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Talk show with celebrity guests.
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2007   2006   2005   2004   2003   2002   … See all »
4 wins & 8 nominations. See more awards »

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A mix of music, comedy and celebrity chat hosted by fast-witted comic Jonathan Ross.

Stars: Jonathan Ross, Stephen de Martin, Ian Parkin
The Big Breakfast (1992–2002)
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The UK's breakfast TV show on Channel 4. A very lighthearted mix of interviews, news, quizzes and features.

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Weakest Link (2001–2003)
Game-Show
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In this hybrid of "Inquizition" and "Survivor," contestants test their trivial mettle as a team and against each other. After each round of play, the team votes out the most expendable ... See full summary »

Stars: Anne Robinson, John Cramer, Anthony Anderson
Pointless Celebrities (TV Series 2010)
Game-Show
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7.1/10 X  

Celebrities try to find the most obscure answers to win money for their chosen charities.

Stars: Alexander Armstrong, Richard Osman, Anton du Beke
The Big Fat Quiz of Everything (TV Special 2016)
Comedy | Game-Show
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.1/10 X  
Director: Mick Thomas
Stars: Richard Ayoade, Darcey Bussell, Jimmy Carr
The Big Fat Quiz of the Year (TV Special 2015)
Comedy | Game-Show
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7.8/10 X  
Director: Mick Thomas
Stars: Jimmy Carr, Richard Ayoade, Jo Brand
The Big Fat Quiz of the Year (TV Special 2014)
Comedy | Game-Show
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7.7/10 X  
Director: Mick Thomas
Stars: Jimmy Carr, Richard Ayoade, Melanie Brown
The Big Fat Anniversary Quiz (TV Special 2015)
Comedy | Game-Show
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8/10 X  
Director: Mick Thomas
Stars: Jimmy Carr, Russell Brand, Warwick Davis
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6.5/10 X  

A game show hosted by Ant and Dec filled with stunts, sketches, and special guest appearances.

Stars: Anthony McPartlin, Declan Donnelly, Kirsty Gallacher
TFI Friday (1996–2015)
Comedy | Music | Talk-Show
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7.1/10 X  

Comedy, guest interviews and live bands in the studio, from a bar in London's riverside studios.

Stars: Catalina Guirado, Chris Evans, Sharleen Spiteri
TV Burp (TV Series 2001)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7.4/10 X  

Harry Hill stars in this surreal comedy show, revolving around the previous week's shows on British television.

Stars: Harry Hill, Steve Benham, Brian Belo
Masterchef Goes Large (TV Series 2005)
Game-Show | Reality-TV
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6.9/10 X  
Stars: John Torode, Gregg Wallace, India Fisher
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Cast

Complete series cast summary:
Michael Parkinson ...
 Himself - Host / ... (332 episodes, 1971-2007)
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Talk show with celebrity guests.

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4 January 2000 (USA)  »

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1.33 : 1
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Trivia

The first series of the show, including interviews with John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Peter Ustinov, Benny Goodman, Spike Milligan and Orson Welles, was wiped on the orders of a BBC committee. All that survives of the first series is a monochrome telerecording of his interview with Shirley MacLaine. See more »

Connections

Featured in Dream Me Up Scotty! (2013) See more »

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User Reviews

 
The golden chat show of the golden age
23 March 2008 | by (England) – See all my reviews

The 1970s was the golden age of British television for so many reasons, not least because it was a time when television executives still assumed their viewers were intelligent enough to watch somebody sitting in a chair and speaking at length, without the need for regular interruptions and jokes from the interviewer. Michael Parkinson, unlike today's chat show hosts, was not a comedian, he was a journalist, and his talent was simply for researching his subjects and showing an interest in what they had to say. The remarkable thing about Parkinson was the variety of the guests. His abilities as an interviewer meant that he was able to successfully deal with guests as different as raconteurs (Kenneth Williams, Peter Ustinov), poets (John Betjeman), authors (Leslie Thomas), musicians (Duke Ellington) and scientists (Jacob Bronowski). Parkinson never dominated the show, he was quite happy to let the guests do that. As a result, he gave British television its greatest chat show, a standard that most subsequent chat shows didn't even bother to attempt.

In the 1970s the big stars rarely gave interviews, there were three television channels and no videos, DVDs or Internet. Parkinson had provided a rare opportunity to see these people. Clearly, things could not be the same when, in 1998, the BBC decided to resurrect the series, 16 years since it had ended. A great deal had changed in television over that period. As the 1990s progressed, the talk show increasingly became the domain of comedians as hosts: Jonathan Ross, Clive Anderson, Frank Skinner and Graham Norton. As such, chat shows became more lightweight and more about the host than the guest. Also, with the explosion of the media in the 1980s and 1990s, another effect was the decline in the meaning of celebrity. The revival of Parkinson lasted for nearly ten years but, unfortunately, the show was dying a slow death, with the man all too often having to interview celebrities so minor that you couldn't have made them up in the 1970s: Trinny & Susannah, Simon Cowell, Sharon Osbourne and Gordon Ramsay for examples. As hard as he tried, Parkinson could never convince me that he was as interested in these people as the great stars of the original series. I certainly wasn't.

In fairness, when he had a good guest he was still better than anyone else. One of his greatest abilities was to interview celebrities who are instinctively private and dislike the spotlight on themselves as subjects. He was better than anyone else at making these stars feel comfortable and able to talk, with Rowan Atkinson and Bobby Charlton being prime examples. I actually think that from what I have seen, only his contemporaries David Frost and Melvyn Bragg rival Parkinson in this regard.

Parkinson has now wrapped up his chat show. He has said himself that his show was the last survivor of the talk shows based on conversation. Now, all we have are the comedy shows based on the American format. In some ways it's a shame, in other ways it isn't. Most of the really fascinating stars are now dead or very, very old. Very few modern stars captivate the attention for very long, as Parkinson found in the last few years. Because even Parkinson couldn't make people interesting if they simply weren't.


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