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This Time With Alan Partridge

 This Time With Alan Partridge
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TVTItem
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This Time With Alan Partridge
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ThisTimeWithAlanPartridge
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2019 British comedy seeing the return of Steve Coogan as Alan Partridge... in more ways than one. A second series was released in 2021.Over twenty years after his first (and last) television hosting gig ended ignominiously with the shooting of a guest and the punching of a senior programming executive with a chicken, Alan Partridge has (somehow) returned to BBC television. After the regular male host of This Time, an evening magazine program (think The One Show) has suddenly fallen ill, Alan is drafted to temporarily act as the host alongside Jennie Gresham, the chipper young female host. Eagerly grasping what may be his last chance to return to broadcast television and escape the dreary world of local digital radio, Alan launches into his new role with all the talent, ability, charm and skill he is able to muster.Chaos, naturally, ensues.
 This Time With Alan Partridge
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2024-04-16T22:47:18Z
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2024-04-16T22:47:18Z
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Plot-Triggering Death
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Plot-Triggering Death: Played with. John Baskell isn't actually revealed to be dead until the second episode, but the illness which leads to his death creates the opening on This Time that Alan fills, thus starting the plot.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_1616e13
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Ripped from the Headlines
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Ripped from the Headlines: When trying to convince the producer that he can get Princess Anne on the show, Alan refers to Prince Andrew's November 2019 reputation-destroying interview with Emily Maitlis (who had previously appeared on the show As Herself).
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_18d15922
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Title Drop
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Title Drop: The Quavers (the vocal harmony group who appear in the fifth episode) refer to the show as being "This Time with Alan Partridge", to Jennie's bemusement (and Alan's unconvincing attempt to feign bemusement).
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Celebrity Resemblance
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Celebrity Resemblance: Guests include a Daniel Craig lookalike and an Irish Alan lookalike.
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The Bully
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The Bully: Alan is this towards Simon, and to a lesser extent towards guests and interviewees he doesn't like.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_22a60f6a
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Nepotism
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Nepotism: Much as he tries to pretend otherwise, Sam Chatwin clearly only has a media career because his father was the Head of Factual Programming at the BBC.
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Chekhov's Gun
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Chekhov's Gun: Simon's big screen comes in handy for Alan when Jennie tries to stop the negative tweets about John Baskell from being read out by getting the crew to replace the Twitter feed on the main screen with a generic countryside picture. Sam having stolen Alan's place on the presenters' sofa also works to Alan's advantage here, as Simon's screen (located on the left of the studio) is in direct line of sight from the guests' sofa, enabling Alan to carry on reading out the tweets.
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Verbal Tic
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Verbal Tic: Alan has a few, mostly involving mispronounced words.
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Funny Background Event
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Funny Background Event: A few. A few of the tweets shown on Simon's screen (when he gets it to work) are either rife with spelling mistakes or bear no relation whatsoever to what's being discussed on the show. Jennie and Simon give puzzled looks to each other and the crew when the camera isn't on them while Alan goes off on his tangents which bear little or no relation to what's being discussed on the show. During one of Alan's outdoor pieces to camera, an off-camera passer-by can be heard to shout: "AH-HAAA!", an occurrence which is repeated when he runs out of the studio in the climax to series 2. Paying close attention the background in several shots during Alan's bungling attempt to fit up Monty Don for accepting bribes shows an older man and a younger woman getting quite frisky with each other, with the implication being that Alan is accidentally exposing someone's tryst with his mistress or a call-girl to the entire nation.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_2764d432
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Bitch in Sheep's Clothing
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Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: The other people who appear in front of the cameras on This Time aren't really much better than Alan, they're just more charming and adept at hiding it. Jennie seems to be all smiles and charm (although this, naturally, starts to slip the more time she spends next to Alan), but she's very quick to steal the off-air jokes he makes that actually work and use them herself on-air. It is also implied at times that she is a bit of a two-faced prima donna behind the scenes. John Baskell is memorialized as a saintly and beloved television fixture with lots of charity work under his belt, but Alan's frequent slip-ups on-air gradually make it clear that Baskell was a career-focused sleaze who cared little for his devoted fans. Revelations toward the end of his memorial episode reveal that he was also a sexual predator who used his charity work to find, groom and abuse his victims. Sam Chatwin is an oily, manipulative jerk who throws his weight around, belittles Alan, makes no secret about how he is planning on stealing Alan's job and is clearly only is where he is because of nepotism, but has sufficient charm to win the audience over. Ruth Duggan is never anything less than polite, friendly and professional on the surface, but she's never forgiven Alan for a slight in their past (according to him, he accidentally split shandy on her) and so is determined to undermine and embarrass him, usually by acting as the Commander Contrarian to everything he says.
