Review: Dogface

Dogface

In the UK: Thursdays, E4, 10pm. Probably other times, too.

Extract from Tarquin Forquay-Fothering-Smythe and the Masculinity Hang-Ups of Doom.

112

You arrive in a small, squalid bedsit. Cockroaches scurry over days old pizza boxes. Cigarette ends line the floor, wall to wall. A small television set is in the corner, its picture flickering.

It is clearly not an actual bedsit that someone lives in. It is actually a bedsit furnished and decorated by some extremely posh people who have never had to live in anything less than 4* accommodation, but imagine that is how all working class men everywhere live.

Stepping over the cigarettes, you reach the faded, tatty armchair in the middle of the room and sit down on a stack of Daily Sports. Idly, you flick through the channels on the television, using the stain-caked remote control.

As you watch, you realise that the television has also been provided with programming exclusively from posh boys’ imaginations: Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels; Snatch; and Dogface, a new comedy show from E4.

You stick with Dogface. On it, you see various people swearing. There are jokes about bodily functions. There are animations where dogs are voiced by men progressively trying to show how hard and working class they are by having pub conversations straight out of the left hemisphere of Guy Ritchie’s brain. You idly notice how just about everything reminds you of something you’ve seen done better on another TV show.

Do you:

  1. Decide to leave because you have some emotional maturity and realise that even though it’s from the “writers of Peep Show”, Dogface is just not for you and you haven’t laughed once because it’s all complete arse? Then turn to 127.
  2. Decide to stay and watch Dogface because you are a 14-year-old Nuts reader without much experience of life and who gets beaten up at school a lot? Then turn to 167.
  3. Decide to stay and watch Dogface because you are a middle-class Tarquin who thinks that by watching shows in which you see working class characters talk hard, that by some form of osmosis, you’ll end up hard and be able to join in with pub conversations you’d never normally be invited to join in with, even though you’d get your f*cking head kicked in if you actually did try? Then turn to 173.

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Questions and realisations from television this week

Project Runway: How exactly is Sky One managing to show season three of this already, when it isn’t going to air on Bravo in the US until October or November? How much is it going to annoy US viewers if the results are announced in the UK before they’re announced in the US?

Psych: Have you noticed that people don’t talk about television much on television, even though it’s quite a big chunk of many people’s conversational lives? While you’ll occasionally get a reference to an old show or one that’s made up, you very rarely get mentions of current shows, particularly ones on other networks, too. There are exceptions to this or else Toby wouldn’t have to struggle with all those ‘zonks’. But large numbers of references, as with Friday’s Psych, to Nanny 911, Jake and the Fatman, et al, do make you realise those mentions are few and far between.

Burn Notice: Verisimilitude is a hard thing to pull off, even when it’s with an area that most people don’t know a lot about. Case in point: Burn Notice. It’s been trying really hard to be authentic, although with decreasing success each week (IRA ‘guerilla’? Oh really?). This week was its biggest major fluff so far, when it referred to ‘false flag’ as the name for forged ID, when it’s actually recruiting people into spying or stealing critical documents, by convincing them that they are working for a friendly government or their own government (cf Wikipedia, which is actually accurate on the subject). Still, it does a good job most of the time.

Interestingly, it appears to be quite high budget for the USA Network, judging by its guest stars: Lucy Lawless this week, I think Richard Schiff is on the way very soon, and we already have Bruce Campbell and Sharon Gless in the roster of regulars. Couple that with the cost of filming in Miami, which has gone sky-high thanks to insurance premiums caused by all the hurricanes and we can see that USA is actually putting some effort into it.

Friday’s extra marmalade news

Doctor Who

  • David Tennant advises Scottish acting students to give Taggart a call

Film

Music

British TV

US TV

Get yourself an avatar – if you want

The keenly observant, frequent visitor here will notice I’ve been doing a little redecorating of late. This has been greeted with an almost universal non-reaction, with just a few dissenting voices of opprobrium. Not bad, I reckon. I probably won’t be doing much more re-decorating, since MT4 seems a bit of a bastard to upgrade to, so things should stabilise as they are for a while, at least.

Biggest change for yous guys as part of the gradual Vox-ification of the site is you can now have ‘avatars’ by your comments – that’s piccies of yourself. You may recognise the idea from Blogger, if you use Blogger or visit Blogger sites, that is.

Initially, I tried out Gravatars, for the general reasons that

  1. they’re global – you can use them on any gravatar-enabled site
  2. they’re easy for me to implement, since nice people have already written Gravatar plug-ins for Movable Type.

However, they’re slow little bastards, these Gravatars, and no one seems to want to use them, since all you get out of them is a piccie.

So I’ve now made the switch to MyBlogLog avatars. MyBlogLog is owned by Yahoo! so

  1. is practically instantaneous, since Yahoo! has more servers than most countries
  2. offers you lots of other things, too, if you own a blog, such as visitor tracking, a widget that shows visitors who’s been reading the blog and a display of your blog’s most popular links.

Marvellous, hey? All you have to do is sign up for a MyBlogLog account, upload a pic and stake out your blog, then use the URL of your blog here. All very simple really.

‘Course, it was a pain in the bottie for me, since I had to write two plug-ins, one in PHP, one in Perl, to get the bloody thing to work. But I think it’s worth it.

Thursday’s marmalade sandwich news

Paddington Bear



Doctor Who

  • Which BBC Wales employee just got a £10,000 bonus?
  • The Sarah Jane Adventures starts on the 24th and there’s a preview at Off The Telly [minor spoilers]

Film

Commercials

  • Paddington’s back and he’s giving Marmite a try

Music

British TV

US TV