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John Bishop

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Videos

Guest List

From Live At The Apollo 2010


More John Bishop videos

Guest List
Stag dos and hen nights
Chatting Up Women
John Bishop in Ireland
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Biography

John Bishop performed stand-up comedy for the first time in October 2000, and the following year made it to the final of all the major new act competitions, including So You Think You're Funny, the Daily Telegraph Open Mic Awards, the BBC New Comedy Awards and the City Life North West Comedian of The Year Award, which he won.

In 2002, he was named best newcomer by BBC Radio Merseyside, and in 2004 he won the North West Comedy Award for best stand-up. And in 2009, he was nominated for the Ediburgh Comedy Award

His material is drawn from his life's experiences, from fatherhood to cycling around the world, to playing semi- professional football, to working as a nightclub doorman.

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Reviews

Give It Up For Comic Relief
Live Review
Wembley Arena

Give It Up For Comic Relief

Like so many things involving Russell Brand, Give It Up For Comic Relief was morally ambiguous.

The evening was raising funds for drug and alcohol addiction centres, yet seemed to be a veritable advert for consumption - from Noel Fielding’s tongue-in-cheek ‘Don’t Do Drugs’ reggae number, to Brand saying: ‘Many people watching this at home will be out of their minds on drugs, and that’s fine...’ Even unlikely narcotic advocate Simon Amstell, who needs little chemical help being paranoid or self-analytical,urged: ‘If you’ve never had magic mushrooms, you really must.’

How much of the pro-drugs message made it to BBC Three screens, I don’t know. But abstinence was not a popular option in Wembley Arena itself, which is odd considering the tie-in with Comic Relief. The skips full of drugs consumed by the likes of Noel Gallagher, Kasabian and Brand himself over the years are hardly likely to be Fair Trade, doing damage in the sort of Third World countries that the rest of the Comic Relief organisation works so hard to put right.

But such considerations were not for tonight. Brand wants a change in attitude to drug addiction so it’s akin to the approach to alcohol, that it’s fine to indulge as long as it’s not a dependency. That was one message of the night, the other was that viewers should text ‘give’ to 70005 and donate a fiver to treatment centres, as they watched the entertainment unfold.

And there was certainly a hell of a lot of entertainment for your £5... or £50 if you brought a ticket to the gig, which ran for three-and-a-half interval-free hours. OK, it’s not Mark Watson’s 25-hour effort of last week... but a long time to be passively viewing music and comedy. Wembley’s plastic seats weren’t built for that.

A ridiculously long running time is a hallmark of any big benefit, of course, as too is an eclectic booking policy, to maximise the appeal. There can’t be much Venn diagram overlap between fans of Kasabian and fans of Rizzle Kicks, but here they are sharing a bill. The former were the musical highlight, alongside Gallagher’s High Flying Birds , delivering a welcome reminder of just how impressive they can be with an awesomely epic version of Fire... which proved an entirely inappropriate introduction to Amstell’s low-key introspection.

Other musical acts on the bill were Emeli Sande, Paloma Faith, Jake Bugg, Jessie J and Nicole Scherzinger. The former Pussycat Doll rather gave away one reason for her involvement in the show by announcing the track Domino as: ‘This song is a positive, inspirational song. It’s also my next single.’

Besides the clumsy plug, surely you can’t tell people your own song is inspirational. I’ll decide what inspires me, and generic, club-friendly, R&B/pop sung by a girl in her pants, isn’t it.

As host, Brand warned against such ungenerous thoughts, pointing out that all the acts were performing for free. Throughout the night, he was playful about both the cause, and his own bad-boy reputation, from flirting with the girls to borrowing a female audience member’s mobile to demonstrate how to text a donation and suggesting: ‘This is the BBC and I’m playing with a phone. It’s already risky territory.’ Then turned to the woman and asked: ‘What’s your grandfather’s phone number?’

Later in the show Brand took a messianic walk among his followers in the audience, finding the most funny in banter with a young lad called Alfie, which he knew would never make the TV. ‘They’re not going to show a BBC presenter getting anywhere near a fucking kid,’ he said knowingly.

Brand was at his best, though, when padding for time from backstage as techies were setting up for bands, ad libbing like crazy yet consistently finding the funny. His banter with pal Fielding, especially, was priceless.

Fielding appeared on stage, uncredited, as hard-ass New York cop Raymond Boombox, delivering his ‘anti’-drug message, which might have been more weird than hilarious – an epitaph for much of his output – though it was entertaining watching people figure out who was behind the gaffer-tape ’tache.

He’d been preceded by Jack Whitehall, who seems to be channelling a lot of Michael McIntyre with his upper-middle-class observational incredulity. After something of a slow start, he found his pace with some material about bullying, an old and obvious gag about the campaigning wristbands notwithstanding.

