Of all the sketch shows ever made, 'Naked Video' is my favourite. It started life in 1981 as a BBC Radio Scotland comedy entitled 'Naked Radio'. After becoming a favourite amongst listeners, its producer Colin Gilbert felt it could work as a television show and so in 1986 took it to BBC Television where it ran on BBC2 for a total of five seasons.
For television, the cast from the radio version were retained - Gregor Fisher, Andy Gray, Tony Roper, Elaine C. Smith, Jonathan Watson, Ron Bain ( series 1 & 2 ), Kate Donnelly ( series 4 ) and Louise Beattie ( series 5 ). Joining the television cast were two non-Scottish performers - Helen Lederer and John Sparkes ( series 1-3 ).
'Naked Radio', though not without its share of laughs, was on the whole pretty naff, but when it became 'Naked Video' it developed into something really special. Regular characters included Gregor Fisher's permanently intoxicated Glasweigan street philosopher 'Rab C. Nesbitt' ( who was so popular he was later given his own show ), John Sparkes' inept Welsh poet Siadwell who would recite duff poems from his bedroom, Helen Lederer's bubbly drunk Sloane who would bemoan from a wine bar her luckless love life, the repressed common law couple Bernard & Miriam ( played by Gregor Fisher and Helen Lederer ), Andy Gray's Mr. Cool, a tastelessly dressed narcissist who will stop at nothing to impress the girls and 'The Baldy Man' ( another character played by Fisher who also was spun-off into his own show ), a vain half wit whose pathetic comb-over was to endure many a misfortune.
Much of the humour was tied to topicality - in one sketch a man in a pub asked his friend: ''Why did you change your dog's name from Rex to Nirex?'', to which his friend responded: ''Because I've trained him to bury his s**t in other people's gardens!'' and in another a man gave his views on nuclear radiation - ''Well, I think the effects of nuclear contamination has positive advantages. After all, two heads are better than one!''. Some of the sketches could be rather gory, such as the man being eaten alive by his own false teeth whilst taking a bath. Another sick sketch had a man accidentally decapitating commuters while trimming his hedge.
Spoofs were also commonplace. One such memorable spoof had the entire cast as Scottish comic strip family 'The Broons' ( who are best known in Scotland to readers of 'The Sunday Post' ). Gregor Fisher was hilarious as Maw Broon. The moment where Maw informs Paw ( played by Tony Roper ) that none of the Broon children are his ( ''I got more than milk and cheese from that big farmer at the But 'N' Ben!'' ) had me in fits. The first two series opened with Helen Lederer and Andy Gray reading spoof news items not dissimilar to those in 'Not The Nine O'Clock News' but this was later changed to Gregor Fisher playing Gus, a Gaelic news reader for the Outer Hebrides Broadcasting Corporation ( ''more nonsense in a minute, but first it's time for OHBC News!'' ). Most episodes contained funny songs written ( and sometimes performed ) by 'Naked Video's' musical composer David McNiven. These included 'Sell Your Cardboard Box' ( a song about the exorbitant prices of estate agent properties ), 'Dear Landlord' ( a song about overcrowding in council dwellings ), 'Caledonian Visionary' ( a spoof of The Proclaimers' 'Letter From America' ), 'H20, Where Did You Go?' ( a more serious number concerning the pollution of the environment ) and, my favourite, 'The Long Goodbye', sung by the entire cast at the end of the first series.
UK Gold repeated all five seasons in the mid to late '90's, since then there has been nothing. 2entertain released the first three series on DVD in 2006, though sadly, they do not seem keen to release the remaining two, which considering how popular the show was in its time is perplexing indeed. As Gus of the OHBC would say: ''That's all for now!''.
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