Episodes
Episode | First Broadcast | Repeated | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
20060905 | 1/4. David Frost was one of the first British broadcasters to subject politicians to the kind of scrutiny and satire which is now the norm. Sir David and guests discuss the effect of That Was The Week That Was and the 60s satire boom. | ||
20060912 | 2/4. Sir David Frost is joined by Norman Tebbit, Denis Healey and Gerald Kaufman to dissect the way in which politicians adapted to the rapidly-changing medium of TV in the 1960s. | ||
20060919 | 3/4. Sir David Frost continues his investigation of how TV comedy has affected the political process throughout his career. Guests include Rory Bremner, John Lloyd and Simon Hoggart. | ||
20060926 | 4/4. Sir David Frost concludes his investigation of how TV comedy has affected the political process. He looks at effective satirists from recent years, such as Spitting Image and Rory Bremner. | ||
20070215 | David Frost presents a series looking at how television comedy has affected the political process during his career. 3/4. He is joined by Rory Bremner, John Lloyd and Simon Hoggart. | ||
20070216 | David Frost presents a series looking at how television comedy has affected the political process during his career. 4/4. This edition celebrates some of the most effective satirists of recent years, including Spitting Image and Rory Bremner. | ||
01 | 20060905 | 20070213 | Sir David and guests discuss the effect of That Was The Week That Was and the 60s satire boom. |
01 | 20070213 | He begins by discussing his own That Was The Week That Was and the 1960s satire boom. David Frost looks at how TV comedy has affected the political process during his career David Frost presents a series looking at how television comedy has affected the political process during his career. 1/4. He begins by discussing his own That Was The Week That Was and the 1960s satire boom, which exposed the shortcomings of our political masters. | |
02 | 20060912 | 20070214 | Sir David Frost is joined by Norman Tebbit, Denis Healey and Gerald Kaufman to dissect the way in which politicians adapted to the rapidly-changing medium of TV in the 1960s. |
02 | 20070214 | David Frost is joined by Norman Tebbit, Denis Healey and Gerald Kaufman. David Frost looks at how TV comedy has affected the political process during his career David Frost presents a series looking at how television comedy has affected the political process during his career. 2/4. He is joined by Norman Tebbit, Denis Healey and Gerald Kaufman to discuss the way in which politicians adapted to the rapidly-changing medium in the 1960s. | |
03 | 20060919 | 20070215 | Sir David Frost continues his investigation of how TV comedy has affected the political process throughout his career. Guests include Rory Bremner, John Lloyd and Simon Hoggart |
03 | 20070215 | David Frost is joined by Rory Bremner, John Lloyd and Simon Hoggart. David Frost looks at how TV comedy has affected the political process during his career | |
04 | 20070216 | This edition celebrates some of the most effective satirists of recent years. David Frost looks at how TV comedy has affected the political process during his career | |
04 LAST | 20060926 | 20070216 | Sir David Frost concludes his investigation of how TV comedy has affected the political process. He looks at effective satirists from recent years, such as Spitting Image and Rory Bremner |