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Lampshade Hanging
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One of the tweets received after Alan's rant at the end of series 2 compares it to Howard Beale's "mad as hell" rant in Network.
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Hidden Depths
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Hidden Depths: On occasions, Simon actually ends up on the presenting sofa. Once there, he's shown to have a fairly natural presenting nature. Alan, of course, is not happy about this — and is quick to pick up on (and point out) the minor faults that Simon makes due to his inexperience with the world of TV broadcasting, even though Alan himself makes similar mistakes. Alan's marksmanship, previously mentioned in Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa, gets a mention in the SAS feature. He does manage to get two killing shots on each of the four targets ... the only problem is, he shot the four hostage targets rather than the four terrorist targets. Still, pretty impressive since this is Alan we're talking about here.
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Scunthorpe Problem
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Scunthorpe Problem: At play when Alan visits the British Library and interviews a linguist for a feature about swearing. Inevitably, given the subject matter and the fact that this is a feature for daytime TV, several words that she says are bleeped out — but one of them is quite clearly "country".
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So Beautiful, It's a Curse
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So Beautiful, It's a Curse: It isn't overt, but Jennie due to her role as an Expy for the gorgeous young women who end up presenting current affairs shows alongside much older, less attractive men and for whom their beauty is emphasized and played up no matter how talented they are at actually presenting. She's very leggy; one unseen segment has her donning a leotard, and Alan, John Baskell and Sam Chatwin are varying degrees of lecherous toward her.
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Noodle Incident
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Noodle Incident: We get a few references to feature segments that aren't shown, such as Alan shouting through a letterbox at the home of the man who invented the hand-dryer, Alan interviewing Malala Yousafzai while cycling around Oxford with her on a tandem bicycle, the disabled guy who needed his house repaired, and Jennie in a leotard.
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Surprisingly Realistic Outcome
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Surprisingly Realistic Outcome: In the cocktail segment, Alan drinks too much (Jennie merely sips at her cocktails, while Alan downs two and then starts on one of her discarded ones), starts slurring his speech and then falls asleep on the sofa at the end of the episode, forcing Simon to step in to do the final piece to camera.
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Stylistic Suck
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Stylistic Suck: Oh so much, as per usual for an Alan Partridge production. Averted in that This Time, prior to Alan, was clearly a middle-of-the-road, unexceptional daytime current events show watched largely by older people. It has the usual set-up of an experienced male host and a young, attractive female host, manufactured banter and reports that fail to go in-depth and are forgotten by the next segment — all in all, fairly typical. Once Alan comes onboard, however, things start to fall apart due to his... petty nature constantly surfacing; off-topic tirades; inability to understand the tone of each segment; shameless self-promotion; uneasy way with people; petty rivalries with other people on the show; insistence on bringing Sidekick Simon on as a comedic element and giving him far too much to handle, then frequently becoming outraged when Simon fails to meet Alan's standards; and clearly having been given too much creative control over some of the pre-recorded segments — for example, what should have been an easy-going report about the Peasants' Revolt involving a battle re-enactment group becomes a gory fight scene right out of movies like Braveheart, and the interview with one of the last surviving women who flew Spitfires during World War II note  Truth in Television, as 10% of the pilots in the civilian Air Transport Auxiliary, which flew military aircraft between factories, assembly plants and airfields, were women ends up being all about Alan getting to fly in a Spitfire.
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Butt-Monkey
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Butt-Monkey: Simon, who (as in his previous appearances in the Alanverse) exists mostly to be humiliated by Alan.
