosh]]'' TV Series - Vince Noir<br /> *''[[Garth Marenghi's Darkplace]]'' TV Series - The Pissing Monkey in 'The Apes Of Wrath'<br /> *''[[British Comedy Awards|The British Comedy Awards]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2003''' <br /> *''[[Melbourne International Comedy Festival|Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2002''' <br /> *''[[Brain Candy]]'' (TV) - Himself<br /> '''2001''' <br /> *''[[Melbourne International Comedy Festival|Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2000''' <br /> *''[[Melbourne International Comedy Festival|Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> *''[[Sweet]]'' - Pete Sweet<br /> '''1999''' <br /> *''[[Plunkett &amp; Macleane]]'' - Brothel Gent<br /> <br /> ===Awards===<br /> *'''2003''' Time Out comedy award winner for outstanding achievement.<br /> *'''2002''' Solo Edinburgh show Voodoo Hedgehog nominated for a Perrier<br /> *'''2001''' The Boosh, first on London Live, then on Radio 4. Won the inaugural Douglas Adams award for [[radio comedy]] writing [http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/oct01/boosh2.html]<br /> *'''2000''' Arctic Boosh won the Barry Award at the [[Melbourne International Comedy Festival]]<br /> *'''1999''' Perrier nominee with Julian Barratt as Arctic Boosh<br /> *'''1998''' Perrier Best Newcomer winner with [[Julian Barratt]] as the double act [[The Mighty Boosh]] <br /> <br /> {{comedian-stub}}<br /> <br /> [[Category:1973 births]]<br /> [[Category:British comedians]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Noel_Fielding&diff=29047847 Noel Fielding 2005-11-23T10:27:05Z <p>Chickenspud: /* Filmography */</p> <hr /> <div>'''Noel Fielding''' is a [[United Kingdom|British]] [[comedian]] and [[actor]] born in [[1973]], best known for playing Vince Noir (and other characters) opposite [[Julian Barratt]] (Howard Moon) and brother [[Michael Fielding]] (Naboo) in the cult comedy series ''[[The Mighty Boosh]]''. Fielding attended [[Croydon Art College]], and is a skilled visual artist (responsible for much of ''Boosh's'' distinctive sets and characters). The name of the series itself is said to derive from a haircut Fielding once sported, referred to as &quot;The Mighty Bush&quot; by friends.<br /> <br /> ===Filmography===<br /> '''2005''' <br /> *''[[The I.T. Crowd]]'' TV Series (episode 1.6) - Richmond<br /> *''[[Nathan Barley]]'' TV Series - Jones<br /> *''[[28 Acts in 28 Minutes]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2004''' <br /> *''[[AD/BC: A Rock Opera]]''(TV) - Shepherd<br /> *''[[The Mighty Boosh]]'' TV Series - Vince Noir<br /> *''[[Garth Marenghi's Darkplace]]'' TV Series - The Pissing Monkey in 'The Apes Of Wrath'<br /> *''[[British Comedy Awards|The British Comedy Awards]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2003''' <br /> *''[[Melbourne International Comedy Festival|Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2002''' <br /> *''[[Brain Candy]]'' (TV) - Himself<br /> '''2001''' <br /> *''[[Melbourne International Comedy Festival|Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> '''2000''' <br /> *''[[Melbourne International Comedy Festival|Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala]]'' (TV) - Himself <br /> *''[[Sweet]]'' - Pete Sweet<br /> '''1999''' <br /> *''[[Plunkett &amp; Macleane]]'' - Brothel Gent<br /> <br /> ===Awards===<br /> *'''2003''' Time Out comedy award winner for outstanding achievement.<br /> *'''2002''' Solo Edinburgh show Voodoo Hedgehog nominated for a Perrier<br /> *'''2001''' The Boosh, first on London Live, then on Radio 4. Won the inaugural Douglas Adams award for [[radio comedy]] writing [http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/oct01/boosh2.html]<br /> *'''2000''' Arctic Boosh won the Barry Award at the [[Melbourne International Comedy Festival]]<br /> *'''1999''' Perrier nominee with Julian Barratt as Arctic Boosh<br /> *'''1998''' Perrier Best Newcomer winner with [[Julian Barratt]] as the double act [[The Mighty Boosh]] <br /> <br /> {{comedian-stub}}<br /> <br /> [[Category:1973 births]]<br /> [[Category:British comedians]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_IT_Crowd&diff=28941678 The IT Crowd 2005-11-21T23:38:11Z <p>Chickenspud: /* Plot Outline */</p> <hr /> <div>'''The I.T. Crowd''' is an upcoming [[Channel 4]] [[sitcom]] written by [[Graham Linehan]] ([[Black Books]], [[Father Ted]]) and produced by [[Asha Atalla]] ([[The Office]]). There is currently one series (six episodes) which have been filmed in front of a live audience at [[Teddington Studios]]. The program is due for broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2006]].<br /> <br /> ==Plot Outline==<br /> The I.T. Crowd is a joyous and surreal look at the underclass of every company. ''Jen'' ([[Katherine Parkinson]]), a career gal, finds herself working with two socially inept geeks in an I.T. department. This is located in the basement of ''Reynholm Industries''. The I.T. guys are roundly despised by everyone who works above ground. ''Jen'' is new to the company and, through some sort of horrible administrative error, has found herself in the post of 'Relationship Manager' for the department.<br /> <br /> This puts her in direct contact with ''Roy'' ([[Chris O'Dowd]]) and ''Moss'' ([[Richard Ayoade]]) two men who share a love of technology, pizza, science fiction and very little else. They are not used to being around women. Hi-jinks ensue!<br /> <br /> ==Cast &amp; Credits==<br /> * '''Moss''' - [[Richard Ayoade]]<br /> * '''Roy''' - [[Chris O'Dowd]]<br /> * '''Jen''' - [[Katherine Parkinson]]<br /> * '''Denham''' - [[Chris Morris]]<br /> ===Guest Appearances===<br /> * '''Jen's creepy date''' - [[Adam Buxton]]<br /> * '''Richmond''' - [[Noel Fielding]]<br /> <br /> ==External Links==<br /> * [http://www.theitcrowd.co.uk/ The I.T. Crowd] A site dedicated to the show.</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Graham_Linehan&diff=28940617 Graham Linehan 2005-11-21T23:22:25Z <p>Chickenspud: Added recent work.</p> <hr /> <div>[[Image:glinehan.jpg|right|thumb|''Graham Linehan'']]<br /> '''''Graham Linehan''''' (born [[1968]]) is an Irish writer who, often in partnership with [[Arthur Mathews]], has written - or written ''for'' - a number of popular [[British comedy|British comedies]].<br /> <br /> As a pair they have been responsible for segments in many high profile sketch shows including ''[[Harry Enfield and Chums]]'', ''[[The All New Alexei Sayle Show]]'' and, notably, the ''Ted &amp; Ralph'' characters in ''[[The Fast Show]]'' (though it should be noted that with a few exceptions, the actual Ted &amp; Ralph sketches were written by [[Charlie Higson]] and [[Paul Whitehouse]]). They also contributed to various magazines and wrote surreal liner notes for the popular &quot;Volume&quot; series of [[alternative music]] compilations.