The place where everyone hangs out, chats, gossips, and argues
#28065
By Finlo Rohrer
BBC News Online entertainment staff
A new entertainment show set in a bar, featuring a "zany", controversial radio DJ turned television host sounds crushingly familiar. Five's Live With Chris Moyles was billed as part of a new wave of programming that would help the channel firm up a distinct identity.

Instead, Five has been lumbered with a format that is a watered-down version of Channel 4's defunct TFI Friday, right down to Chris Evans' presence as executive producer. It is often said funny, live television is near impossible to pull off, but Moyles does not give himself a head start with a train of bad games and tepid jokes that would be more at home at an irritating freshers' night than on primetime television.

The BBC Radio 1 DJ starts off with a perfunctory run through the funniest headlines of the day, fluffs the telephone number for the competition and keeps referring to how things had run smoothly in the "pilots". He makes much of running in the previous day's 10km fun run, flashing up a sign reading "knackered" that seems perfectly in tune with his performance.

The low point of a well below sea level show is a game where the audience are electrocuted through finger stalls because one of their number can't slide pints down a bar with any level of accuracy. But it is run close in a bizarre segment, when for no obvious reason, Moyles first talks to Five's head of entertainment on the phone and then runs "backstage" to find the bespectacled commissioning editor waiting in a stairwell.

While TFI Friday's viewing figures were never phenomenal, it tapped into a key audience, became a major talking point and initially performed well in a difficult timeslot. But TFI died a painful and protracted death as it was deserted by its viewers and even its host, and this show tries to replicate its forerunner on a lower budget and without the celebrity guests.

Even the most bullish personalities eventually find themselves out of their depths, stuck in their own version of the Peter Principle. For Evans, it was when US "shock jock" Howard Stern's remarks about the TFI host's ex-wife changed his demeanour to that of a quivering schoolboy waiting outside the headmaster's office.

For Moyles, it seems like the transition to television has caught him out. As a DJ he is used to live performance, but his feelings on how the first show was going seemed to be telegraphed by his hands, which fluttered like leaves in a hurricane every time he held something up. And when the highlights of the show are an account of his bleeding nipples and some antediluvian jokes about the audience of 16 student nurses, you realise entertainment hosts are as bad as they were 30 years ago. They just have better haircuts.

Live With Chris Moyles may improve in the coming weeks after teething troubles and nervousness are overcome, but for Five that may be too late.
Last edited by Uglybob on Mon Sep 23, 2002 11:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
By Uglybob
#28066
I remember Chris on local radio and he was funny there. He is sure to do well on television.
Peter Sherwood, UK

Och... it wasn't that bad folks! Give it a couple of days to bed down. I thought the idea of a small audience was quite refreshing.
Bridie, Scotland

No he can't cut it on telly. The Millennium Tube should have given everyone ample proof of this fact, especially when he thought it highly entertaining to tell everyone the "twist" of The Sixth Sense. Nor can he cut it on radio. In fact, the only thing he can cut is a piece of paper with his razor-sharp wit...
Shpeng, England

The first episode was awful, maybe it will improve, or maybe he should stick to the radio.
Brent Forth, England

Boring ... yawn! It promised so much but it was a big let down. I ended watching Channel 4 news instead. If this is the best Chris Evans can come up with after a year away then he better stick with pub crawls in Chelsea.
Chico Mendez, UK

I think his ego is ten times bigger than his talent - he is smug rather than ironic and he comes across as a school bully. Still, maybe Chris Evans can do something with him
Susan Irvine, Northern Ireland

I simply didn't watch it.
Jack Wratten, London, UK

The fact that it's produced by Evans explains a lot about the format of the show - the audience participation, the bar set, the gag segments etc. It reeks of TFI.