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Commander Contrarian
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Commander Contrarian: Ruth Duggan, the roving reporter on whom Alan once accidentally spilled shandy. Because of this, she responds to Alan by contradicting everything he says, usually while on air. This even extends to when he is asking her whether she is happy about getting engaged, and when he repeats (word-for-word) a statement that Jennie had previously said that Ruth had agreed with.
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Wham Line
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_4e7c4536
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Wham Line: Near the end of the final episode of series two, Alan discovers that pictures of him in blackface (well, too much fake tan make-up) have been leaked to the tabloid press and makes the ill-advised decision to show them on TV so he can offer a weak excuse, jeopardising his career and costing him the chance to interview Princess Anne. Then we get this exchange, revealing that the images hadn't been leaked after all:
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Almost Famous Name
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Almost Famous Name: One of Simon's features involves a tiler called Dennis Nilsen. Alan is quick to point out that that's also the name of an infamous serial killer, and is then quick to emphasise that "it's a different guy, though".
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Bookends
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Book Ends: The first series begins and ends with Alan asking someone back-stage to give him a glass of water.
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Adaptation Distillation
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Adaptation Distillation: Not quite an adaptation, since it's part of the same universe, but the show essentially distills parts of previous media starring Alan into one. It takes the "live on-air" approach from The Day Today and especially Knowing Me, Knowing You with Alan Partridge. The "behind-the-scenes" glimpses allow us to see Alan outside of the showbiz personality to the loser underneath, as with I'm Alan Partridge. Lynn also shows up throughout the episodes, and Alan's interactions with Ted, the recurring fan from Sunderland, evoke his dynamic with Michael. Giving Alan a co-host to bounce off echoes Mid Morning Matters. Simon also appears.
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Freeze-Frame Bonus
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We also have War Machines (Sam's new history show that he's plugging) and — something of a Freeze-Frame Bonus — various TV shows that John used to present (Britain by Balloon, Scotland's Strongest Man, Fly Tip Squad, a holiday show in which the host samples the cooked breakfasts in various resorts, etc), all of which sound like the sort of shows that Alan himself might have pitched.
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British Brevity
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British Brevity: Thus far, twelve episodes spread through two series. Which is more than Knowing Me, Knowing You with Alan Partridge, and the same as I'm Alan Partridge.
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Jerkass Has a Point
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Jerkass Has a Point: Alan remains a dick throughout the series, but he's not always the one in the wrong. He's clearly only doing it for self-serving reasons (to increase his chances of remaining on the show), but the way he refuses to let Jennie and Sam off the hook when they try to sweep the Twitter revelations about John Baskell's sexual misconduct under the rug and distance themselves from him is a rare heroic moment for Alan. He's entirely right to point out that celebrity guest chef Ralphie Moore should have read his health and safety briefing before coming on the show and not prepared food with oysters, which Alan is allergic to. In his interactions with Ruth Duggan, he's often the one trying to be professional and get through the segment, whereas Ruth responds to even reasonable comments and observations he makes with knee-jerk contradiction and dismissiveness (though in turn Alan keeps getting derailed by his frustration and dragging out the conflict longer than it needs to be). It was tactless and self-defeating of him, but let's face it; his rant in the Series 2 finale about how the viewing audience of the show is largely composed of banal idiots whose trite and pointless nattering on social media doesn't contribute anything of worth to the world and how the show's production team in particular (and the BBC in general) is largely composed of smug elitists hypocritically pretending to care deeply about their audience while privately viewing them with contempt, and who are only interested in stirring up endless noise and conflict from said banal idiots purely for the sake of ratings, is entirely on the mark. Alan sometimes ends up on the receiving end of this too. The security guard who won't let him back into the building after he runs out into the street following his rant is only doing his job (part of which involves making sure that people without security passes are not allowed inside), even if he is being a bit of a jerk about it.
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Grammar Nazi
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Grammar Nazi: in Series 2 Episode 4, Alan and Jennie report that a woman has written into the show to complain about their use of split infinitives. When the camera stops, it's clear that neither of them are impressed by this.
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One Dialogue, Two Conversations
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One Dialogue, Two Conversations: When Sam is interviewed from Egypt, it's ostensibly about his new series commemorating the centenary of Howard Carter's discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb, but his waxing lyrical about how Carter's persistence eventually paid off is clearly more to do with him trying to get back with Jennie.
