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Everyone’s favourite bumbling British TV personality, Alan Partridge, is back with a hysterically funny new podcast series.
Everyone’s favourite bumbling British TV personality, Alan Partridge, is back with a hysterically funny new batch of episodes ...
Alan Partridge started life as a dogged sports reporter on Radio 4’s delicious current affairs parody On The Hour, back in 1991. He was a broadcaster who was always comfortable in front of the ...
"Alan Partridge" will certainly appeal to die-hard fans of the character, whom Coogan created more than 20 years ago as a fictional sports reporter on the BBC's current affairs radio show "On the ...
The one-liners can be hilarious, but Alan Partridge is not consistently funny. The conclusion drags on and has a forced kind of redemptive arc, even as it mocks the premise. Some of the movie ...
Anybody. "Alan Partridge" isn't a big movie, nor one filled with huge laughs; its quiet humor comes from uncomfortable situations, half-swallowed insults, jokes that (purposefully) fall flat.
Alan Partridge has been criticised by viewers for a joke made about Ukrainian refugees on 'Comic Relief''s Red Nose Day.
There’s no true American analog for Steve Coogan’s Alan Partridge, a character that Coogan’s been playing for 30 years as of this month. Sure, the United States has long-running characters ...
It is almost as if Alan Partridge knew his series of ace comedy virals for Foster’s Funny had just passed over one million views… Although the slight boozy overindulgence he enjoys in the ...
Alan Partridge is meant to be a sexist, delusional dinosaur – so why is he still so relevant? It seems everyone from scandal-hit politicians to Richard Madeley has been given the Partridge ...
But he has only himself to blame. He is so brilliantly funny as hapless DJ Alan Partridge that his fans won’t let him give up the role. As imagined by Coogan, Partridge is a pathetic figure.