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Eric Idle Criticises Modern TV

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Eric Idle, the Monty Python co-founder, has voiced sharp criticism of modern television, saying it no longer captivates him—apart from sports.

 

In a recent interview promoting his new tour, Idle called mainstream TV formulaic: largely reality shows, game shows, news, or programmes of people trying to “bonk each other on islands.” He believes streaming services have siphoned off TV’s originality, saying “they’ve uninvented television.” Idle contrasted this with his preference for watching cricket and supporting his football club, Chelsea, as his few remaining habits of tuning in.

 

Despite his dissatisfaction, Idle praised South Park for its audacious political commentary, particularly its treatment of Donald Trump. He noted that humour has a unique power: “Comedy is saying the right thing at the wrong time … telling truth to power.” He argued that leaders like Trump and Hitler fear comedy because being mocked undermines their image.

 

Idle reflected on his early days with Monty Python, when the group had freedom over their material without interference from executives.

 

 He recalled how the BBC placed their show in a late Sunday slot, a time when few were watching—and that lack of oversight allowed for creativity that, he implies, rarely exists now. Idle also acknowledged the passing of his troupe mates—Graham Chapman (1989) and Terry Jones (2020)—and how Monty Python’s influence shaped sketch comedy for decades.

 

Through his critique, Idle is grieving more than just changing modes of TV: he’s mourning what he sees as the loss of risk, invention, and truth in television comedy.

 

 

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Key Takeaways:

 

Idle finds modern TV stale. He believes many shows follow repetitive formulas and that streaming has hollowed out what made television distinctive.

 

Comedy with edge matters. He praises South Park and its courage to mock power, seeing comedy as a vital counterbalance to authoritarian impulses.

 

Creative freedom has declined. Idle wistfully recalls a time when Monty Python operated without executive constraints—something he says is rare in today’s TV landscape.

 

 

Adapted From:

 

https://www.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/monty-python-legend-eric-idle-35946042

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