Michael McIntyre's Comedy Roadshow | |
---|---|
Intertitle
|
|
Genre | Stand-up comedy |
Directed by | Paul Wheeler |
Presented by | Michael McIntyre |
Narrated by | Peter Dickson |
Opening theme | "Burn Baby Burn" by Ash |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 13 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Andrew Beint Addison Cresswell Katie Taylor |
Producer(s) | Anthony Caveney |
Running time | 45 minutes |
Production company(s) | Open Mike Manchester |
Release | |
Original network |
BBC One (2009—2011) BBC HD (2009) BBC One HD (2010—2011) |
Picture format | 1080p (HDTV) |
Original release | 6 June 2009 | – 25 December 2011
Chronology | |
Related shows | Live at the Apollo |
External links | |
Website |
Michael McIntyre's Comedy Roadshow is a British stand-up comedy television series hosted by comedian Michael McIntyre from different venues around the United Kingdom and Ireland. The first series was broadcast with six episodes in 2009. Each episode features a routine from McIntyre, followed by three other comedians before the headline act. A second six episode series in the same format followed in 2010.
A special one-hour Christmas episode transmitted on 25 December 2011.
The series was commissioned in February 2009 following the success of Live at the Apollo. Hosted by stand-up comedian Michael McIntyre, the series aimed to bring acts "new to a BBC One Saturday night audience". The series is often repeated on Comedy Central and is broadcast in high definition on BBC HD and Comedy Central HD.
Michael McIntyre's Comedy Roadshow returned for an hour long Christmas special on 25 December 2011 at 10.30pm.
In Australia, season one and two aired back-to-back on ABC1 each Saturday at 9:20pm (moved to 9:35pm for season two) from 18 September 2010. Episodes also made available from the ABC iview catch-up service.
The series peaked with 5.5 million viewers for the first episode, which also gained 1.17 million views on BBC iPlayer, the third highest for the year to 13 December 2009 behind Top Gear. In The Times, David Chater said that "If this roadshow is anything to go by, the quality of stand-up in Britain is at an all-time high." The series was nominated in the Best Comedy Entertainment Programme category for the 2009 British Comedy Awards.
In 2011 the programme was nominated in the National Television Awards but lost out to ITV Comedy, Benidorm. It's also nominated for the Entertainment Award in 2012 as well as Michael being nominated as best Entertainment Performance. The programme won the Entertainment Award, but Michael lost out as presenter to Ant and Dec.