<br /> <br /> However, it was with ''[[Father Ted]]'' (3 series, 1995-1998) that Linehan &amp; Mathews (as the pair are often referred to) made their biggest splash on the public imagination. <br /> <br /> Linehan and Mathews both wrote the first series of the [[sketch comedy|sketch show]] ''[[Big Train]]'' but Linehan bowed out for the second series. <br /> <br /> Nevertheless, Linehan has continued to provide material for shows which are held in high regard, in particular ''[[Brass Eye]]''.<br /> <br /> Both Linehan and Mathews often make cameo appearances in programmes they have written. They also made a notable appearance in the hugely accomplished sitcom ''[[I'm Alan Partridge]]'' as two Irish men considering Alan Partridge ([[Steve Coogan]]) for a contract. Typically, they went away with a strong urge to employ somebody else (Partridge: &quot;Sunday Bloody Sunday. Really captures the frustration of a Sunday, doesn't it? The kids are running around, you've got all of the papers to read, and you think &quot;Sunday, Bloody Sunday&quot; <br /> <br /> Linehan has also appeared in two episodes (episodes 3 &amp; 6) of ''[[Garth Marenghi's Darkplace]]''.<br /> <br /> With [[Dylan Moran]], Linehan co-wrote the first series of ''[[Black Books]]'', a series to which Mathews made a much smaller contribution.<br /> <br /> In late [[2003]], he and Mathews were named one of the [[Observer's 50 funniest|50 Funniest]] acts in Britain by [[The Guardian]]. [http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/features/story/0,11710,1101525,00.html]<br /> <br /> Linehan is an Honorary Associate of the [[National Secular Society]].<br /> <br /> ==Recent Work==<br /> Lineham wrote the new [[Channel 4]] [[situation comedy|sitcom]] [[The I.T. Crowd]] which finished recording at [[Teddington Studios]] in [[November]] [[2005]]. The show is due to be broadcast sometime in [[January]] or [[February]] [[2006]]<br /> <br /> ==Further reading==<br /> <br /> * &quot;Father Ted&quot;: The Complete Scripts -- Graham Linehan, Arthur Mathews. (Paperback - Boxtree - October 20, 2000) ISBN 0752272357<br /> <br /> ==External links==<br /> *[http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/features/story/0,11710,1101525,00.html The Guardian Newspaper's 50 Funniest People In Britain]<br /> *[http://www.pfd.co.uk/scripts/get.py/filmandtv/?ftwriterdirectors%20LINEHANG Graham Linehan's CV]<br /> *[http://www.theitcrowd.co.uk/ The I.T. Crowd]<br /> <br /> [[Category:1968 births|Lineham, Graham]]<br /> [[Category:Irish writers|Lineham, Graham]]<br /> [[Category:Irish comedians|Lineham, Graham]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_IT_Crowd&diff=28938642 The IT Crowd 2005-11-21T22:56:13Z <p>Chickenspud: </p> <hr /> <div>'''The I.T. Crowd''' is an upcoming [[Channel 4]] [[sitcom]] written by [[Graham Linehan]] ([[Black Books]], [[Father Ted]]) and produced by [[Asha Atalla]] ([[The Office]]). There is currently one series (six episodes) which have been filmed in front of a live audience at [[Teddington Studios]]. The program is due for broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2006]].<br /> <br /> ==Plot Outline==<br /> The I.T. Crowd is a joyous and surreal look at the underclass of every company. '''Jen''' ([[Katherine Parkinson]]), a career gal, finds herself working with two socially inept geeks in an I.T. department. This is located in the basement of ''Reynholm Industries''. The I.T. guys are roundly despised by everyone who works above ground. ''Jen'' is new to the company and, through some sort of horrible administrative error, has found herself in the post of 'Relationship Manager' for the department.<br /> <br /> This puts her in direct contact with ''Roy'' ([[Chris O'Dowd]]) and ''Moss'' ([[Richard Ayoade]]) two men who share a love of technology, pizza, science fiction and very little else. They are not used to being around women. Hi-jinks ensue! <br /> <br /> ==Cast &amp; Credits==<br /> * '''Moss''' - [[Richard Ayoade]]<br /> * '''Roy''' - [[Chris O'Dowd]]<br /> * '''Jen''' - [[Katherine Parkinson]]<br /> * '''Denham''' - [[Chris Morris]]<br /> ===Guest Appearances===<br /> * '''Jen's creepy date''' - [[Adam Buxton]]<br /> * '''Richmond''' - [[Noel Fielding]]<br /> <br /> ==External Links==<br /> * [http://www.theitcrowd.co.uk/ The I.T. Crowd] A site dedicated to the show.</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chris_Morris_(satirist)&diff=28936056 Chris Morris (satirist) 2005-11-21T22:22:24Z <p>Chickenspud: /* External links */</p> <hr /> <div>[[Image:Chrismorris.jpg|thumb|right|Chris Morris in ''[[Brass Eye]]'']]<br /> <br /> '''Chris Morris''' (born [[June 15]], [[1962]]) is an [[England|English]] comedy writer, [[satire|satirist]] and radio [[disc jockey|DJ]].<br /> <br /> Morris was born in [[Cambridgeshire]]; both his parents were doctors. He was educated at [[Stonyhurst College]], a [[Jesuit]] boys' boarding school in [[Lancashire]]. He is a vegetarian and studied [[zoology]] at [[Bristol University]].<br /> <br /> ==Early Career==<br /> <br /> On graduating, Morris took up a traineeship with [[BBC Radio Cambridgeshire]], where he took advantage of the free access to editing and recording equipment to create elaborate [[spoof]]s and [[parody|parodies]]. On leaving Radio Cambridgeshire he worked at [[BBC Radio Bristol]] and [[Greater London Radio]] (GLR). He was fired by Radio Bristol, with varying accounts claiming that he had either been excessively abusive to a caller or had talked (and possibly eaten) over a news broadcast. However, the legendary incident in which he supposedly released helium into a news studio was part of a prepared 'sketch' item and never led to a suspension or dismissal. Also, despite rumours to the contrary, he was never fired or suspended from GLR and continued to broadcast with the station sporadically until his television career took off.<br /> <br /> In 1991 Morris largely gave up work as a mainstream disc-jockey and devoted himself to comedy with his radio project ''[[On the Hour]]''. Working with [[Armando Iannucci]], [[Patrick Marber]], [[Richard Herring]], [[Stewart Lee]], [[Steve Coogan]] and others, he created a highly original spoof news show which was broadcast on [[BBC Radio 4]].<br /> <br /> ==Move into Television==<br /> <br /> In 1994 a television series based on ''On the Hour'' was broadcast under the name ''[[The Day Today]]''. ''The Day Today'' made a star of Morris, and also helped to launch the careers of [[Patrick Marber]] and [[Steve Coogan]]. 