Alan Carr: Chatty Man Explained

Genre:Chat show
Runtime:50–80 minutes
Director:Chris Howe
Language:English
Country:United Kingdom
Company:Open Mike Productions
Location:The London Studios
Presenter:Alan Carr
Network:Channel 4
First Aired2:[1]
Num Series:16
Num Episodes:181
List Episodes:List of Alan Carr: Chatty Man episodes

Alan Carr: Chatty Man (also simply known as Chatty Man) is a British comedy chat show presented by comedian Alan Carr. The show included interviews with celebrity guests, sketches, topical chat and music. In 2013, Carr won a BAFTA for Best Entertainment Performance.[2]

The show was first on as two pilots in late May 2009. It proved popular with the public and was commissioned for a full series and ran for 16 series from 2009 to 2016. The first episode drew in a total of 2.15 million viewers. To date, the show has broadcast 16 series and 181 episodes. The eleventh series consisted of 18 episodes, making it the longest series to date. A new series began airing on 30 August 2013. In 2013, Carr signed a two-year contract extension with Channel 4 for £4 million.[3] The sixteenth and final series ran from 3 March to 5 May 2016.

In continental Europe and Scandinavia, Alan Carr: Chatty Man was shown on BBC Entertainment a week behind the UK. Old episodes aired on 4Music between 2012 and 2013.[4] The show returned for a Christmas special in December 2017.[1]

Filming

A structural difference from other British chat shows is that, while the guests for each episode of Chatty Man all film on the same day, there is rarely any on-screen interaction between the guests. A guest will be introduced and be interviewed and then they are almost always gone when the next guest comes out. An advantage to this process is that Carr is able to pre-tape interviews with certain guests. If a particular guest is unavailable to be interviewed on the chosen week, an interview can be pre-taped and slotted in during the next week's editing. Often, at the end of a series, the final episode can be made up of three pre-taped interviews (as well as a musical performance) filmed earlier in that particular series' run, thus eliminating one tape date. However, in the later series, all guests returned to the sofa during the final part of the programme.

Issues

An interview with Marilyn Manson was recorded in mid-2009, however, due to Manson's drunkenness, plans to air the interview were scrapped.[5]

Cancellation

On 9 October 2016, it was confirmed that Chatty Man had been cancelled due to low ratings compared to rival show The Graham Norton Show. The show aired a Christmas Special on Christmas Day, which was the last episode.

Chatty Man was replaced by the spin-off show Alan Carr's Happy Hour, which began on 2 December 2016.[6]

Episodes

See main article: List of Alan Carr: Chatty Man episodes.

International broadcasts

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Christmas 2017 highlights – Channel 4 – Info – Press. Channel 4.
  2. Web site: Alan Carr wins entertainment performance BAFTA. 12 May 2013. 4 June 2017. ITV.
  3. News: Eames. Tom. Alan Carr signs new two-year deal with Channel 4. 11 April 2013. Digital Spy. 11 April 2013.
  4. Web site: show: Alan Carr: Chatty Man . 4Music . 12 March 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130208072343/http://www.4music.com/shows/622/Alan-Carr-Chatty-Man . 8 February 2013 .
  5. Web site: Information on Alan and Marilyn Manson . 13 July 2009 . Alancarr.net . 5 March 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091028165119/http://www.alancarr.net/diary/2009/07/angelheart.html . 28 October 2009 .
  6. Web site: it hasn't been axed – I'm doing 'Happy Hour' this autumn and Chattyman is back at Xmas. Told them this at book launch. Alan. Carr.
  7. Web site: Alan Carr: Chatty Man. BBC Worldwide Australia. 2015-08-28. 4 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304082035/http://www.bbcaustralia.com/shows/?programme=52137401. dead.
  8. Web site: Alan Carr Chatty Man . .