legrandefromage":4b30mpj0 said:
No-one mentioned that the Brand/ Sachs incident was funny, his live radio show was erudite and articulate
Then if not humour, what purpose did it serve? Satire?
You flatter them to deceive. They thought they were being funny, but really, it was just the excess of ego. As you say, Brand can be very eloquent, and quite humourous - no denial from me. Unfortunately, this instance was rather tragically absent of any of that, or any true humour, it was merely replaced by a certain detached arrogance and ego.
And if nothing else, that was the test, there - not that it may have been a bit naughty - but it wasn't even funny.
legrandefromage":4b30mpj0 said:
Its what happened afterwards that I whined about.
I'm completely happy with what happened next. Both Brand and Ross were writing cheques with their egos, but in this instance, it was intellectually, morally, and humourously bankrupt.
Despite your claims that it was merely placating the hand-wringing, Daily-Wail-inspired, vocallly unrepresentative minority - that's not the point, nor why the Trust would have waded in.
The BBC put their house in order, because Brand and Ross had lost the plot whilst they were waving their wangs around. And worst aspect of it all? It wasn't even funny.
legrandefromage":4b30mpj0 said:
The same happens with Top Gear - no-one complains after a shows screening yet the press pick it up and it snowballs from there. These days, if you fart the wrong smell in the media you can be accused of xenophobia, racsim and anything else you care to think of (other 'isms' are available).
Top Gear has plenty of detractors as well as supporters - probably partly by design.
And it's problems, are it's excesses of ego, led on by what you claim is it's strength or redeeming characteristic - popularity. The problem isn't the subject matter, irreverence, nor perhaps irredeemably the presenters. The problem is the contrived machinations, which are the huge design, scriptedness, and sneering contempt of their demographs.
This isn't a programme simply trying to be not bowed by political correctness - this is a programme that's become caricature-like in it's self-serving need to try and outdo itself with bolshy bobbins that I suspect most of the time JC and the help don't even believe / buy into - they just know that their demographic, slavering "apes" will lap it up, because they haven't realised the punchline.
All the while, they can trust their fans to say bobbins like this - it's detractors hate real-speak, down-to-earth, unpolitically correct, yet somehow correct outbursts - when they seem to be blissfully unaware that most of the time, it's quite unlikely the people spouting it, actually buy it.
legrandefromage":4b30mpj0 said:
The original Top Gear was very dry, the regenerated version tapped into a 'something' that made it very popular. Popularity always attracts critics and scrutiny so anything that anyone said is taken out of context.
That's not the problem. The reboot and for a fair while afterwards, were where they were at their best.
Where it's gone wrong, is the Spinal-Tap-esque turn-it-up-to-11 that's been where it's at for the last few years. That's the same, life over - actors, musicians, TV-show-presenters - they all jump-the-shark when they buy into their own hype.