1994 proved to be Morris's most critically successful year, as he presented a [[BBC Radio 1]] series similar in content to, but sharper than, the [[Greater London Radio]] broadcasts, and teamed up with comedy legend [[Peter Cook]], as [[Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling]], in a series of improvised conversations for Radio Three, entitled ''Why Bother?''. Morris followed this with ''[[Blue Jam]]'', a late-night [[ambient music]] and sketch show broadcast on Radio 1, which was later reworked for television as [[Channel 4]]'s ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''.<br /> <br /> The &quot;sick comedy&quot; which had bubbled under in ''On the Hour'' and ''The Day Today'' found full release, however, with ''[[Brass Eye]]'', another spoof current affairs television documentary show, shown on Channel 4. The station remit allowed for more shocking material, and Morris took full advantage of this freedom, exploring such [[taboo]]s as infant mortality, [[incest]], [[buggery]], [[rape]], [[suicide]] and [[sadomasochism]]. In 2001 a reprise of ''Brass Eye'' on the subject of [[pedophilia|paedophilia]] led to record numbers of viewer complaints, and a great deal of hysterical discussion in the press. Many complainants, some of whom later admitted to not having seen the programme (notably [[Beverley Hughes]], at the time a government minister), felt the satire was directed at the victims of paedophilia, which Morris denies. Most critics, however, felt that the programme's target was actually media coverage of the subject. It is interesting to note that the government's criticism appeared at a period of a rather severe worsening of the [[2001 UK foot and mouth crisis]].<br /> <br /> ==A Controversial Figure==<br /> <br /> Morris has also covered other controversial subjects. He once [[List of premature obituaries|falsely suggested]] on the radio that [[Jimmy Savile]] and [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative]] [[Member_of_Parliament|MP]] [[Michael Heseltine]] had died; had a show faded mid-broadcast when he played a scurrilous [[cut-up]] of the [[Archbishop of Canterbury]]'s funeral oration for [[Diana, Princess of Wales]], although Radio 1 had previously cleared this for broadcast and this was an error on their part as they mistook it for another censored sketch on a similar theme; and performed a song in the style of [[Pulp]] lead singer [[Jarvis Cocker]] about notorious child-murderer [[Myra Hindley]] with the following lyrics: &quot;Every time I see your picture, Myra/I have to phone my latest girlfriend up and fire her/And find a prostitute who looks like you and hire her/Oh, me oh Myra.&quot;<br /> <br /> In 1994 Morris portrayed a fictional rapper, Fur-Q for a sketch satirising hip hop's glamourising of guns and violence (signature track - &quot;Uzi Lover&quot;). He would visit similar territory in ''[[Brass Eye]]'', with JLB8 (Jailbait), an [[Eminem]] clone who openly worked paedophile themes into his work and thus had a huge following of preteen girls.<br /> <br /> In [[2002]] Morris ventured into [[film]] with the [[short film|short]] ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'', a version of a ''Blue Jam'' sketch about a man looking after a sinister talking dog. It was the first film project of [[Warp Films]], a branch of [[Warp Records]]. In [[2003]] this won the [[BAFTA]] for best short film. <br /> <br /> Morris' most recent television project was a sitcom entitled ''[[Nathan Barley]]'', based on the character created by [[Charlie Brooker]] for his website [[TVGoHome]]. Co-written by Brooker and Morris, the series was broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2005]]. Recent efforts have tended to stray away from obvious 'jokes' and into more artistically ambiguous areas, dividing his once-loyal fanbase.<br /> <br /> ==Upcoming Work==<br /> <br /> Soon to appear in &quot;[[The I.T. Crowd]]&quot;, a new Channel 4 sitcom focusing on the office and home lives of two geeks who work in an IT department. The series is written and directed by Graham Linehan (Father Ted, Black Books writer) and produced by Ash Atalla (The Office). Morris plays the insane boss of the fictional company Reynholm Industries and the series is set in the dingy basement. He appears regularly throughout the series and although this is the first time he has accepted a role that he hasn't written himself, his anarchic style sings through. The series is currently set to appear on Channel 4 around January or February of 2006.<br /> <br /> ==Other Information==<br /> <br /> A significant feature of Morris's output is his music. He often composes and performs incidental music for his television shows, notably with ''Jam'' and the 'extended remix' version, ''Jaaaaam''. His parodies of musical performances (such as the Pulp spoof mentioned above and an [[Eminem]] in the Paedophilia special) are very accurate. This is due not only to his musical ability, but also to his understanding of the way in which the original artist created their music.<br /> <br /> In [[2003]] he was listed in [[The Observer]] as one of the [[Observer's 50 funniest|50 funniest]] acts in British comedy. In [[2004]], [[Channel 4]] aired a show called ''[[The Comedian's Comedian]]'' in which foremost writers and performers of comedy ranked their 50 favourite acts. Chris Morris was at number eleven, above many acclaimed comedians including [[Bill Hicks]], [[Peter Sellers]] and [[Eddie Izzard]].<br /> <br /> Morris is widely regarded as someone reluctant to discuss his work, although he has given interviews, albeit rarely. He is currently said to be eager to return to radio - news welcomed by a large part of his considerable fanbase.<br /> <br /> Morris lives in [[Brixton]] with wife [[Jo Unwin]].<br /> <br /> == Works ==<br /> <br /> * ''[[No Known Cure]]'' (August [[1987]]- March [[1989]], BBC Radio Bristol)<br /> * ''Miss Marple'' ([[1988]]-[[1993]], BBC GLR)<br /> * ''[[Loose Ends (radio)|Loose Ends]]'' ([[1989]], [[BBC Radio 4]])<br /> * ''[[Up Yer Loose One]]'' ([[1990]], [[BSB]])<br /> * ''[[The Chris Morris Christmas Show]]'' ([[25 December]] [[1990]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[On The Hour]]'' ([[1991]]-[[1992]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[White Brother?]]'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 3)<br /> * ''[[The Day Today]]'' ([[1994]], BBC 2)<br /> * ''The Chris Morris Music Show'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye]]'' ([[1997]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Blue Jam]]'' ([[1997]]-[[1999]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Swatman Follies]]'' ([[1998]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[Big Train]]'' ([[1999]], BBC 2) Various sketches.