Ricky Gervais
12I've only seen the extras a few times, it was his best work, but that doesn't say much at all. The episode I recall most vividly featured David Bowie. The appeal seems to be the novelty of the guest stars, because the funniest gag on that episode was the debate about giving the homeless man money on the street. Even then, I found Gervais' character insanely annoying. I think he writes all his characters that way because he himself is annoying, and is incapable of acting any other way. Everything I've seen him in, including interviews, is just the same damn character a million times. I think his shows would benefit from now having him in them, because he does work with some pretty talented people.
His stand-up was the single worst stand-up I ever saw. One of the routines I saw revolved around him holding up drawings of various animals doing gay sex while he made crude remarks about 'having it in the blowhole'. The punchline was a drawing of two Ricky Gervais going at it.
This was the opposite of funny.
A few more inches, and Ricky Gervais would qualify for the shortest tragedy thread!
His stand-up was the single worst stand-up I ever saw. One of the routines I saw revolved around him holding up drawings of various animals doing gay sex while he made crude remarks about 'having it in the blowhole'. The punchline was a drawing of two Ricky Gervais going at it.
This was the opposite of funny.
A few more inches, and Ricky Gervais would qualify for the shortest tragedy thread!
Ricky Gervais
13He was on Letterman the other night (that's where I first saw the clip that I posted above).
Letterman was asking him about his cat that plays the piano.
Ricky: "Yeah, it's 400 dollars a lesson...or 20 pounds, however you want to look at it."
Then he looked at the audience and said, "how does it feel to be a third world country".
Ricky Gervais rules.
Letterman was asking him about his cat that plays the piano.
Ricky: "Yeah, it's 400 dollars a lesson...or 20 pounds, however you want to look at it."
Then he looked at the audience and said, "how does it feel to be a third world country".
Ricky Gervais rules.
drew patrick wrote:Peripatetic will win.
Ricky Gervais
14Just about every member of the PRF has been making that remark for years, they just haven't had the opportunity to say it on TV.
CRAP!
CRAP!
Ricky Gervais
15For any fans of Ricky Gervais, I would suggest downloading all the radio shows he did with Steve Merchant and Karl Pilkington at XFM.
Find them all here.
Perfect for long car journeys.
Find them all here.
Perfect for long car journeys.
"Why stop now, just when I'm hating it?" - Marvin
Ricky Gervais
16He was on Letterman the other night (that's where I first saw the clip that I posted above).
Letterman was asking him about his cat that plays the piano.
Ricky: "Yeah, it's 400 dollars a lesson...or 20 pounds, however you want to look at it."
Then he looked at the audience and said, "how does it feel to be a third world country".
Ricky Gervais rules.
Yeah, lame.
I am with sox, Ricky Gervais is not that funny, actually pretty unfunny most of the time.
There is a thingy where he and Larry David talk about "the craft" on YouTube that is painfully self-congratulatory and basically lacking in any sort of meaningful insight, about "the craft."
"I am a white, middle-class English bloke."
Yeah, we hadn't noticed, putz.
CRAP
Ricky Gervais
17Christ, that's awfully cynical. I don't even see how you can take that from that Gervais/David video at all - I thought it was interesting, even insightful in places. Though it strikes me as odd that you'd watch an lengthy interview if you don't like him in the first place.
Ricky Gervais
18The interview with Garry Shandling made him seem genuinely out of his depth.
I don't like him either.
I don't like him either.
run joe run wrote:Kerble your enthusiasm.
Ricky Gervais
19Shandling comes across as just a massive tool. It's shitty when your heroes turn out to be dicks.
If we're going to talk about interviews, how about the one he did with Larry David? David's more of a contemporary of Gervais than Shandling is and the kinship between the comedy of the two men shines through.
If we're going to talk about interviews, how about the one he did with Larry David? David's more of a contemporary of Gervais than Shandling is and the kinship between the comedy of the two men shines through.
Marsupialized wrote:You are shitting me
Ricky Gervais
20Does Extras teeter a bit too close to the same exact kinda humor as Curb for anybody else?