David Baddiel

David Baddiel

Date of birth: 28-05-1964

David Baddiel’s first brush with comedy was in 1982 when he wrote and performed in the Sixth Form revue at The Haberdashers Aske School, Elsetree, before developing his talents while a student at King's College, Cambridge. As well as graduating with a double-first in English Literature, he was vice president of the Footlights.

On leaving, he performed stand-up on the London circuit, while working on a PhD entitled Seductive Innocence: The Little Girl In Victorian Sexuality. There he met Robert Newman [then called Rob] and they started writing sketches for the Radio 4 show WeekEnding, which solicited work from any writers who wanted to contribute.

They were subsequently paired up with Steve Punt and Hugh Dennis for the Radio 1 comedy show The Mary Whitehouse Experience, which began in 1989. Two years later it transferred to BBC Two for two series.

Baddiel continued to work with Newman for the 1993 series Newman and Baddiel in Pieces –and later that year became the first comedians to play Wembley Arena, prompting the now clichéd saying that ‘comedy is the new rock and roll’. However, the duo’s relationship was under huge pressure at the time, and they subsequently split with some acrimony.

Baddiel then formed a partnership with Frank Skinner, who at the time was lodging at his London flat, recreating their living-room banter in both Fantasy Football League – which ran on BBC Two from 1994 to 1996, returning on ITV for the 1998 World Cup and 2004 European Championship ¬– and Unplanned, which started life as an Edinburgh Fringe show in 2000 before transferring to the West End and, eventually, TV.

In 1996, the pair teamed up with the Lightning Seeds’ Ian Broudie to record the England football anthem Three Lions, which has been a terrace favourite ever since.

Outside of these comic partnerships, Baddiel created the 2001 Sky One sitcom Baddiel's Syndrome and devised the Radio 4 panel show Heresy, which attempts to challenge received opinion. In 2009 he appeared in the 3rd series of Skins, alongside his real-life partner.

He has written three novels : Time For Bed, Whatever Love Means and The Secret Purposes and writes a regular literary column for The Times. He also wrote the 2010 comedy film The Infidel, starring Omid Djalili as a Muslim who discovers his parents were actually Jewish.

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David Baddiel is Cat Man

Comic makes a series about feline friends

David Baddiel is to follow up his powerful Channel 4 polemic about antisemitism – with a new series about cats.

The broadcaster says the pets have long been overlooked on TV, and that this new three-part show, entitled Cat Man ‘sets out to challenge the marginalisation of moggies’.

The comedian said: ‘I’ve been in many meetings over many years with TV commissioners and at the end of them, they often say "and do you have any other ideas?" And I always say: "Yes, there should be a TV show about cats." And mostly they’ve laughed, thinking I’m joking. 

‘I’ve never been joking. 

‘There’s always been TV about dogs. Which is fine. But meanwhile there are 12.5 million pet cats in the UK. 29 per cent of households have a cat. The internet’s been won by cats, so why not TV? 

‘Anyway, finally, Channel 4 has realised I’m not joking and commissioned it. Which is great, because I just really love cats, and this will allow me to hang out with them a lot. 

‘I presently have four of my own, and I’m very, very happy to disprove the myth that someone with that many must be a mad old cat woman, by being on Channel 4 as an out and proud mad old cat man.’

One reason for the broadcaster’s change of heart could be that the show is to be ‘made in partnership with' Everypaw Pet Insurance.

The show is being made by Clarkson's Farm producers Expectation, whose creative director Ben Wicks called the series ‘a love letter to the best creatures on earth’.

‘Dogs have dominated our screens for decades and this show redresses the balance,’ he added. ‘Also, science says watching cats can reduce stress by up to 50 per cent so technically this show is medicine.’

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Published: 10 Oct 2025

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