<br /> * ''[[Second Class Male/Time To Go]]'' ([[1999]], newspaper column for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''/''[[Jaaaaam]]'' ([[2000]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye Special]]'' ([[2001]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The Smokehammer]]'' ([[2002]], website)<br /> * ''[[Absolute Atrocity Special]]'' ([[2002]], newspaper pullout for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Bushwhacked MP3|Bushwhacked]]'' (2002)<br /> * ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'' ([[2002]], [[short film]])<br /> * ''[[Nathan Barley]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The I.T. Crowd]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> <br /> ==External links==<br /> *[http://www.thesmokehammer.com/ The Smokehammer] - A site by Chris Morris<br /> *{{imdb name|id=0606439|name=Christopher Morris}}<br /> *[http://www.cookdandbombd.co.uk Cook'd and Bomb'd] - A site devoted to the work of Chris Morris and his collaborators<br /> *[http://thepiratebay.org/details.php?id=3391502 Pure Morris] - Morris downloads<br /> *[http://www.trashbat.co.ck/ trashbat.co.ck] - This site is referred to in ''Nathan Barley'' throughout and, notionally, is the creation of the titular character. The [[.co]][[.ck]] domain is as a result of the second level UK domain for ''company'' and the top level domain for the ''[[Cook Islands]]''.<br /> *[http://www.theitcrowd.co.uk/ The I.T. Crowd] - A site dedicated to the upcoming show [[The I.T. Crowd]].<br /> <br /> [[Category:1965 births|Morris, Chris]]<br /> [[Category:English comedians|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:Satirists|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:University of Bristol Alumni|Morris, Chris]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chris_Morris_(satirist)&diff=28935697 Chris Morris (satirist) 2005-11-21T22:17:31Z <p>Chickenspud: /* Upcoming Work */</p> <hr /> <div>[[Image:Chrismorris.jpg|thumb|right|Chris Morris in ''[[Brass Eye]]'']]<br /> <br /> '''Chris Morris''' (born [[June 15]], [[1962]]) is an [[England|English]] comedy writer, [[satire|satirist]] and radio [[disc jockey|DJ]].<br /> <br /> Morris was born in [[Cambridgeshire]]; both his parents were doctors. He was educated at [[Stonyhurst College]], a [[Jesuit]] boys' boarding school in [[Lancashire]]. He is a vegetarian and studied [[zoology]] at [[Bristol University]].<br /> <br /> ==Early Career==<br /> <br /> On graduating, Morris took up a traineeship with [[BBC Radio Cambridgeshire]], where he took advantage of the free access to editing and recording equipment to create elaborate [[spoof]]s and [[parody|parodies]]. On leaving Radio Cambridgeshire he worked at [[BBC Radio Bristol]] and [[Greater London Radio]] (GLR). He was fired by Radio Bristol, with varying accounts claiming that he had either been excessively abusive to a caller or had talked (and possibly eaten) over a news broadcast. However, the legendary incident in which he supposedly released helium into a news studio was part of a prepared 'sketch' item and never led to a suspension or dismissal. Also, despite rumours to the contrary, he was never fired or suspended from GLR and continued to broadcast with the station sporadically until his television career took off.<br /> <br /> In 1991 Morris largely gave up work as a mainstream disc-jockey and devoted himself to comedy with his radio project ''[[On the Hour]]''. Working with [[Armando Iannucci]], [[Patrick Marber]], [[Richard Herring]], [[Stewart Lee]], [[Steve Coogan]] and others, he created a highly original spoof news show which was broadcast on [[BBC Radio 4]].<br /> <br /> ==Move into Television==<br /> <br /> In 1994 a television series based on ''On the Hour'' was broadcast under the name ''[[The Day Today]]''. ''The Day Today'' made a star of Morris, and also helped to launch the careers of [[Patrick Marber]] and [[Steve Coogan]]. 1994 proved to be Morris's most critically successful year, as he presented a [[BBC Radio 1]] series similar in content to, but sharper than, the [[Greater London Radio]] broadcasts, and teamed up with comedy legend [[Peter Cook]], as [[Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling]], in a series of improvised conversations for Radio Three, entitled ''Why Bother?''. Morris followed this with ''[[Blue Jam]]'', a late-night [[ambient music]] and sketch show broadcast on Radio 1, which was later reworked for television as [[Channel 4]]'s ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''.<br /> <br /> The &quot;sick comedy&quot; which had bubbled under in ''On the Hour'' and ''The Day Today'' found full release, however, with ''[[Brass Eye]]'', another spoof current affairs television documentary show, shown on Channel 4. The station remit allowed for more shocking material, and Morris took full advantage of this freedom, exploring such [[taboo]]s as infant mortality, [[incest]], [[buggery]], [[rape]], [[suicide]] and [[sadomasochism]]. In 2001 a reprise of ''Brass Eye'' on the subject of [[pedophilia|paedophilia]] led to record numbers of viewer complaints, and a great deal of hysterical discussion in the press. Many complainants, some of whom later admitted to not having seen the programme (notably [[Beverley Hughes]], at the time a government minister), felt the satire was directed at the victims of paedophilia, which Morris denies. Most critics, however, felt that the programme's target was actually media coverage of the subject. It is interesting to note that the government's criticism appeared at a period of a rather severe worsening of the [[2001 UK foot and mouth crisis]].<br /> <br /> ==A Controversial Figure==<br /> <br /> Morris has also covered other controversial subjects. He once [[List of premature obituaries|falsely suggested]] on the radio that [[Jimmy Savile]] and [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative]] [[Member_of_Parliament|MP]] [[Michael Heseltine]] had died; had a show faded mid-broadcast when he played a scurrilous [[cut-up]] of the [[Archbishop of Canterbury]]'s funeral oration for [[Diana, Princess of Wales]], although Radio 1 had previously cleared this for broadcast and this was an error on their part as they mistook it for another censored sketch on a similar theme; and performed a song in the style of [[Pulp]] lead singer [[Jarvis Cocker]] about notorious child-murderer [[Myra Hindley]] with the following lyrics: &quot;Every time I see your picture, Myra/I have to phone my latest girlfriend up and fire her/And find a prostitute who looks like you and hire her/Oh, me oh Myra.