Having said that, I did enjoy the show. Moyles has Evans' ability to adapt the show to any situation while on air, and he's pretty funny too. Give it five weeks and it'll be a great ratings puller.
Graeme West, UK

There was nothing more irritating or tedious than listening to Chris on Radio 1. I'm sure he must be worse on telly. Why does he think people want to listen to his moronic banter. Chris Evans would be better off doing the show.
James Wilsey, New Zealand

It's like the return of TFI Friday - only the last episode before it got cancelled.
Andy Carr, UK

A budget version of TGI Friday. No bands, no celebrities and no laughs. Is it any wonder Chris Moyles seemed so uncomfortable.
Daniel Lunnon, UK

All of what makes Chris Moyles such a riveting listen was lost mainly due to the restrictions of live television. His razor-sharp wit and spot-on cynicism had no space to breathe under the script. And the audience had obviously been asked to laugh at the end of every sentence.
Anil Vij, Maidenhead - UK

I thoroughly enjoy listening to Chris Moyles on Radio 1 - it always has me in stitches in the car on the way home from work. But I watched tonights show on Five and all I can say is "Don't give up the day job!"
Marcus, UK

Stick to the radio Chris!
Liam, UK
User avatar
By Angry Android
#28067
I laughed at the electric shock part.
By stevotrash
#28069
i felt the format, well...wasn't really there. It seemed to to rely way to much on 'entertainment news' for the the first serving. Moyles stength has always been to interact with other people, given that he is he sole host reveals his weaknesses.

There needs to be more interaction, whther with the the people phoning in , audience or celbrity guests
User avatar
By Jonny Hoare
#28078
moyles needs to "get in there" do it form the back of the taxi bike bouncing in and outof pubs , however it just looks like a TFI friday lite


Blue peter was shite on day one. Still is.
User avatar
By Nablo.
#28087
The Audience didn't help either they just laughed at everything he said, if he just said "Hi I'm Chris Moyles" sure there would of been some of them gigglying at the back.
There was hardly anything funny in it at all, it was a dissapointment. Even that game they had was pathetic to rushed and nothing funny came out of it.


Needs alot of work if it's going to be as funny as the Radio Show.
By Wingnut
#28089
An ok show but i feel that he needs someone to bounce off of, like he has in his radio show. Why doesn't he bring along Comedy Dave, give it a blast and see the ratings rise along with a funnier show??? Maybe, who knows.....

Cheers

Wingnut
User avatar
By M+L Fan II
#28090
Yes, there didn't seem to be much point to it. Although it is sometimes good not to have too much of a formular, this did really look like he had just rushed to the pub without anything to say. I don't really like the pub setting - I think it would be a lot better if it was in a proper studio. And looking at it from the outside I can imagine that Moyles fans would like to watch it, but I can't imagine anyone who doesn't listen to his radio show tuning in for long.
User avatar
By Sidders
#28097
I wholely agree with most of these comments. Moyles needs to have guests, or at least a 'posse' to interact with. Moyles on his own just isn't funny. The whole thing just seemed very unrehearsed and Moyles was phased on one or two occasions as to what was coming next, this in a way made it funny as it does with the radio show.
I enjoyed it, but only because Moyles was presenting it; if it had been anyone else I would have found it as dull as dishwater.
User avatar
By Adam
#28098
Remember, things can only get better
User avatar
By Uglybob
#28099
women laugh at anything though, blame them.
User avatar
By Adam
#28102
did tfi friday get a bad review when that first started?
By Bridgie
#28103
i very much doubt it
User avatar
By Chris
#28108
You have to remember Evans was a bit of a golden boy around the time TFI started .. and the programme itself wasn't like anything else.

Moyles is facing something of an uphill struggle presenting a semi-clone of something old, and having a TV history which is far from glittering. But that's not news to UMTV ... things will pick up, watch and see.
User avatar
By Adam
#28109
you heard it from the man himself

ad
User avatar
By Jonny Hoare
#28124
not exactly ads- it's chris HARRIS....

it's foolish posts like that cause confusion

Moyles is indeed suffering from Evans's left offs