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The Cast Showoff
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The Cast Showoff: Alan is trying hard to be this In-Universe, although it usually comes across as Stylistic Suck; he recites his own poetry (a particularly cringe-inducing attempt to suck up to the BBC) and sings with the Quavers, in addition to which some of the musical pieces played during his feature segments are recognisably him singing.
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ShoutOutToShakespeare
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Shout-Out to Shakespeare: In his video interview, Hugh Bevell reads a passage from Antony and Cleopatra, although the effect is ruined by the fact that he is shown to be not wearing any trousers (or underpants) while he does so.
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The Alcoholic
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The Alcoholic: John Baskell, if what Alan says about his whisky intake is true.
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Establishing Character Moment
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_7febc23b
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Establishing Character Moment: Jennie has a couple in the first episode — she mistakenly refers to Mid Morning Matters as a TV show note  in-universe, it was a radio show (showing that she doesn't know much about her new co-host, quite possibly because she's not expecting to work with him for long) and is quick to steal one of Alan's jokes.
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Actually Pretty Funny
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comment
Actually Pretty Funny: A meta example: Sam Chatwin is widely viewed as a jab at TV historian Dan Snow, son of former BBC news correspondent Peter Snow, and the accusations of Nepotism that have surrounded his career. As demonstrated here, Snow himself seemed to view the parody with plenty of good humour.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_805b13e
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Wacky Marriage Proposal
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_805b13e
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Wacky Marriage Proposal: Sam pulls one of these on Jennie by giving her a copy of his latest book with a ring concealed inside, a sure sign of his own narcissism.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_81bdc398
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He's Back!
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_81bdc398
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He's Back!: After over two decades in the wilderness of local radio, Alan Partridge returns to hosting a show on BBC TV.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_83a903f6
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Stepford Smiler
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_83a903f6
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Stepford Smiler: Since she's a daytime TV presenter, Jennie has a rather superficial grin in the first place. The more she has to put up with Alan, the more fixed it looks.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_863fa679
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What Happened to the Mouse?
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: As is standard for a TV show of this sort, there's little by way of follow-up on most of the features as the show moves on to other topics. We also hear no more of Lisa from the office after Simon asks her out.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_8e6a882b
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Prison Episode
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comment
Prison Episode: In the second episode of the second series, Alan — already shown to have voluntarily worn a probation tag which he didn't realise (or wasn't told) followed his every movement — goes to prison (as part of a feature). Actually, it's a young offenders' institution, as Alan asked not to be sent to an actual prison, but still.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_927b2f11
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The Bus Came Back
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_927b2f11
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The Bus Came Back: A couple of one-off characters from previous Alanverse shows return. Joe Beazley and Cheeky Monkey, the crap puppet act that bombed in an episode of Knowing Me, Knowing You, is a guest on the show in the second episode of the second series. Joe claims that he's not still angry about the way things went last time, which is probably a lie given that he uses Cheeky Monkey to attack Alan (although he does sincerely offer Alan help with his depression after the cameras have stopped rolling). Rosie Whitter, the wine expert from Mid Morning Matters, is brought into the studio for a feature on cocktails.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_973d220f
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Never My Fault
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_973d220f
comment
Never My Fault: After getting pulled over by the police for a traffic offence and refusing to take a breathalyser test, Alan gets arrested. His response is to make a news report for This Time about his "ordeal" in which he presents himself as a blameless victim of police over-zealousness and brutality. However, the video footage in the report clearly shows that the cop who pulled him over did so because he really had committed a traffic offence (ignoring a "no turning" sign), following which his behaviour gave the cop reasonable grounds to assume that he may have been intoxicated (which, as it happened, he wasn't — although as he refused to take the breathalyser test, the cop had no choice but to take him into custody).
