...on Television

(Redirected from Tarrant On TV)

...on Television or ...on TV, is a long-running late night television programme on ITV. The programme, which was made first by LWT and then Granada Productions, featured a number of clips from unusual or (often unintentionally) amusing television programmes and commercials from around the world.

...on Television
Also known as
  • Clive James on Television
  • Floyd on Television
  • Tarrant on TV
  • It's Clarkson on TV
GenreComedy
Starring
Country of originUnited Kingdom
No. of series21
Production
Running time30–60 minutes (including adverts)
Production companies
Original release
NetworkITV
Release19 September 1982 (1982-09-19) –
5 October 2006 (2006-10-05)
Release25 December 2020 (2020-12-25) –
29 August 2021 (2021-08-29)
Related
  • Tarrant's Ten Years of Television
  • Tarrant on CCTV

The show was first presented by TV critic and journalist Clive James between 1982 and 1988, followed by celebrity chef Keith Floyd in 1989. Chris Tarrant took over as presenter from 1990 to 1996, with James briefly returning in 1997. Tarrant resumed as presenter from 1998 until the show ended in 2006. On Christmas Day 2020, the show was revived for a one-off special with Jeremy Clarkson as host. Another episode with Clarkson aired in April 2021, with a series of three episodes being broadcast after Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? in July 2021.

Early years

edit

The show first began in 1982, hosted by the Australian television critic and satirist Clive James. The series showed funny and bizarre clips from TV shows and adverts from around the world, most notably from the Far Eastern countries of Japan and Korea. The series popularised the Japanese show Endurance which followed numerous contestants as they underwent painful tasks around the world.

After James joined the BBC in 1988, celebrity chef Keith Floyd was brought in for a six-episode series in 1989 before Chris Tarrant took over in 1990.

Later years

edit

For its tenth anniversary in 1992, Tarrant presented a compilation series entitled Tarrant's Ten Years of Television (later 10 Years on TV), which showed clips from the past five series and specials. It also included extra footage that was deemed unsuitable for transmission in the original show.

In 1997, Clive James returned as host for two series, produced by Watchmaker Productions for Carlton Television, in 1997 and 1998.

Tarrant on TV

edit

The show continued to show bizarre clips from all over the world. But they now often included nudity, strong language, and crude or dark humour. Examples include a Japanese crying contest, a Japanese contraception advert, a profane North Korean propaganda film, and an advert showing eggs being fired from the bottom. Tarrant on TV also began to cover more violent and unusual programming such as the Jerry Springer Show or The Man Show.[1] Additionally, many acclaimed public information films were shown from around the world, particularly road safety campaigns from the Transport Accident Commission of Australia and Land Transport New Zealand.

With a different presenter, the format was also altered to include a special guest. On 4 April 1992, Mel Brooks appeared on the show. The show's content focused on different types of humour in Sweden, America and Israel. However the celebrity guest format was dropped by LWT because it was deemed too expensive to pay for cinematic clips and a guest star each week.[citation needed]

The last series of Tarrant on TV was in 2005, with a special broadcast in October 2006. The theme tune between 1996 and 2006 was Syd Dale's "The Penthouse Suite".[citation needed]

It's Clarkson on TV

edit

On Christmas Day 2020, a revival of the show was broadcast, with Jeremy Clarkson hosting a review of the year's television.[2][3][4] A second episode was broadcast on 2 April 2021 with a series following in July 2021.[5][6][7] Now produced for ITV by Expectation Entertainment,[8] the series has moved away from featuring as many foreign television clips (such as Japanese game show Endurance) as its predecessors, with British dramas such as White House Farm, Quiz and Des critiqued alongside English-language shows on streaming services, such as Love is Blind and Selling Sunset.

Transmissions

edit

No full series was aired between 1985 and 1988, in 1991, 1992, 1994 and 1997; however special episodes were often broadcast.