&quot;<br /> <br /> In 1994 Morris portrayed a fictional rapper, Fur-Q for a sketch satirising hip hop's glamourising of guns and violence (signature track - &quot;Uzi Lover&quot;). He would visit similar territory in ''[[Brass Eye]]'', with JLB8 (Jailbait), an [[Eminem]] clone who openly worked paedophile themes into his work and thus had a huge following of preteen girls.<br /> <br /> In [[2002]] Morris ventured into [[film]] with the [[short film|short]] ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'', a version of a ''Blue Jam'' sketch about a man looking after a sinister talking dog. It was the first film project of [[Warp Films]], a branch of [[Warp Records]]. In [[2003]] this won the [[BAFTA]] for best short film. <br /> <br /> Morris' most recent television project was a sitcom entitled ''[[Nathan Barley]]'', based on the character created by [[Charlie Brooker]] for his website [[TVGoHome]]. Co-written by Brooker and Morris, the series was broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2005]]. Recent efforts have tended to stray away from obvious 'jokes' and into more artistically ambiguous areas, dividing his once-loyal fanbase.<br /> <br /> ==Upcoming Work==<br /> <br /> Soon to appear in &quot;[[The I.T. Crowd]]&quot;, a new Channel 4 sitcom focusing on the office and home lives of two geeks who work in an IT department. The series is written and directed by Graham Linehan (Father Ted, Black Books writer) and produced by Ash Atalla (The Office). Morris plays the insane boss of the fictional company Reynholm Industries and the series is set in the dingy basement. He appears regularly throughout the series and although this is the first time he has accepted a role that he hasn't written himself, his anarchic style sings through. The series is currently set to appear on Channel 4 around January or February of 2006.<br /> <br /> ==Other Information==<br /> <br /> A significant feature of Morris's output is his music. He often composes and performs incidental music for his television shows, notably with ''Jam'' and the 'extended remix' version, ''Jaaaaam''. His parodies of musical performances (such as the Pulp spoof mentioned above and an [[Eminem]] in the Paedophilia special) are very accurate. This is due not only to his musical ability, but also to his understanding of the way in which the original artist created their music.<br /> <br /> In [[2003]] he was listed in [[The Observer]] as one of the [[Observer's 50 funniest|50 funniest]] acts in British comedy. In [[2004]], [[Channel 4]] aired a show called ''[[The Comedian's Comedian]]'' in which foremost writers and performers of comedy ranked their 50 favourite acts. Chris Morris was at number eleven, above many acclaimed comedians including [[Bill Hicks]], [[Peter Sellers]] and [[Eddie Izzard]].<br /> <br /> Morris is widely regarded as someone reluctant to discuss his work, although he has given interviews, albeit rarely. He is currently said to be eager to return to radio - news welcomed by a large part of his considerable fanbase.<br /> <br /> Morris lives in [[Brixton]] with wife [[Jo Unwin]].<br /> <br /> == Works ==<br /> <br /> * ''[[No Known Cure]]'' (August [[1987]]- March [[1989]], BBC Radio Bristol)<br /> * ''Miss Marple'' ([[1988]]-[[1993]], BBC GLR)<br /> * ''[[Loose Ends (radio)|Loose Ends]]'' ([[1989]], [[BBC Radio 4]])<br /> * ''[[Up Yer Loose One]]'' ([[1990]], [[BSB]])<br /> * ''[[The Chris Morris Christmas Show]]'' ([[25 December]] [[1990]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[On The Hour]]'' ([[1991]]-[[1992]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[White Brother?]]'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 3)<br /> * ''[[The Day Today]]'' ([[1994]], BBC 2)<br /> * ''The Chris Morris Music Show'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye]]'' ([[1997]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Blue Jam]]'' ([[1997]]-[[1999]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Swatman Follies]]'' ([[1998]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[Big Train]]'' ([[1999]], BBC 2) Various sketches.<br /> * ''[[Second Class Male/Time To Go]]'' ([[1999]], newspaper column for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''/''[[Jaaaaam]]'' ([[2000]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye Special]]'' ([[2001]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The Smokehammer]]'' ([[2002]], website)<br /> * ''[[Absolute Atrocity Special]]'' ([[2002]], newspaper pullout for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Bushwhacked MP3|Bushwhacked]]'' (2002)<br /> * ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'' ([[2002]], [[short film]])<br /> * ''[[Nathan Barley]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The I.T. Crowd]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> <br /> ==External links==<br /> *[http://www.thesmokehammer.com/ The Smokehammer] - A site by Chris Morris<br /> *{{imdb name|id=0606439|name=Christopher Morris}}<br /> *[http://www.cookdandbombd.co.uk Cook'd and Bomb'd] - A site devoted to the work of Chris Morris and his collaborators<br /> *[http://thepiratebay.org/details.php?id=3391502 Pure Morris] - Morris downloads<br /> *[http://www.trashbat.co.ck/ trashbat.co.ck] - This site is referred to in ''Nathan Barley'' throughout and, notionally, is the creation of the titular character. The [[.co]][[.ck]] domain is as a result of the second level UK domain for ''company'' and the top level domain for the ''[[Cook Islands]]''.<br /> <br /> [[Category:1965 births|Morris, Chris]]<br /> [[Category:English comedians|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:Satirists|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:University of Bristol Alumni|Morris, Chris]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chris_Morris_(satirist)&diff=28932596 Chris Morris (satirist) 2005-11-21T21:31:32Z <p>Chickenspud: /* Works */</p> <hr /> <div>[[Image:Chrismorris.jpg|thumb|right|Chris Morris in ''[[Brass Eye]]'']]<br /> <br /> '''Chris Morris''' (born [[June 15]], [[1962]]) is an [[England|English]] comedy writer, [[satire|satirist]] and radio [[disc jockey|DJ]].<br /> <br /> Morris was born in [[Cambridgeshire]]; both his parents were doctors. He was educated at [[Stonyhurst College]], a [[Jesuit]] boys' boarding school in [[Lancashire]]. He is a vegetarian and studied [[zoology]] at [[Bristol University]].