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_9edfdf1f
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Studio Audience
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Studio Audience: There is one, and they are occasionally seen. Ted, the guy from Sunderland whose love of the show appears to have had severe repercussions on his personal life, is the audience member who gets the most air-time.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_a10d8339
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The Show Must Go On
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_a10d8339
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The Show Must Go On: Rather than seek medical attention after suffering an allergic reaction, Alan decides to continue with the show, leading to him performing with the Quavers despite having badly swollen lips. A big-lipped Alan-gator moment, if you will.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_a5e0c01
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As Himself
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As Himself: Gardening presenter Monty Don is the victim of Alan's bungled entrapment attempt.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_adf1dcc2
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Promoted Fanboy
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Promoted Fanboy: At play In-Universe when Alan does a feature on the SAS and gets to take part in a mock hostage situation. He's clearly enjoying himself as he basically gets to play out one of his (non-sexual) fantasies, but it goes badly, with the debriefing officer giving a scathing assessment of his performance in which he shot the four hostage targets, not the four terrorist targets.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_b913a5df
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Accidental Innuendo
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_b913a5df
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Accidental Innuendo: In-Universe, courtesy of Alan, of course. Jennie, his attractive and somewhat younger co-host, is invariably on the receiving end.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_ba5bbda5
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Mirror Character
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_ba5bbda5
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Mirror Character: A constant undercurrent of the series is that Alan, for all his pettiness and venal narcissism, isn't actually that much worse from the other celebrities who host and appear on This Time; he's just less skilled at covering up said pettiness and narcissism with charm and apparent professionalism. This is made especially clear in episode two, in which John Baskell's career highlights are heavily implied to be not that much better than Alan's various half-witted program ideas that he pitched to Tony Hayers in I'm Alan Partridge. Sam Chatwin, meanwhile, is clearly only where he is due to nepotism rather than merit. Alan, John and Sam are all shown at various moments to exhibit barely-concealed lechery towards Jennie — except that where Alan constantly bungles things up, John and Sam are sufficiently smooth to get the audience (and producers) on side. While less immediately apparent, the ladies don't exactly look that much better either; Jennie has her own self-serving tendencies and it's implied she can be a bit of a bitchy prima donna behind the scenes, while Ruth Duggan shares Alan's petty refusal to back down from an argument.
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It's All About Me
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It's All About Me: Alan has a long track record of making everything about him. Jennie, for her part, is pretty good at making everything all about her. Sam is also an embodiment of this trope, which is what eventually causes him and Jennie to break up, as she realises that the most important person in Sam's life is and always will be Sam himself.
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Romance on the Set
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Romance on the Set: In-Universe, and rather forced; after picking up on the fact that Simon has mentioned Lisa from the office a few times, Alan calls her out into the studio and basically bullies Simon into asking her out. Both parties are clearly uncomfortable, but surprisingly, Lisa says yes. No more is heard of this, though. In the second series, we get another in-universe example with Sam pulling a Wacky Marriage Proposal on Jennie. She accepts, but they later break up. Alan flirting with Tiff the make-up artist is a more downplayed example. At first.
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Show Within a Show
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Show Within a Show: The premise of this show concerns Alan Partridge co-presenting a fictional daytime TV show called This Time. Said show is as a parody of like as The One Show and Good Morning Britain. We also have War Machines (Sam's new history show that he's plugging) and — something of a Freeze-Frame Bonus — various TV shows that John used to present (Britain by Balloon, Scotland's Strongest Man, Fly Tip Squad, a holiday show in which the host samples the cooked breakfasts in various resorts, etc), all of which sound like the sort of shows that Alan himself might have pitched.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_c660bc15
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Fan Disservice
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Fan Disservice: Hugh Bevell's arse.
