2015: the year in TV

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It’s been a momentous year for television. Mainly in the sense that I entered the world of a TV show that I love, Gogglebox, which proceeded to take over my life. When I say it’s a show I love, that love has not been reduced or tainted by the privileged position of having met, interacted and forged modest bonds with its participants. Do you get me?


Although I have met, interviewed, interacted with on Twitter and worked in real life wife a large number of actors, writers, directors and other key crew on TV shows, and toil silently in the backroom on scripts for most of the time (most of it, this year, in the basement of development), my most important relationship with television takes place in my living room, or at my computer. And that’s fine with me. For the time being.


There is always a danger when you meet your heroes that they turn out to have feet of clay. As a viewer, I always regarded the Gogglebox families and couples not as heroes, or gods, or celestial beings, but something even stranger: as close friends. Being invited across their threshholds during April and May this year to meet their pets, drink their coffee, eat their biscuits and use their facilities was a cosmic experience unlike any other in my quarter-century in the media; not only does Gogglebox infer intimate knowledge on the besotted viewer (and there are more of us now than ever before), it makes you feel as if you know your way around the houses, even though you don’t, as you only ever view them through one permanently fixed frame. Thanks to the book publisher Macmillan, I was able to go through the looking glass. It has been a rare treat, one not to be repeated. I’m proud of the book. I hope it raises some smiles this Christmas.


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Back in front of my own TV, on the appropriate side of the glass, I watched loads of great telly. I shall list my Top 22 in no particular order, although you may have heard me say already that season two of HBO’s The Leftovers was my favourite show of 2015, just as season one of this beguiling, heartbreaking drama about loss and grief was my favourite show of 2014. The news that HBO have ordered up a third (albeit final) season made my year.


The Leftovers, HBO (thus Sky Atlantic)

Detectorists, BBC Four

First Dates, Chanel 4

The Last Kingdom, BBC Two

Fargo, Fox

Catastrophe, Channel 4

Gogglebox, Channel 4

Wolf Hall, BBC Two

This Is England 90, Channel 4

Unforgotten, ITV

Cradle To Grave, BBC Two

The Walking Dead, Fox

1864, BBC Four

The Game, BBC Two

Ripper Street, Amazon/BBC One

Masterchef: The Professionals, BBC Two

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, HBO

The Last Panthers, Sky Atlantic

Game Of Thrones, HBO

The Frankenstein Chronicles, ITV Encore

Sound Of Song, BBC Four

Modern Life Is Goodish, Dave


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Having sifted 22 to the top. Let’s doff the cap to another batch, all of which have entertained or informed me, in some cases both, and gripped me to the last episode (or in the case of the single drama The Go-Between, gripped me to the end of the only episode). In another year of countless first episodes dutifully watched and second episodes left untouched (From Darkness, River, season two of The Returned, Witnesses, Cuffs), sometimes through sheer bulk of telly to get through but mostly due to failure of engagement, I really appreciated those shows that pulled me back in and had me ’till goodbye.


Poldark, BBC one

Toast Of London, Channel 4

The Hunt, BBC One

True Detective, HBO

Broadchurch 2, ITV

The Go-Between, BBC One

The Saboteurs, More4

The Good Wife, More4

Penny Dreadful, Sky Atlantic

Lewis, ITV

Mad Men, Sky Atlantic

The Daily Show (prior to Jon Stewart leaving), Comedy Central

W1A, BBC Two

Veep, Sky Atlantic

Looking, Sky Atlantic

The Man In The High Castle, Amazon

Togetherness, Sky Atlantic

Show Me A Hero, Sky Atlantic

Silicon Valley, Sky Atlantic

The Great British Bake Off, BBC One

Dawn Chorus, BBC Four

Bitter Lake, BBC iPlayer

Fear Itself, BBC iPlayer


I must pay tribute to North One TV, the production company which keeps asking me to be a talking head on shows like The Best Of Bad TV on Channel 5, and – one for the New Year – The Greatest Animated Movies. I really enjoy doing these, as it’s basically talking about telly and films, which I’d be doing anyway! I’m not on the screen that much any more, except for the little one on the Guardian website, so it’s a pleasure to be asked.


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It curdles my insides to say it, but I think this is the first year for some time where my name didn’t appear in the credits for something on TV (or at the cinema, like last year, hem hem), unless you count the reruns of Not Going Out on Dave, which are on a loop. Oh, it goes without saying that I am still co-developing a TV drama, the one I was co-developing this time last year, but as anybody who’s been in development will concur, it’s better to still be developing it than no longer developing it. It’s not dead until pronounced so by the broadcaster. Here’s to another year of it. All of it.


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Published on December 21, 2015 12:28
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