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A Stab in the Dark (TV series)

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A promotional image, showing Baddiel (l) and Gove (r).

A Stab in the Dark is a British television programme of topical monologues and discussion screened on Channel 4 in 1992, shortly after Channel 4 axed the similarly titled (but unrelated) After Dark. The series ran from 5 June[1] until 7 August 1992.[2]

It was hosted by comedian David Baddiel, television presenter Tracey MacLeod and journalist and critic Michael Gove, later a Conservative MP and minister.[3][4]

The monologues, often containing very dark humour, were delivered straight to camera by each host in turn before a small studio audience on a stark set with numerous staircases.[5] Sometimes relevant guests were invited on, including Conservative MPs Jerry Hayes and Alan Clark. Contributions were also made by Richard Herring.[6] One of the writers on the show was Stewart Lee.[7] A segment was included where Gove examined the rubbish bins of celebrities, including David Attenborough's.[8]

Both MacLeod and Baddiel have described the show as a failure: Baddiel called it "not right in so many ways" and MacLeod called it a "fiftysomething commissioner's fantasy of merging The Tube and That Was the Week That Was...the clips that exist capture the horrible, echoey silence with which most of our monologues were received...[it] turns out it's a good idea to have very strong opinions about stuff before signing up to do a polemical TV series."[9][3] Baddiel also said in 2016 that "I actually think bits of it were interesting and funny. But the presentation was appalling."[10]

Viewing figures were not encouraging and the show ran for a single series; Baddiel was privately asked if he was interested in filming a second series without his co-hosts but declined.[3] It has never been repeated, although in 2016 Channel 4 released eight of the nine episodes to its All 4 streaming service, following increased public interest in Gove after the EU membership referendum.[11]

References

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  1. ^ Date: Friday, 5 June 1992, Publication: The Times (London, England) Issue: 64351
  2. ^ Friday, 7 August 1992 Publication: The Times (London, England) Issue: 64405
  3. ^ a b c MacLeod, Tracey (5 July 2016). "The TV show I made with Michael Gove still gives me nightmares". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  4. ^ Aitkenhead, Decca (5 October 2012). "Michael Gove: the next Tory leader?". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  5. ^ Sexton, David (9 August 1992). "TELEVISION / Hard lessons from the autocue: David Sexton on problems met by presenters, Samaritans, chaperones and schoolteachers". The Independent. Archived from the original on 19 August 2016. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  6. ^ Skelton, Jack. "Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast". Broadway Baby. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  7. ^ The Brexit government is lost in a fog of lies, Stewart Lee, The Observer, 2 August 2020.
  8. ^ @Baddiel (1 July 2016). "there was yes. David Attenborough's included" (Tweet). Retrieved 24 March 2019 – via Twitter.
  9. ^ @Baddiel (1 July 2016). "I did a C4 late night show in 1991 that he was on. It had one series. Very weird not-right-in-so-many-ways programme" (Tweet). Retrieved 24 March 2019 – via Twitter.
  10. ^ @Baddiel (5 July 2016). "thanks L. I actually think bits of it were interesting and funny. But the presentation was appalling" (Tweet). Retrieved 24 March 2019 – via Twitter.
  11. ^ "A Stab in the Dark". All 4. Channel 4. Retrieved 1 August 2016. Episodes 1–7 & 9. The excluded episode 8 includes interview material with Jimmy Savile as a Roll-Royce car owner.
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