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Shout-Out
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Shout-Out: A few... This being Alan Partridge, there are a few nods to James Bond. One of the guests on the show is a Daniel Craig lookalike who was in Quantum of Solace. In the SAS feature, Alan consciously models his firing stance on what he's seen in the Bond films, to the bemusement of the SAS guys. Alan and Tiff discuss the status of Moneypenny, who Alan is adamant is "just a secretary" even though she's shown wielding a gun in the most recent film (which, going on when the episode was first broadcast, would have been Spectre note  the second series was broadcast in April-June 2021, and No Time to Die was (belatedly) released in cinemas in October 2021 ). During his night in the young offenders' institution, Alan recreates the Steve McQueen bouncing a baseball against the wall scene from The Great Escape, albeit with a table-tennis ball. At one point, Simon tries to cram in as many Queen song titles as he can into the converation as part of a charity challenge. Alan takes a while to clue into this, but once he does, he joins in. Alan claims to have been a Blue Peter badge holder when he was 13, although his story of how he got it sounds unlikely, in addition to which he quickly follows it with an explanation of why he no longer has the badge. The theme tune from The World At War is played during Alan's Spitfire flight note  this probably counts as an example of Alan's Stylistic Suck, as a less sombre piece of war-related music (like, for example, the theme tune from Battle of Britain) would've worked much better . When the topless Punkbitch protesters invade the set, Alan tries to chase them away, but then shouts at the camera crew not to film him, as it'll look like a Benny Hill routine. Alan's rant at the end of series 2 is consciously modelled on Howard Beale's "mad as hell" rant in Network; if you look closely at the viewer tweets on Simon's screen, you'll see that one of them even compares the two.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_d397657d
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Hoist by His Own Petard
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Hoist By Their Own Petard: A couple of examples. A subtle one occurs in the John Baskell memorial episode when Sam Chatwin steals Alan's place on the presenters' sofa, forcing Alan to sit on the guests' sofa. This plays into Alan's hands when the tweets about John start to expose his true nature, embarrassing Jennie and Sam who've spent most of the episode emphasising how friendly they were with John; the main screen gets blocked, but the tweets are still visible on Simon's screen, which Alan would not have been able to read from had he been sitting on the presenters' sofa. In a segment on the expansion of Heathrow Airport (sorry, "adding a third runway"), Ruth Duggan slightly snidely catches Alan when he comments that the proposal will add "billions" to the economy by pedantically pointing out that he didn't specify whether he was talking about pounds or a different currency — despite this being pretty clear in context, as he was talking about the British (sorry, UK) economy. When she, in turn, notes than an objection is that it will have negative impacts on the health of "thousands", he immediately picks her up on her imprecision by demanding she clarify whether she's talking about thousands of humans or other possible flora and fauna that could be affected. She's clearly seething to have to clarify, but can't call Alan out on the obviousness and how childish he's being without facing the same charge regarding her own pettiness. Again with Ruth, in one episode she's agreeing wholeheartedly with Jennie's viewpoints and automatically dismissing everything Alan says as per usual ... until Alan reveals that his and Jennie's notes have 'accidentally' gotten swapped somehow, meaning that it turns out that Ruth actually agreed with all of Alan's viewpoints. She's again clearly fuming at Alan trapping her like that.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_d52d28b6
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Hypocrite
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Hypocrite: Alan (obviously), but other than him, we have... "Mickey", the masked hacktivist who Alan interviews in the first episode. He lambasts Alan and, having hacked his workplace and personal computer, proceeds to humiliate him by reading out pitiful and embarrassing details about him on air. When Alan gets fed up and reveals who "Mickey" himself really is, however, his response is to complain about agreeing to do the interview under conditions of privacy and storm off in a huff. After spending the entire episode waxing lyrical over how close they were to the recently-deceased John Baskell and overtly using this as a tool to push Alan further away from any chance of continuing to host the show, both Jennie and Sam instantly try to distance themselves from Baskell when it's revealed that he had a habit of sexually harassing women. Alan doesn't let them wriggle off the hook so easily, however. That said, Alan isn't exactly much better since he's also been trying to jump onto the "I knew John" bandwagon all episode, but ironically his ineptitude in doing so works in his favour for once. The part of Alan's rant in the final episode which isn't about how the audience of This Time is by and large made up of idiots is about how the BBC is largely made up of condescending elitists who make a big deal in public about caring about the opinions of the viewers while privately viewing them with sneering contempt.
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 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_e5421161
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Expy
 This Time With Alan Partridge / int_e5421161
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Expy: A few. Alan is in a role similar to that of Piers Morgan on the ITV breakfast show Good Morning Britain. Like Morgan, Alan is a tactless, unaware, self-promoting and petty middle-aged man working alongside a beautiful and younger woman who only barely tolerates his repulsive antics. However, Alan is far less of a boorish sleazebag than Morgan, probably in order to keep him from being too horrible to watch. Jennie is this to female TV presenters like Susanna Reid, who had to put up with working with Piers Morgan on Good Morning Britain. Sam Chatwin is a parody of Dan Snow, a TV historian and frequent contributor to The One Show (a key inspiration for the series), who many believe would probably not have such a prominent TV career as he does were his father not the legendary BBC journalist Peter Snow. The late John Baskell is this for several once-respected presenters who have, following the posthumous revelations about Jimmy Savile and the subsequent Operation Yewtree police investigation, been found to have used their positions as cover for committing many acts of sexual abuse. Examples include Rolf Harris and Stuart Hall.
