ChatterBank4 mins ago
Tom Allen's You're Fired.
58 Answers
Is there a less funny or cruder show
than this, his motley guests don't get
a laugh until they come out with the 'F'
word, puerile entertainment'
than this, his motley guests don't get
a laugh until they come out with the 'F'
word, puerile entertainment'
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I always used to switch over to the you're fired bit after the apprentice but not looked once since Tom Allen started doing it. I really can't stand him, he's obviously flavour of the month at the moment with the beeb. He seems to think he's the first and only gay comedian and has to make sleazy references to the fact at every opportunity.
Not a fan of Tom Allen at all, he builds his act around being gay and fancying any vaguely attractive man he sees! He appears on the spin off show from GBBO with Jo Brand and I always fast forward when he's on. I remember once he kept going on and on about a male contestant, but no-one was laughing. Can't wait for him to have his day!
I think Mr Allen's personnel is designed to be 'waspish', which is a character a lot of gay men assume to deflect the daily atmosphere of hostility in which they live.
It can be amusing, but not when over-cooked, as Mr Allen now seems to be doing.
Perhaps he is ageing the 'vinegary old queen' persona that Paul O'Grady used on his highly popular, and recently abandoned, Radio Two show.
It can be amusing, but not when over-cooked, as Mr Allen now seems to be doing.
Perhaps he is ageing the 'vinegary old queen' persona that Paul O'Grady used on his highly popular, and recently abandoned, Radio Two show.
MissTerious - // I would agree Naomi //
Then you also appear to believe that 'showbusiness' is some sort of hermetically sealed bubble where only gay and gay-friendly people live, and they never have the tiresome trouble of actually interacting with the wider world where homophobia is rife.
And of course gay people emerge fully qualified for a show-business career ready formed for them - they don't have to work their way up to that level with the standard knockbacks and nastiness that the real world offers, and doesn't make exceptions for gay people.
It's a nice perception, but that's all it is, a perception - and a wrong one.
Then you also appear to believe that 'showbusiness' is some sort of hermetically sealed bubble where only gay and gay-friendly people live, and they never have the tiresome trouble of actually interacting with the wider world where homophobia is rife.
And of course gay people emerge fully qualified for a show-business career ready formed for them - they don't have to work their way up to that level with the standard knockbacks and nastiness that the real world offers, and doesn't make exceptions for gay people.
It's a nice perception, but that's all it is, a perception - and a wrong one.