One (radio series)

One is a radio comedy series created by David Quantick. It was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 4 Extra.[1] Each episode lasts 15 minutes and consists of a series of vignettes, each of which features only a single voice.

One
GenreComedy
Running time15 minutes
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Language(s)English
Home stationBBC Radio 4
Created byDavid Quantick
Written byDavid Quantick, Kevin Cecil, Dan Maier and others
Produced byJon Naismith
Original release2006 – 2010
No. of series3
No. of episodes18
Audio formatStereophonic sound
Opening themeOne is the Loneliest Number by Harry Nilsson

Subjects

The style and subject matter of the vignettes is varied, but some themes recur.

  • Unusual messages recorded on answering machines.
  • Readings of notes found in a guest book at a vacation home, featuring bizarre complaints.
  • Audio guides to museums that have obscure or bizarre exhibits.
  • Parodies of commentaries in the style of well-known personalities, sometimes read by the personalities themselves, such as Jeremy Clarkson reading "Top Dog", or bird expert Bill Oddie describing, in the style of a nature documentary, a typical encounter between Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner.
  • Recitations of ideas such as personal crises, bad moods, T-shirt slogans etc., in the style of the Shipping Forecast. For example:
"And now with the time approaching 5 pm,
It's time for the mid-life crisis forecast...
Forties; restless: three or four.
Marriage: stale; becoming suffocating.
Sportscar, jeans and t-shirt; westerly, five.
Waitress; blonde; 19 or 20.
Converse all stars; haircut; earring; children;
becoming embarrassed.
Tail between legs; atmosphere frosty;
Spare room: five or six."

Performers

Performers include Graeme Garden, Dan Antopolski, Simon Greenall, Lizzie Roper, and Deborah Norton. Those appearing as themselves include Jeremy Clarkson and Bill Oddie.

gollark: Basically, my WHY JIT compiler sticks your actual code into a skeleton with the busy loop, then embeds that into a shell script which writes a C compiler (embedded at the end of the script using a bizarre quirk of shell scripts where you can just stick anything in after an exit and it won't care) to a temporary file, writes the skeletoned code into another one from a heredoc, executes the C compiler temporary file with the code temporary file as input (it outputs to another temporary file), executes the result, and exits with the return code.
gollark: Void main got popular, so they just allow it.
gollark: Lax compilers.
gollark: Exit codes go to 255.
gollark: `void** main(char* argd, long long argc)`

References

  1. "One". Retrieved 25 October 2013.
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