Not The Nine O'Clock News
Created | Updated Oct 4, 2019
First broadcast in 1979, Not The Nine O'Clock News was the first satirical comedy show on British television since the legendary That Was The Week That Was in the mid-1960s.
Transmitted at 9pm on BBC2 - directly opposite the 9 o'clock news on BBC1, hence the title - the show took news film clips, edited them together and used them out of context to poke fun at the royal family and political figures of the day, particularly Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. This idea broke new ground in television and paved the way for shows such as the puppet satire Spitting Image in the 1980s, while the show's anarchic approach was television's first taste of the alternative comedy scene which would take off in the early 1980s with The Young Ones and The Comic Strip.
These film clips punctuated sketches performed by a group of then unknown comedy actors: Rowan Atkinson, Mel Smith, Pamela Stephenson and Chris Langham. After the first series, Langham was replaced by Griff Rhys Jones, completing the best remembered line-up.
Among the show's most memorable sketches are:
'Nice Video, Shame About The Song' which is a spoof of pretentious pop videos.
'Constable Savage' is a swipe at racism in the police force in which a white policeman repeatedly arrests a black man for offences such as 'urinating in a public convenience' and 'looking at me in a funny way'.
'I Like Trucking' is a parody of truck drivers which caused outrage with its graphic scenes of hedgehogs being run over1.
The show ran until 1982, during which time the cast also hit the UK album chart three times with recordings of songs and sketches from the series: Not The Nine O'Clock News, Hedgehog Sandwich and The Memory Kinda Lingers.
In the mid-1990s, the BBC had the show re-edited in an attempt to make it 'faster and funnier than ever'. These new versions are still regularly repeated, but much of the topical material has dated quite badly, and jokes about Jimmy Carter and Michael Foot are almost certainly lost on today's target audience.
Where are They Now?
Mel Smith and Griff Rhys Jones continued their partnership in their long running sketch show Alas Smith & Jones, and formed their own TV production company.
Rowan Atkinson went on to star in the hugely successful Blackadder series, and created Mr Bean in several TV specials and two full-length movies (the first directed by Mel Smith).
Pamela Stephenson married comedian Billy Connolly and retired from showbusiness to become a psychiatrist.
Chris Langham is still a comic actor and has recently been seen in the sitcom Kiss Me Kate and the spoof documentary series People Like Us.