Shows (M)
Macaulay And Co [2009]
Mackenzie Taylor & Friends Featuring The Phone Book Live!
Mackenzie Taylor: No Straightjacket Required
Maggie Service With A Smile
Man And Mouse
Manos The Greek: Everything You Wanted To Know About Greece But Were Afraid To Ask
Marc Hogan: Actions Speak Louder Than Birds
Marcel Lucont's Cabaret Fantastique
Marcel Lucont: Sexual Metro
Marcus Brigstocke: God Collar
Marga Gomez: All That Gomez
Mark Allen's Quite Good Britain [2009]
Mark Butler: The Birds And The Bees
Mark Restuccia And Toby Brown Undiluted
Mark Trenwith: Be My Friend
Mark Walker: Scorpio
Mark Watson's Earth Summit
Mark Watson's Last Ever 24 Hour Show
Martha McBrier: The Anti-Comic
Martin White Presents... Accordions Of The Gods
Mason, Carroll & Graves
Matt Forde: Fordy's Lock-In
Matt Green: Truth & Pleasure
Matt Harvey: Wondermentalist
Matt Kirshen: Shorter Than Napoleon
Matt Price: My Girlfriend Was Attacked By A Small-Time Wannabe Gangster And This Is What I Did About It
Max and Ivan: Televisionaries
Me & Jezebel
Mervyn Stutter's Pick Of The Fringe 2009
Michael Fabbri
Michael Jackson At The Gates Of Heaven And Hell
Mick Ferry: The Comedy Final
Mick Sergeant: Lifeboat
Micky Flanagan: Spiel
Microcomedy
Midnight Hour
Mike Amato: Romeopathic: The Comedy of Sex Addiction or Trying To Fill One Hole With Another
Mike Bubbins: It's Not The End Of The World (But You Can See It From Here)
Mike Wozniak: Clown Shoes
Miles Jupp: Telling It Like It Might Be
MInority Report
Misery Eats Company
Monsieur Montpellier: Entertainer Extraordinaire!
Monsters From My Id
The Moonfish Rhumba Show
Moore & Metcalfe in Fun Dryer
Morecambe
The Most Important Show of the Day
The Most Spectacular Show At The Free Fringe
Mould & Arrowsmith's Inventions
Moz and the Meal
Muck-Gical Mystery Tour
The Muffia: Tight Women
Mugging Chickens
Myth-Illogical Improv
Show Details
Mark Watson's Earth Summit
Show type: Edinburgh Fringe 2009
Starring Comic:
Mark Watson

Mark Watson's Earth Summit


+
Description

In 2007 Mark Watson was one of 100 volunteers chosen to attend Al Gore’s climate project training programme. For the first time in the UK, he attempts a semi-comic version of Gore’s famous climate change lecture.

+
Reviews

Mark Watson's Earth Summit
Live Review
Soho Theatre

Mark Watson's Earth Summit

As 15,000 delegates meet in Copenhagen to try to save the planet, a few dozen others gather in Soho Theatre’s studio room to hear a comedian give his version of Al Gore’s Oscar-winning Inconvenient Truth PowerPoint lecture. Which will get more done? Let’s hope it’s Copenhagen….

Mark Watson is one of the former Presidential candidate’s official missionaries, trained up to go out and spread the word – the only stand-up, incidentally, to be recruited to the task. The result is a show with a split personality, which has all the core elements of Gore’s po-faced wake-up call, but enlivened by Watson’s not exactly deferential commentary.

Because of its genesis, this hour is not a natural comedy show, and gets funnier the more the easily distracted Watson deviates from the standard text. It suggests a fully-fledged stand-up show on this vital topic – hitherto largely overlooked by the comedy fraternity – is probably long overdue, but this hybrid comes with mixed results.

Only Watson could combine the apocalyptic with the apologetic in quite such a likeable way. In his typical enthusiastic but self-effacing style, Watson never claims this is a comedy hour; rather a more entertaining – and briefer – version of the original lecture delivered in a slightly-tongue-in-cheek way by an avowed layman. Emissions into the atmosphere, for example, are dumbed down to the slightly less scientific term, ‘crap’.

The science bits he presents are therefore simplistic – eg explaining the greenhouse effect – or less than rigorous. Showing a graph that shows rising carbon dioxide levels is almost identical to rising global temperature is not evidence of cause and effect, although there hundreds of peer-reviewed studies that fulfil that task. Even with the evidence in the recently leaked emails, there is virtually no debate among those who know what they are talking about that global warming (a) humans’ fault and (b) catastrophic if unchecked. And maybe assuming the audience have a bit more knowledge on climate change – thanks in large part to the success of Gore’s film – would speed things along in the early stages.

Watson has updated the lecture to include the latest figures, and to denounce the irresponsible tabloid coverage. Other deviations from Gore’s original include appointing audience monitors, rather like he did in his 24-hour shows, to ensure he doesn’t go on for too long, get too complex, or become too depressing – a successful ploy to make us all feel more involved. And rather than using the picture of a forlorn solitary polar bear on a tiny island of ice to depict the dramatic impact of rising temperatures, he uses an even more dramatic image: himself weakened with sunstroke in Australia last year.

The terrifying graphs of temperature rises and population explosion, however, speak for themselves. Even so, when Watson coyly but proudly announces that he is expecting a child, the audience reaction is a genuine ‘aaah’ rather than churlishly denouncing such a reckless contribution to the population. No one’s that heartless…

Some easy jokes are to be had by tagging punchlines onto experts’ quotes, while more distinctively ‘Watsonesque’ are his self-deprecating comments on his PowerPoint skills. Yet the feeling is he keeps on being drawn back to the approved script, when it would be funnier, more passionate and more convincing if he were to address the topic on his own terms – as the rant against Jeremy Clarkson proves.

But you have to keep reminding yourself that Mark Watson’s Earth Summit is not meant to be that comedy show, but a conduit for Gore’s wake-up call. On that count – even if Watson will inevitably be preaching to the choir – job done.

Date of live review: Tuesday 8th Dec, '09
Review by Steve Bennett
+
Comments

No comments are currently available for this show.


Have your say:
:
:
:
 
+
This comic also appears in: