Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

More to Ireland den dis? Alan Partridge 'Men Behind the Wire' clip prompts amusement, bemusement

Viewers’ jaws may have dropped a little when the songs were aired – but a joke’s a joke right? Hopefully.

TWITTER WAS AWASH with people predicting a furious response to the airing of republican anthems like The Men Behind the Wire on an episode of the latest Alan Partridge series last night. 

Fast forward to this afternoon though, and we’re still awaiting any substantial fury. 

So far, the most noteworthy tweet on the affair has come from an Ian Paisley parody account (above) known for its regular satirical DUP-esque posts about, for instance, ‘Londonderry Girls’. 

If you haven’t caught it yet and are wondering what all the fuss is about, the sequence in question plays out at the end of the show Partridge is presenting. An Irish farmer/folk singer, also played by Partridge creator Steve Coogan, hijacks the remaining airtime and proceeds to belt out an unrelenting medley of increasingly controversial ballads. 

The initial social media response may have simply been a kind of instinctual shock response at the fact that a song like Men Behind the Wire – written in the aftermath of internment in the early 1970s – was being sung on primetime BBC. 

‘More to Ireland den dis’ 

Respondents to those initial tweets were quick to point out that Coogan has Irish roots, and a pretty spot-on record in terms of his handling of matters pertaining to Ireland.

His best known creation – an unimaginably inept TV presenter who, in this latest series, has made an inexplicable return to the Beeb to co-present an inane daytime magazine show – never seems to fare particularly well in encounters with the Irish, but the joke is always on Partridge. 

Fans of the character will remember how, in a former incarnation, the hapless host had an equally cringeworthy run in with a pair of Irish TV producers – played by Father Ted creators Graham Linehan and Arthur Mathews – who were considering hiring him for a fresh, modern show about a changing Ireland. (Sample Alan quotes: “A good slogan for the tourist board… Dere’s more to Ireland den dis.”, “Could we come live from the Blarney Stone?”). 

BBC Studios / YouTube

Partridge’s sole cinema outing, Alpha Papa, also features a disgruntled Irish radio host played by Colm Meaney who stages a siege at a Norwich radio station.  

Speaking at the time, Coogan said: 

“I’m half Irish and Alan does make all sorts of Irish references. I spent nearly every summer of my life growing up in the west of Ireland and I’m very familiar with Mayo and Cork and west Cork.

A lot of the humour I do as Alan is British prejudice against the Irish which can sound just like jokes against the Irish but it has to be put into the context of Alan’s ignorance which is why we get away with it. Also, the director of Alpha Papa is Irish.

Bearing in mind the adage that analysing comedy is akin to dissecting a frog (nobody laughs and the frog dies), it’s the main character’s unease with, frankly, anything that upends his middle-of-the-road, middle England sensibility that prompts the laughs in Partridge projects. 

As one response to this tweet (above) from BBC Radio Ulster’s main phone-in show put it: 

Terrific comedy. Steve Coogan and his team of writers are superb. Can’t understand why this is controversial. It’s called satire.
Close
56 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Hilary McDuffy
    Favourite Hilary McDuffy
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 7:51 AM

    Everything is cheaper in China from your consumer goods right down to the cost of a persons life,
    The western world needs to wake up and be proactive regarding making consumers aware what’s going on over there, It’s a bloody disgrace and no other country should tolerate the abuse and suffering this country does to it’s children,

    18
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Andrew Telford
    Favourite Andrew Telford
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 8:25 AM

    There’s a book by an author named Porter called the price of everything I read a few months back that gave the exact stats…

    Can’t recall precise figures but Something like countries like the USA were willing to pollute the environment/cut safety requirements to the extent of effectively taking one year of life from a person for $80k gain. The UK $67k, right down to China $1,200

    6
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute gingerman
    Favourite gingerman
    Report
    Jun 5th 2013, 7:46 AM

    The way we are going we won’t be long reproducing a similar accident in the west. Workers rights are being given up all over the place in the name of efficiency and productivity. The only benefactors being the wealthy capitalist class. How long before Chinese working conditions become the global norm? Workers have been shown to be powerless in the face of it all.

    11
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a commentcancel