Review: Mrs Brown’s Boys, BBC1
The jokes are excellent — a little extreme in parts, but that’s welcome in these days of bland TV — the acting’s superb, the accents brilliant and the writing top notch.
The jokes are excellent — a little extreme in parts, but that’s welcome in these days of bland TV — the acting’s superb, the accents brilliant and the writing top notch.
AS a band you had some magificent highs, topping the charts and playing to sold out stadia around the world.
There were giant beach balls, a flying stage, fireworks, a bizarre but equally impressive rap, guns firing T-shirts into the crowd, and at the back of the stage, a gas-powered flaming sign that threatened to engulf the drummer.
R.E.M. return to form with a flourish on their latest long-player Collapse Into Now.
HOW the mighty are fallen! At one time Laurence Llewellyn Bowen was the crown prince of home improvement shows.
THIS programme has been on so long that if anyone has any reels of an early episode they should simply take them along to a roadshow, get them valued and cash in.
BEGINNING with the obligatory Shine On You Crazy Diamond, The Australian Pink Floyd Show proved yet again why they are widely lauded as the ‘best tribute band in the world’.
NOW in its 26th year, this sixties revue shows no sign of slowing down if the reaction of the audience – and their numbers – is anything to go by.
BRITISH produce is under threat and who can we count on to save it — French chef Michael Roux Jr?
DO you love thy neighbours? You probably don’t even know who they are.