Regular series

edit
Series Start date End date Host
1 19 September 1982 31 October 1982 Clive James
2 23 October 1983 4 December 1983
3 28 October 1984 2 December 1984
4 5 March 1989 16 April 1989 Keith Floyd
5 21 January 1990 25 February 1990 Chris Tarrant
6 (Tarrant's Ten Years of..) 13 February 1993 20 March 1993
7 (10 Years on..) 19 March 1995 16 April 1995
8 8 September 1996 13 October 1996
9 4 January 1998 22 February 1998
10 3 January 1999 21 March 1999
11 4 January 2000 28 February 2000
12 21 January 2001 18 March 2001
13 3 May 2002 5 July 2002
14 12 September 2002 7 November 2002
15 2 January 2003 25 May 2003
16 6 February 2004 22 March 2004
17 (The Best of...) 10 June 2004 1 July 2004
18 8 October 2004 23 November 2004
19 30 May 2005 27 June 2005

Revived series

edit
Series Start date End date Host
1 4 September 1997 16 October 1997 Clive James
2 11 November 1998 21 December 1998

Specials

edit

Hosted by Clive James:

  • Special 1: 5 January 1986
  • Special 2: 29 March 1986
  • Special 3: 28 June 1986
  • Special 4: 28 December 1986
  • Special 5: 1 January 1987
  • Special 6: 19 April 1987
  • Special 7: 11 October 1987
  • Special 8: 1 January 1988

Hosted by Chris Tarrant:

  • Special 9: 30 December 1990
  • Special 10: 4 January 1992
  • Special 11: 4 April 1992
  • Special 12: 11 July 1992
  • Special 13: 26 September 1993
  • Special 14 (Tarrant's Ten Years of..): 17 September 1994
  • Special 15 (Tarrant's Ten Years of..): 24 September 1994
  • Special 16: 27 December 1997 (Christmas special)
  • Special 17: 10 May 1998 (Best of TV Series 9)
  • Special 18: 16 May 1999 (Best of Series 10)
  • Special 19: 7 May 2000 (Best of Series 11)
  • Special 20: 25 March 2001 (Tarrant on CCTV)
  • Special 21: 20 January 2002 (Tarrant on CCTV)
  • Special 22: 7 July 2002 (Tarrant on CCTV)
  • Special 23: 23 November 2002
  • Special 24: 14 December 2002
  • Special 25: 5 May 2003 (Tarrant on CCTV)
  • Special 26: 4 September 2003
  • Special 27: 23 October 2003
  • Special 28: 7 November 2003
  • Special 29: 24 December 2003
  • Special 30: 13 May 2004 (Japan special)
  • Special 31: 5 July 2004
  • Special 32: 31 August 2004
  • Special 33: 5 October 2006

Hosted by Jeremy Clarkson:

  • Special 34: 25 December 2020
  • Special 35: 2 April 2021

It's Clarkson on TV series

edit
Series Start date End date Host
1 10 July 2021 29 August 2021 Jeremy Clarkson

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Chris Tarrant: The all-rounder | Media". The Independent. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 20 May 2016.
  2. ^ "It's Clarkson On TV Episode 1". Press Centre.
  3. ^ Darvill, Josh (5 December 2020). "Jeremy Clarkson to review the year's TV in ITV special". TellyMix.
  4. ^ "Jeremy Clarkson takes on Charlie Brooker with Screen Wipe-style TV special". 11 November 2020.
  5. ^ "It's Clarkson on TV". Archived from the original on 4 January 2022. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  6. ^ "It's Clarkson on TV (TV Series)".
  7. ^ "It's Clarkson on TV". Archived from the original on 11 July 2021. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
  8. ^ "It's Clarkson on TV".
  9. ^ "When is Japandemonium on TV? What channel is it on, and what's it about?". Radio Times.
  10. ^ "Japandemonium - ITV". What's on TV.
  11. ^ "Japandemonium TV Show - Season 1 Episodes List - Next Episode". next-episode.net.
  12. ^ "ITV's new series Japademonium to celebrate the "best and funniest" Japanese game shows". Radio Times.
  13. ^ Bennett, Steve. "Jon Richardson to host Comedy Central clip show : News 2020 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide". www.chortle.co.uk.
  14. ^ Kanter, Jake (23 September 2020). "Comedy Central UK Greenlights 'Guessable' & 'Channel Hopping With Jon Richardson'".
  15. ^ "News: Comedy Central Shows For Jon Richardson And Sara Pascoe". Beyond The Joke. 23 September 2020.
edit