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Document : 1621
Title    : TV critic review column on Best Ever Spitting Image & Friday
Night With Jonathan Ross
Author(s): Paul English

Copyright holder(s): Derek Stewart-Brown: on behalf of The Scottish Daily
Record and Sunday Mail Ltd

Text

If Cameron becomes PM, I'll be Spitting mad: Best Ever Spitting Image ITV,
Sun Friday Night With Jonathan Ross BBC1, Fri

IF Tory leader David Cameron gets in at the next general election, it's all
Spitting Image's fault.

As producer John Lloyd pointed out in Sunday night's near-perfect nostalgia
fest, a generation of punters became politically aware by watching Fluck
and Law's rubber dummies voiced by comics.

These days, it's just George Bush with his hand up our Government's
backside, and nobody's laughing.

Best Ever Spitting Image reinforced the fact that half of us wouldn't know
the Shadow Cabinet from our bedside cabinet.

There was plenty to titter at, although I had a sense of nagging discomfort
watching Edwina Currie and Michael Heseltine getting all chucklish as they
recalled how they and their Tory cronies felt they'd made it if they were
featured. Of course, Edwina. Those years of Tory pillage were just a bit of
a laugh, weren't they?

Spitting Image's greatest hits was a laytex laughathon with an ultimately
sad ending.

It seems there's Fluck-all chance of TV's most important popular political
programme ever coming back.

Which, in retrospect, made what happened on Friday night on BBC1 all the
more meaningful. Jonathan Ross, a man who invariably interviews himself
more than his guests, swapped ticklestick for hacksaw as he welcomed "Toff
Idol" David Cameron.

Ross pinned his colours to the mast early. "You're the first politician
we've had on the programme," he said. "But I read that you listen to my
Radio 2 show, so you can't be a complete pwick." Ten minutes of
surprisingly edgy stuff followed from Wossy, whose verbal rallies with
Cameron rivalled those of previous guest Martina Navratilova on the tennis
court.

He refused to give the credibility-hungry Tory an easy ride on a chat show
which often feels like it's one question away from "What's your favourite
colour, Mr Willis?"

Maybe if politics were digested in this arena every week, rather than by
some old gonk with a comb-over, more of us would give a damn that this guy
might soon end up running our country.

Ross grilled the ruddy-faced Old Etonian on Iraq. He implied he only
supported Tony Blair's decision to go to war because he knew it would
hasten Labour's demise.

Ross challenged him on drugs. And, in a moment that should go down in TV
history, he asked the leader of the Opposition if he ever indulged in
self-pleasure while thinking about Maggie Thatcher.

Almost a week later, I've just I about winched my jaw off the floor. At
£16million, Jonathan Ross's publicly-funded salary is obscene.

But at least we can take some comfort in his public joust on our behalf
with a braying "yah" who thinks Dragoness Thatcher's decisions have been
vindicated.

"The Labour party haven't undone a lot of what she did," proclaimed
Cameron, proudly.

Maybe, David. But then you can't un-bulldoze a shipyard, can you?


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Text audience
Adults (18+): General public: Audience size: 1000+

Text details
Method of composition: Wordprocessed
Year of composition: 2006
Word count: 523
General description: Newspaper TV review

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Published: Publisher: Daily Record
Publication year: 2006
Place of publication: Glasgow
Part of larger text: Contained in: Daily Record 29/06/06
Page numbers: 25

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Author
Author details
Author id: 1165
Forenames: Paul
Surname: English
Gender: Male
Decade of birth: 1970
Educational attainment: University
Age left school: 17
Upbringing/religious beliefs: Catholicism
Occupation: Journalist, Daily Record Features Writer
Place of birth: Paisley
Region of birth: Renfrew
Birthplace CSD dialect area: Renfr
Country of birth: Scotland
Place of residence: Glasgow
Region of residence: Glasgow
Residence CSD dialect area: Gsw
Country of residence: Scotland
Father's occupation: Social club manager
Father's place of birth: Port Glasgow
Father's region of birth: Glasgow
Father's birthplace CSD dialect area: Gsw
Father's country of birth: Scotland
Mother's occupation: School meals auxiliary
Mother's place of birth: Port Glasgow
Mother's region of birth: Glasgow
Mother's birthplace CSD dialect area: Gsw
Mother's country of birth: Scotland

Languages:
Language: English
Speak: Yes
Read: Yes
Write: Yes
Understand: Yes
Circumstances: Work / home etc