<br /> <br /> ==Early Career==<br /> <br /> On graduating, Morris took up a traineeship with [[BBC Radio Cambridgeshire]], where he took advantage of the free access to editing and recording equipment to create elaborate [[spoof]]s and [[parody|parodies]]. On leaving Radio Cambridgeshire he worked at [[BBC Radio Bristol]] and [[Greater London Radio]] (GLR). He was fired by Radio Bristol, with varying accounts claiming that he had either been excessively abusive to a caller or had talked (and possibly eaten) over a news broadcast. However, the legendary incident in which he supposedly released helium into a news studio was part of a prepared 'sketch' item and never led to a suspension or dismissal. Also, despite rumours to the contrary, he was never fired or suspended from GLR and continued to broadcast with the station sporadically until his television career took off.<br /> <br /> In 1991 Morris largely gave up work as a mainstream disc-jockey and devoted himself to comedy with his radio project ''[[On the Hour]]''. Working with [[Armando Iannucci]], [[Patrick Marber]], [[Richard Herring]], [[Stewart Lee]], [[Steve Coogan]] and others, he created a highly original spoof news show which was broadcast on [[BBC Radio 4]].<br /> <br /> ==Move into Television==<br /> <br /> In 1994 a television series based on ''On the Hour'' was broadcast under the name ''[[The Day Today]]''. ''The Day Today'' made a star of Morris, and also helped to launch the careers of [[Patrick Marber]] and [[Steve Coogan]]. 1994 proved to be Morris's most critically successful year, as he presented a [[BBC Radio 1]] series similar in content to, but sharper than, the [[Greater London Radio]] broadcasts, and teamed up with comedy legend [[Peter Cook]], as [[Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling]], in a series of improvised conversations for Radio Three, entitled ''Why Bother?''. Morris followed this with ''[[Blue Jam]]'', a late-night [[ambient music]] and sketch show broadcast on Radio 1, which was later reworked for television as [[Channel 4]]'s ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''.<br /> <br /> The &quot;sick comedy&quot; which had bubbled under in ''On the Hour'' and ''The Day Today'' found full release, however, with ''[[Brass Eye]]'', another spoof current affairs television documentary show, shown on Channel 4. The station remit allowed for more shocking material, and Morris took full advantage of this freedom, exploring such [[taboo]]s as infant mortality, [[incest]], [[buggery]], [[rape]], [[suicide]] and [[sadomasochism]]. In 2001 a reprise of ''Brass Eye'' on the subject of [[pedophilia|paedophilia]] led to record numbers of viewer complaints, and a great deal of hysterical discussion in the press. Many complainants, some of whom later admitted to not having seen the programme (notably [[Beverley Hughes]], at the time a government minister), felt the satire was directed at the victims of paedophilia, which Morris denies. Most critics, however, felt that the programme's target was actually media coverage of the subject. It is interesting to note that the government's criticism appeared at a period of a rather severe worsening of the [[2001 UK foot and mouth crisis]].<br /> <br /> ==A Controversial Figure==<br /> <br /> Morris has also covered other controversial subjects. He once [[List of premature obituaries|falsely suggested]] on the radio that [[Jimmy Savile]] and [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative]] [[Member_of_Parliament|MP]] [[Michael Heseltine]] had died; had a show faded mid-broadcast when he played a scurrilous [[cut-up]] of the [[Archbishop of Canterbury]]'s funeral oration for [[Diana, Princess of Wales]], although Radio 1 had previously cleared this for broadcast and this was an error on their part as they mistook it for another censored sketch on a similar theme; and performed a song in the style of [[Pulp]] lead singer [[Jarvis Cocker]] about notorious child-murderer [[Myra Hindley]] with the following lyrics: &quot;Every time I see your picture, Myra/I have to phone my latest girlfriend up and fire her/And find a prostitute who looks like you and hire her/Oh, me oh Myra.&quot;<br /> <br /> In 1994 Morris portrayed a fictional rapper, Fur-Q for a sketch satirising hip hop's glamourising of guns and violence (signature track - &quot;Uzi Lover&quot;). He would visit similar territory in ''[[Brass Eye]]'', with JLB8 (Jailbait), an [[Eminem]] clone who openly worked paedophile themes into his work and thus had a huge following of preteen girls.<br /> <br /> In [[2002]] Morris ventured into [[film]] with the [[short film|short]] ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'', a version of a ''Blue Jam'' sketch about a man looking after a sinister talking dog. It was the first film project of [[Warp Films]], a branch of [[Warp Records]]. In [[2003]] this won the [[BAFTA]] for best short film. <br /> <br /> Morris' most recent television project was a sitcom entitled ''[[Nathan Barley]]'', based on the character created by [[Charlie Brooker]] for his website [[TVGoHome]]. Co-written by Brooker and Morris, the series was broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2005]]. Recent efforts have tended to stray away from obvious 'jokes' and into more artistically ambiguous areas, dividing his once-loyal fanbase.<br /> <br /> ==Upcoming Work==<br /> <br /> Soon to appear in &quot;[[The I.T. Crowd]]&quot;, a new Channel 4 sitcom focusing on the office and home lives of two geeks who work in an IT department. The series is written and directed by Graham Linehan (Father Ted, Black Books writer) and produced by Ash Atalla (The Office). Morris plays the insane boss of the fictional company Reynholm Industries and the series is set in the dingy basement. He appears regularly throughout the series and although this is the first time he has accepted a role that he hasn't written himself, his anarchic style sings through. The series is currently set to appear on Channel 4 around January or February of next year.<br /> <br /> ==Other Information==<br /> <br /> A significant feature of Morris's output is his music. He often composes and performs incidental music for his television shows, notably with ''Jam'' and the 'extended remix' version, ''Jaaaaam''. His parodies of musical performances (such as the Pulp spoof mentioned above and an [[Eminem]] in the Paedophilia special) are very accurate. This is due not only to his musical ability, but also to his understanding of the way in which the original artist created their music.<br /> <br /> In [[2003]] he was listed in [[The Observer]] as one of the [[Observer's 50 funniest|50 funniest]] acts in British comedy. In [[2004]], [[Channel 4]] aired a show called ''[[The Comedian's Comedian]]'' in which foremost writers and performers of comedy ranked their 50 favourite acts. Chris Morris was at number eleven, above many acclaimed comedians including [[Bill Hicks]], [[Peter Sellers]] and [[Eddie Izzard]].