Quizzes & Puzzles15 mins ago
North/South divide
15 Answers
Don't know if I am posting this in the right place, but am interested to know if such a thing as a North/South divide exists regarding comedy. I am sure it does.
I am from London, and prefer to watch Only Fools and Horses to (say) Last Of The Summer Wine. I prefer the comedy of Jim Davidson or Mike Reid to Ken Dodd or Roy Chubby Brown.
Also (ducks) I find Peter Kay totally unfunny, and prefer The Office and Extras to Phoenix Nights or The Royle Family.
I know it's all about opinions, but I was just wondering.
I am from London, and prefer to watch Only Fools and Horses to (say) Last Of The Summer Wine. I prefer the comedy of Jim Davidson or Mike Reid to Ken Dodd or Roy Chubby Brown.
Also (ducks) I find Peter Kay totally unfunny, and prefer The Office and Extras to Phoenix Nights or The Royle Family.
I know it's all about opinions, but I was just wondering.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Lesisblue. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm a proud Southerner, but would never put the words "comedy" and "Jim Davidson" in the same sentence. Erm, except just then, obviously.
I can't say as I really care where comedy comes from as long as it makes me laugh. For example, I laugh at both Bill Bailey (Southern) and Ross Noble (Northern) because of their material, not because of their accents - and I certainly don't suffer from the seemingly common belief that having a Scouse accent automatically makes you God's gift to comedy.
I can't say as I really care where comedy comes from as long as it makes me laugh. For example, I laugh at both Bill Bailey (Southern) and Ross Noble (Northern) because of their material, not because of their accents - and I certainly don't suffer from the seemingly common belief that having a Scouse accent automatically makes you God's gift to comedy.
i think there's a divide to some extent, but it's probably just a case of different types of humour, different language and different references that's used by different comedians and in different sitcoms.
i've got a northern family/background, but i was born and brought up in the south, and i think it's partly due to this that i've got a wide range of comedy tastes.
i certainly know some southerners who just don't get the humour in comedies such as phoenix nights/peter kay or the royle family and would much rather watch something like the office or extras.
also, age (along with many other factors) has as much to do with comedy taste as anything else. i think you'd probably find the audience for ken dodd, mike reid and last of the summer wine is older than the audience for comedians such as bill bailey and ross noble.
and like the majority of the population i agree with littleoldme - jim davidson is certainly NOT a comedian - he's just an irritating tit, who thankfully doesn't grace our TV sets any more!
i've got a northern family/background, but i was born and brought up in the south, and i think it's partly due to this that i've got a wide range of comedy tastes.
i certainly know some southerners who just don't get the humour in comedies such as phoenix nights/peter kay or the royle family and would much rather watch something like the office or extras.
also, age (along with many other factors) has as much to do with comedy taste as anything else. i think you'd probably find the audience for ken dodd, mike reid and last of the summer wine is older than the audience for comedians such as bill bailey and ross noble.
and like the majority of the population i agree with littleoldme - jim davidson is certainly NOT a comedian - he's just an irritating tit, who thankfully doesn't grace our TV sets any more!
Wasn't Tommy Cooper a Bristolian? As far as I am concerned The South starts at an east-west line passing roughly just to the north of Oxford. Woodstock is in The Midlands, Oxford isn't. The North, I suppose, begins at a similar line passing roughly just to the north of Chesterfield. The part of England in between those lines (ie The Midlands) is the real England. As far as comedy goes, I don't see where Davidson, Reid, Dodd OR Brown come into the equation - on the other hand, funny is funny, regardless of which part of the country its perpetrator hails from.