Drop the Dead Donkey
- Serie de TV
- 1990–1998
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.0/10
1.8 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Sátira política sobre la empresa de noticias de TV Globe Link y su equipo de trabajadores, como los presentadores Henry y Sally, el reportero Damien, el editor Dave, los ejecutivos George y ... Leer todoSátira política sobre la empresa de noticias de TV Globe Link y su equipo de trabajadores, como los presentadores Henry y Sally, el reportero Damien, el editor Dave, los ejecutivos George y Helen, la asistente Joy y el gerente Gus Hedges.Sátira política sobre la empresa de noticias de TV Globe Link y su equipo de trabajadores, como los presentadores Henry y Sally, el reportero Damien, el editor Dave, los ejecutivos George y Helen, la asistente Joy y el gerente Gus Hedges.
- Ganó 1 premio BAFTA
- 9 premios ganados y 8 nominaciones en total
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Opiniones destacadas
During my 2 year stay in the UK, I grew addicted to this show. To a newcomer, the satirical bite to this show gave me the "real" feel of how the dry news of the day was perceived by the public. The writing was great and was brought to life by a brilliant cast! I was elated when I found this show was to be shown on Comedy Central in the US, but it took one viewing to realize that without the daily access to the british news, this show was lost here. Too bad! It was extremely funny! BTW, can someone please tell me what happened to that poor chap, Jerry the camera man?
It is only dated because each episode tried very hard to include topical and amusing news items. All of the main characters are distinctive. George, the editor, is conscientious but seems totally out of place in the newsroom environment as he is a bit of a fragile eccentric. His boss Gus, a bit of a sad bachelor, is the king of Politically correct sound bites. Dave, who's job is a bit obscure, is the office 'stud' as well as being a chronic gambler. Henry, the aged newsreader, has clearly seen better days but is still convinced he is up to competing with Dave. The other newsreader, Sally, has a sex life which is mainly in Lorry parks and service stations. Joy,the officer gofer, is not a girl to be messed with and takes no prisoners. Damian, the young fearless reporter is totally obsessed with fame and has no regards for the feelings of others, particularly his on location staff. Helen, a lesbian, replaced Alex early on as Gerorges No 2. There is a bit of slapstick but the humour, which comes thick and fast, is mainly verbal.
This was my favourite show back in the late 80's and early 90's. I still watch the occasional episode on the original channels' (UK Channel 4) online archive and end up watching 3 or 4 more.
Damien's tabloid/sensationalist "journalism", Henry Davenport, the grand old curmudgeon/geriatric ladykiller, Sally, the original faux-celeb, with her lapses into born again evangelical christianity and the pleasures of lorry driver cabs, Gus, well sometimes I would laugh the second when he walked on set, poor, put upon George the luckless hypochondriac and most of all, the psychotic office admin, Joy, who Id love to believe was the inspiration for Ruth in Ozark.
Give it a try if you can, especially the awards ceremony episode if you want to get off to a flyer.
Genius stuff.
Hilarious show, the humour still holds up and I should know I wasn't alive for any of the topical jokes
Just started watching this again and forgot how good it was. Set in a television newsroom. Brilliant characters George and Gus especially. Good references to the news at the time. The Christmas party episode especially is brilliant.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaDuring the BBC documentary show, Comedy Connections (2003), screened in March 2006, the cast members confessed that most of their lines were actually written on the pieces of paper and clipboards that they were forever looking at during each episode. This was because scripts were written so close to transmission in order to keep it topical, that they often didn't have time to learn all their lines before shooting began.
- Citas
Gus Hedges: Could we interlock brain spaces in my work area?
- Créditos curiososFor the first four series, the end credits invariably featured two characters discussing a recent news item in voiceover. This was changed to a more conventional final scene each week for the last two series due the pressure of filming so close to broadcast.
- ConexionesFeatured in Comedy Connections: Drop the Dead Donkey (2006)
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By what name was Drop the Dead Donkey (1990) officially released in India in English?
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