<br /> <br /> Morris is widely regarded as someone reluctant to discuss his work, although he has given interviews, albeit rarely. He is currently said to be eager to return to radio - news welcomed by a large part of his considerable fanbase.<br /> <br /> Morris lives in [[Brixton]] with wife [[Jo Unwin]].<br /> <br /> == Works ==<br /> <br /> * ''[[No Known Cure]]'' (August [[1987]]- March [[1989]], BBC Radio Bristol)<br /> * ''Miss Marple'' ([[1988]]-[[1993]], BBC GLR)<br /> * ''[[Loose Ends (radio)|Loose Ends]]'' ([[1989]], [[BBC Radio 4]])<br /> * ''[[Up Yer Loose One]]'' ([[1990]], [[BSB]])<br /> * ''[[The Chris Morris Christmas Show]]'' ([[25 December]] [[1990]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[On The Hour]]'' ([[1991]]-[[1992]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[White Brother?]]'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 3)<br /> * ''[[The Day Today]]'' ([[1994]], BBC 2)<br /> * ''The Chris Morris Music Show'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye]]'' ([[1997]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Blue Jam]]'' ([[1997]]-[[1999]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Swatman Follies]]'' ([[1998]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[Big Train]]'' ([[1999]], BBC 2) Various sketches.<br /> * ''[[Second Class Male/Time To Go]]'' ([[1999]], newspaper column for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''/''[[Jaaaaam]]'' ([[2000]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye Special]]'' ([[2001]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The Smokehammer]]'' ([[2002]], website)<br /> * ''[[Absolute Atrocity Special]]'' ([[2002]], newspaper pullout for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Bushwhacked MP3|Bushwhacked]]'' (2002)<br /> * ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'' ([[2002]], [[short film]])<br /> * ''[[Nathan Barley]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The I.T. Crowd]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> <br /> ==External links==<br /> *[http://www.thesmokehammer.com/ The Smokehammer] - A site by Chris Morris<br /> *{{imdb name|id=0606439|name=Christopher Morris}}<br /> *[http://www.cookdandbombd.co.uk Cook'd and Bomb'd] - A site devoted to the work of Chris Morris and his collaborators<br /> *[http://thepiratebay.org/details.php?id=3391502 Pure Morris] - Morris downloads<br /> *[http://www.trashbat.co.ck/ trashbat.co.ck] - This site is referred to in ''Nathan Barley'' throughout and, notionally, is the creation of the titular character. The [[.co]][[.ck]] domain is as a result of the second level UK domain for ''company'' and the top level domain for the ''[[Cook Islands]]''.<br /> <br /> [[Category:1965 births|Morris, Chris]]<br /> [[Category:English comedians|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:Satirists|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:University of Bristol Alumni|Morris, Chris]]</div> Chickenspud https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chris_Morris_(satirist)&diff=28932497 Chris Morris (satirist) 2005-11-21T21:30:00Z <p>Chickenspud: /* Upcoming Work */</p> <hr /> <div>[[Image:Chrismorris.jpg|thumb|right|Chris Morris in ''[[Brass Eye]]'']]<br /> <br /> '''Chris Morris''' (born [[June 15]], [[1962]]) is an [[England|English]] comedy writer, [[satire|satirist]] and radio [[disc jockey|DJ]].<br /> <br /> Morris was born in [[Cambridgeshire]]; both his parents were doctors. He was educated at [[Stonyhurst College]], a [[Jesuit]] boys' boarding school in [[Lancashire]]. He is a vegetarian and studied [[zoology]] at [[Bristol University]].<br /> <br /> ==Early Career==<br /> <br /> On graduating, Morris took up a traineeship with [[BBC Radio Cambridgeshire]], where he took advantage of the free access to editing and recording equipment to create elaborate [[spoof]]s and [[parody|parodies]]. On leaving Radio Cambridgeshire he worked at [[BBC Radio Bristol]] and [[Greater London Radio]] (GLR). He was fired by Radio Bristol, with varying accounts claiming that he had either been excessively abusive to a caller or had talked (and possibly eaten) over a news broadcast. However, the legendary incident in which he supposedly released helium into a news studio was part of a prepared 'sketch' item and never led to a suspension or dismissal. Also, despite rumours to the contrary, he was never fired or suspended from GLR and continued to broadcast with the station sporadically until his television career took off.<br /> <br /> In 1991 Morris largely gave up work as a mainstream disc-jockey and devoted himself to comedy with his radio project ''[[On the Hour]]''. Working with [[Armando Iannucci]], [[Patrick Marber]], [[Richard Herring]], [[Stewart Lee]], [[Steve Coogan]] and others, he created a highly original spoof news show which was broadcast on [[BBC Radio 4]].<br /> <br /> ==Move into Television==<br /> <br /> In 1994 a television series based on ''On the Hour'' was broadcast under the name ''[[The Day Today]]''. ''The Day Today'' made a star of Morris, and also helped to launch the careers of [[Patrick Marber]] and [[Steve Coogan]]. 1994 proved to be Morris's most critically successful year, as he presented a [[BBC Radio 1]] series similar in content to, but sharper than, the [[Greater London Radio]] broadcasts, and teamed up with comedy legend [[Peter Cook]], as [[Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling]], in a series of improvised conversations for Radio Three, entitled ''Why Bother?''. Morris followed this with ''[[Blue Jam]]'', a late-night [[ambient music]] and sketch show broadcast on Radio 1, which was later reworked for television as [[Channel 4]]'s ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''.<br /> <br /> The &quot;sick comedy&quot; which had bubbled under in ''On the Hour'' and ''The Day Today'' found full release, however, with ''[[Brass Eye]]'', another spoof current affairs television documentary show, shown on Channel 4. The station remit allowed for more shocking material, and Morris took full advantage of this freedom, exploring such [[taboo]]s as infant mortality, [[incest]], [[buggery]], [[rape]], [[suicide]] and [[sadomasochism]]. In 2001 a reprise of ''Brass Eye'' on the subject of [[pedophilia|paedophilia]] led to record numbers of viewer complaints, and a great deal of hysterical discussion in the press. Many complainants, some of whom later admitted to not having seen the programme (notably [[Beverley Hughes]], at the time a government minister), felt the satire was directed at the victims of paedophilia, which Morris denies. Most critics, however, felt that the programme's target was actually media coverage of the subject. It is interesting to note that the government's criticism appeared at a period of a rather severe worsening of the [[2001 UK foot and mouth crisis]].