MeeBOX

MeeBOX is a television pilot broadcast on 22 June 2008 on BBC Three. It is a sketch show written by and starring Adam Buxton. The show is set on a video hosting website, featuring sketches involving archive manipulation, cut ups, sketches, revoiced clips, animations, spoof pop videos, lip-synching and mock TV clips. Its theme music was composed by Jonny Greenwood of Radiohead, a friend of Buxton.[1] The pilot was not picked up.[2]

Sketches

The pilot included a range of sketches:

  • Famous Guy - A big-name Hollywood actor. He appears in a series of sketches in which he is interviewed about his films.
  • Sign Language - A signer gives an explanation to a clip, while Buxton provides a false commentary on the footage.
  • 10,000 Things Which Are Sooo Crap - A parody of list shows.
  • General Tony - A man dressed up as an alien gives his responses to other people's web videos and comments.
  • Talking Independent Film with Ken Korda - A film review show hosted by Ken Korda, a character who appears in Buxton's previous television series The Adam and Joe Show.
  • Songs - A series of comic songs appear in the show. These are a hymn given rude subtitles called "Songs of Praise: When I Was Nasty", "The Sausages Song" and "Don't Make me a Target".
  • Software Tutorial - A man gives a guide to some film-making software, designed to create a blockbuster movie.
  • Today on Xantiar - A mock news clip, showing footage of Queen Elizabeth II, but claiming the footage is from an alien planet.
  • Baaaddad's Clichéd Memories of Punk - Buxton's father Nigel Buxton presents his views on punk rock.
  • Phone Expert Accident - A manipulated clip of a mobile phone expert having his head inflated.
gollark: Esolangs fractures into two divided by different opinions on game theory WHEN?
gollark: It works if they're *identical* and know they'll both make the same decision.
gollark: Taking one box is also rational because if you do you get 1 million and if you don't you get 10000.
gollark: Predicting which box I'll take effectively means running a high accuracy simulation of me. Thus, since I may be being simulated when I choose, my choice does affect the (eventual) box content, thus take one box.
gollark: No. I've thought about this.

References

  1. "Dead Air Space". radiohead.com. 2008-06-22. Archived from the original on 2011-02-17. Retrieved 2011-03-08.
  2. "MeeBox". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 2008-08-11.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.