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Insistent Terminology
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Insistent Terminology: Alan, being Alan, is only too happy to call others out on using incorrect terminology, but is clearly annoyed whenever anyone calls him out on the same thing. Ruth Duggan has a similar problem, although this may be Alan-specific in her case.
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How Did You Get It?
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How Did You Get It?: Alan asks this of audience member Ted when he sees that the latter is wearing a tooth badge identical to his own; this is the only time the badge, which Alan wears on his lapel in most episodes, gets mentioned.
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Intoxication Ensues
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Intoxication Ensues: Happens to Alan when he drinks too much in the cocktail feature.
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Pungeon Master
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Pungeon Master: Alan. In his head, at any rate. Simon tries to embody this trope as well.
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Product Placement
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Product Placement: Alan has previous form on this, even though he's on the BBC, a broadcaster which frowns on such activity due to it being publicly funded. To deflect attention from himself, he tries to entrap Monty Don into accepting a bribe to plug gardening equipment from a particular company on a new gardening show, which goes about as well as you'd expect. Later on, he calls Simon out on this when the latter thanks British Gas for helping out with a feature.
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Smarmy Host
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Smarmy Host: Alan, of course. Prior to him was John Baskell, who was clearly better at hiding his smarm than Alan, but who was much worse as a person if the tweets Alan reads out after his death are any indication.
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Running Gag
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Running Gag: Simon's constant technological failures (although he does get better over time) and naivety with the world of live TV broadcasting. The opening credits gradually become more Alan-focused as he manages, through luck and ruthlessness, to wrangle more and more control over the show. Alan, seeking audience members to interview, inevitably picks Ted, a super-fan from Sunderland who has a rather troubled life and an inability to clearly get to the point which ends up distracting Alan from whatever he was supposed to be interviewing him about. Speaking of the audience, there seem to be fewer of them each time the camera cuts to them note  in the second series, this could be because they are having to socially distance as a result of the Covid pandemic, although if this is the case, social distancing is notably absent from the presenters' sofa, where Alan continues to sit a little bit too close to Jennie . Roving reporter Ruth Duggan has an old grudge against Alan for an off-screen incident where he accidentally spilled shandy on her, which she expresses on-air by contradicting every single thing he says or asks her. Even when it makes her look somewhat unprofessional (like when Alan repeats word-for-word something Jennie said earlier and which Ruth had agreed with when Jennie said it). Each episode hints at a different sexual fetish or appetite that Alan apparently possesses and tries to keep hidden; in one episode he is transfixed by a female interviewee's hands, in another several nude photos of pregnant women are revealed to be on his iPad, in another he alludes to a recurring dream he has about visiting a prostitute, and so on.
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The Dog Bites Back
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Also ... Simon's prank over the blackface photos. Just a joke that got out of hand, or revenge for Alan's constant bullying? It certainly seems a little different from Simon's usual line of humour.
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Comically Missing the Point
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Comically Missing the Point: Alan recounts that when he went to see Hamilton, he thought he was going to see a musical about Lewis Hamilton.
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Brick Joke
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Brick Joke: Early in episode two, Alan looks at the ceiling and notices a shuttlecock. At the end of the episode, it falls onto the set. In a later episode, mention is made early on of Simon's charity attempt to squeeze twelve Queen song titles into the conversation; this is quickly forgotten with the score on eleven, until Alan describes Sam as being "under presssure" just before the episode ends.
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Pet the Dog
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Pet the Dog: When Alan finds out that Jennie and Sam have split up, he genuinely tries to talk nicely to her, and they actually bond for once. It's the closest this show gets to a genuine Friendship Moment.
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This Time With Alan Partridge

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British Brevity / int_c8624e28
 This Time With Alan Partridge
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