
Introduction
I have mixed feelings about a lot of modern comedy. Not alternative comedy, although that's something of a misnomer these days as there is so little old-fashioned comedy around the alternative stuff is the mainstream. Putting aside gross-out, cringe and shock comedy (Little Britain, The Office et al) there's a strong tradition growing in modern comedy of smart-arsism. You know what I mean – glib little ****ers like Jonathan Ross who deliver witticisms with the same kind of self-satisfied smirk that ghastly kid at the back of the class used to disrupt Physics lessons with. Clever, quick-witted and thought he was wasting his time learning anything because he knew his gob would lead him to stardom. A smart-arse.
There's a lot of smart-arsism in modern comedy. It's mostly to do with the fact that you can't get into television comedy these days without an Oxbridge education under your belt, or at least have had a gig at the Edinburgh Fringe where you can blend in with the intelligensia. The showcases for this kind of humour on television are the post-modern panel games such as Buzzcocks and Have I Got News.
QI is part of that growing tradition. Dating back into the mists of early television history – ooo, 2003 would you believe – QI is a comedy quiz show with a difference. It isn't a smart-arse show (well, not much). It's genuinely intelligent. Quizmaster Stephen Fry is joined by three celebrities and Alan Davies to mull over the conundrum that is the modern world and answer a series of mind-pummelling questions in as quite an interesting way as possible – hence the title QI for Quite Interesting (not Quotient Intelligence or Quaintly Indifferent). Points are deducted quite arbitrarily for using what the gnomes behind the scenes consider an obvious answer – which is almost inevitably any answer given by Alan Davies.
More often than not, the show appears to be an opportunity for guests – and frequently Alan Davies – to go on pure flights of fancy or even streams of consciousness which can be pretty hit or miss whether they're genuinely funny but they keep the studio audience amused. The real star of the show, however, is Stephen Fry whose professorial demeanour makes some of the more off-the-wall moments of the show even more surreal.
For my money, QI is the funniest thing on television. Especially when guests and quizmaster Fry start riffing on an answer. The show is the latest from Blackadder/ Spitting Image producer John Lloyd.