Amstell injected a bold note of cynicism into proceedings. Reverting to his Pop World snidery, he questioned Jessie J’s motives in shaving her head for Red Nose Day – and even whether charity was the best way to combat the complicated problems of poverty. It was nicely contrary, but he could have used more time to expand, especially after dealing with the gear-change of following Kasabian.

After his tumultuous week at the hands of The Sun, Jason Manford delivered a solid but unspectacular observational set that probably won’t be remembered on such a packed night. Eddie Izzard was far more successful. Even if some of his initial flights of fancy into the topics of human sacrifices and Charles I’s reign didn’t quite land, his unique thought processes are always fascinating, and after padding around a while, he finally found the vein of wit, to use an entirely inappropriate metaphor.

Jimmy Carr did what Jimmy Carr does, pointed if unprincipled one-liners – some that he’s been doing for a while, and some new – accompanied by his distinctive heehaw laugh. He set a high gag-rate in the limited timeslot, and if he was setting the taste bar low, so Frankie Boyle could stomp it down through the ground.

‘I’m genuinely surprised to be here,’ he said, surely echoing the thoughts of many a BBC executive. And indeed, he was cut from the ‘almost-live’ broadcast after being brutally offensive with every perfectly-crafted line. Criticising the hypocrisy of Comic Relief while much of the West profits from Third-World strife might have touched a nerve, but it was an harsh anti-Queen setup that provoked the greatest boos of discontent among a surprisingly monarchist crowd. ‘A joke is just a proposition, a “what if”?’ he explained, as he’s probably quite used to doing. But it’s the quality of the punchlines that determine whether real offence is caused, and unlike most low-aiming wannabe shock comics, his sharp writing scores on that count.

Doc Brown, despite being the lowest-profile act on the bill, showed why he deserved to be there with a brief set featuring his boldly political comedy rap about poor tea-making technique, before the comedy was closed with John Bishop making reference to his own, more strenuous, fundraising efforts of last year. Despite spending most of his set doing the admin of emphasising the positive aspects of the night, it was Bishop, not Boyle, who caused the evening’s biggest controversy... by dissing Man Utd, since football is far more important than who rules Britain.

Still, if there was a Champions’ League for comedians, all of this line-up would be in it, ensuring the quality was maintained even if the viewer’s concentration ebbed and flowed over the long night.

Date of live review: Thursday 7th Mar, '13
Review by Steve Bennett
Channel 4 Comedy Gala 2011
Channel 4 Comedy Gala 2011

Wednesday 25th May, '11- O2 Arena
Teenage Cancer Trust benefit 2011
Teenage Cancer Trust benefit 2011

Tuesday 22nd Mar, '11-
John Bishop: Sunshine
John Bishop: Sunshine

Friday 13th Aug, '10-
John Bishop: Elvis Has Left The Building - Fringe 2009
Saturday 8th Aug, '09-
John Bishop: Cultural Ambassador
John Bishop: Cultural Ambassador

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2008 -
John Bishop : Original Review
John Bishop : Original Review

Wednesday 17th Oct, '07-
John Bishop: Stick Your Job Up Your Arse
John Bishop: Stick Your Job Up Your Arse

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2007 -
City Life Final Comedian Of The Year 2001
City Life Final Comedian Of The Year 2001

Show - Misc live shows -
BBC Comedy Presents... [Manchester 2008]
BBC Comedy Presents... [Manchester 2008]

Show - Misc live shows -
John Bishop: Freefall
John Bishop: Freefall

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2003 -
John Bishop: Peddling Stories
John Bishop: Peddling Stories

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2004 -
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Comments

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I think he's brilliant

caine merrick, February 2007


I saw him at the Comedy Store in Manchester on Saturday - he was the MC and by far the best act

John McLear, January 2007


A true comic genius. Do yourself a favour and go and see him. I was crying with laughter. He totally stole the evening for me.

wilko, October 2006


I could not stop laughing. Absolutely had us all in stitches, it was great to see a genius at work.

Sean Johnson, March 2006


Haven't seen him live yet but caught his spot on The Comedy Store on Paramount - bloody funny. Marky Boy 20.01.06

Marky Boy, January 2006


I saw JB at the Comedy Store in Manchester on Saturday. He was the MC and was absolutely fantastic. He is so quick witted and was without a doubt the best comedian of the night. I can not wait to see him again

Alison, January 2006


Anything that looks easy to do is often extremely difficult. The same is true of stand up. John is a true natural. Appearing effortlessy funny but the thought behind his work is evident. First class.

Jason Cairns, December 2005


I have seen John a few times and even if you have heard the stories before the way he brings the audience into his routiene is brilliant. You go home feeling like you've had a really good laugh with one of your best mates - he is natural and extremely funny - if only all my friends were like him.

Ann Dunn, November 2005


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