<br /> <br /> ==A Controversial Figure==<br /> <br /> Morris has also covered other controversial subjects. He once [[List of premature obituaries|falsely suggested]] on the radio that [[Jimmy Savile]] and [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative]] [[Member_of_Parliament|MP]] [[Michael Heseltine]] had died; had a show faded mid-broadcast when he played a scurrilous [[cut-up]] of the [[Archbishop of Canterbury]]'s funeral oration for [[Diana, Princess of Wales]], although Radio 1 had previously cleared this for broadcast and this was an error on their part as they mistook it for another censored sketch on a similar theme; and performed a song in the style of [[Pulp]] lead singer [[Jarvis Cocker]] about notorious child-murderer [[Myra Hindley]] with the following lyrics: &quot;Every time I see your picture, Myra/I have to phone my latest girlfriend up and fire her/And find a prostitute who looks like you and hire her/Oh, me oh Myra.&quot;<br /> <br /> In 1994 Morris portrayed a fictional rapper, Fur-Q for a sketch satirising hip hop's glamourising of guns and violence (signature track - &quot;Uzi Lover&quot;). He would visit similar territory in ''[[Brass Eye]]'', with JLB8 (Jailbait), an [[Eminem]] clone who openly worked paedophile themes into his work and thus had a huge following of preteen girls.<br /> <br /> In [[2002]] Morris ventured into [[film]] with the [[short film|short]] ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'', a version of a ''Blue Jam'' sketch about a man looking after a sinister talking dog. It was the first film project of [[Warp Films]], a branch of [[Warp Records]]. In [[2003]] this won the [[BAFTA]] for best short film. <br /> <br /> Morris' most recent television project was a sitcom entitled ''[[Nathan Barley]]'', based on the character created by [[Charlie Brooker]] for his website [[TVGoHome]]. Co-written by Brooker and Morris, the series was broadcast on [[Channel 4]] in early [[2005]]. Recent efforts have tended to stray away from obvious 'jokes' and into more artistically ambiguous areas, dividing his once-loyal fanbase.<br /> <br /> ==Upcoming Work==<br /> <br /> Soon to appear in &quot;[[The I.T. Crowd]]&quot;, a new Channel 4 sitcom focusing on the office and home lives of two geeks who work in an IT department. The series is written and directed by Graham Linehan (Father Ted, Black Books writer) and produced by Ash Atalla (The Office). Morris plays the insane boss of the fictional company Reynholm Industries and the series is set in the dingy basement. He appears regularly throughout the series and although this is the first time he has accepted a role that he hasn't written himself, his anarchic style sings through. The series is currently set to appear on Channel 4 around January or February of next year.<br /> <br /> ==Other Information==<br /> <br /> A significant feature of Morris's output is his music. He often composes and performs incidental music for his television shows, notably with ''Jam'' and the 'extended remix' version, ''Jaaaaam''. His parodies of musical performances (such as the Pulp spoof mentioned above and an [[Eminem]] in the Paedophilia special) are very accurate. This is due not only to his musical ability, but also to his understanding of the way in which the original artist created their music.<br /> <br /> In [[2003]] he was listed in [[The Observer]] as one of the [[Observer's 50 funniest|50 funniest]] acts in British comedy. In [[2004]], [[Channel 4]] aired a show called ''[[The Comedian's Comedian]]'' in which foremost writers and performers of comedy ranked their 50 favourite acts. Chris Morris was at number eleven, above many acclaimed comedians including [[Bill Hicks]], [[Peter Sellers]] and [[Eddie Izzard]].<br /> <br /> Morris is widely regarded as someone reluctant to discuss his work, although he has given interviews, albeit rarely. He is currently said to be eager to return to radio - news welcomed by a large part of his considerable fanbase.<br /> <br /> Morris lives in [[Brixton]] with wife [[Jo Unwin]].<br /> <br /> == Works ==<br /> <br /> * ''[[No Known Cure]]'' (August [[1987]]- March [[1989]], BBC Radio Bristol)<br /> * ''Miss Marple'' ([[1988]]-[[1993]], BBC GLR)<br /> * ''[[Loose Ends (radio)|Loose Ends]]'' ([[1989]], [[BBC Radio 4]])<br /> * ''[[Up Yer Loose One]]'' ([[1990]], [[BSB]])<br /> * ''[[The Chris Morris Christmas Show]]'' ([[25 December]] [[1990]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[On The Hour]]'' ([[1991]]-[[1992]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[White Brother?]]'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 3)<br /> * ''[[The Day Today]]'' ([[1994]], BBC 2)<br /> * ''The Chris Morris Music Show'' ([[1994]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye]]'' ([[1997]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Blue Jam]]'' ([[1997]]-[[1999]], BBC Radio 1)<br /> * ''[[Swatman Follies]]'' ([[1998]], BBC Radio 4)<br /> * ''[[Big Train]]'' ([[1999]], BBC 2) Various sketches.<br /> * ''[[Second Class Male/Time To Go]]'' ([[1999]], newspaper column for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Jam (TV series)|Jam]]''/''[[Jaaaaam]]'' ([[2000]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[Brass Eye Special]]'' ([[2001]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The Smokehammer]]'' ([[2002]], website)<br /> * ''[[Absolute Atrocity Special]]'' ([[2002]], newspaper pullout for [[The Observer]])<br /> * ''[[Bushwhacked MP3|Bushwhacked]]'' (2002)<br /> * ''[[My Wrongs 8245 - 8249 and 117]]'' ([[2002]], [[short film]])<br /> * ''[[Nathan Barley]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> * ''[[The I.T Crowd]]'' ([[2005]], Channel 4)<br /> <br /> ==External links==<br /> *[http://www.thesmokehammer.com/ The Smokehammer] - A site by Chris Morris<br /> *{{imdb name|id=0606439|name=Christopher Morris}}<br /> *[http://www.cookdandbombd.co.uk Cook'd and Bomb'd] - A site devoted to the work of Chris Morris and his collaborators<br /> *[http://thepiratebay.org/details.php?id=3391502 Pure Morris] - Morris downloads<br /> *[http://www.trashbat.co.ck/ trashbat.co.ck] - This site is referred to in ''Nathan Barley'' throughout and, notionally, is the creation of the titular character. The [[.co]][[.ck]] domain is as a result of the second level UK domain for ''company'' and the top level domain for the ''[[Cook Islands]]''.<br /> <br /> [[Category:1965 births|Morris, Chris]]<br /> [[Category:English comedians|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:Satirists|Morris,Chris]]<br /> [[Category:University of Bristol Alumni|Morris, Chris]]</div> Chickenspud