Hayes & Harlington Gazette

I lived my childhood through the telly

Josh Widdicombe tells HANNAH STEPHENSON how the TV of the 90s inspired his comedy career and led him to write his new book

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TUNE into most contempora­ry panel shows and comedian Josh Widdicombe will have at some point made an appearance.

Tousled, boyish and bespectacl­ed, you may have seen him on Channel 4’s late night talk show The Last Leg with fellow funnymen Alex Brooker and Adam Hills, or on Mock The Week and Taskmaster, or with his good friend James Acaster on Hypothetic­al. He’s even starred in his eponymous sitcom, Josh.

Yet the 38-year-old comedian, who grew up in Devon, says most people who approach him in the street these days do so because of the chart-topping Lockdown Parenting Hell

(now just called Parenting Hell), a podcast he created with comedian

Rob Beckett when they were stuck indoors with their kids.

In it, they highlight their own real parenting dilemmas – Josh has two children, Pearl, three, and fourmonth-old Cassius – and interview celebritie­s about their own parenting techniques and terrors.

They’ve had some great names on the show – Paloma Faith, Peter Crouch, Dawn O’Porter and Robbie Williams, who was still in bed when he joined the parenting chat, he recalls.

“In a weird way, we’re like a much lower key Kardashian­s,” Josh muses. “Our life is a soap opera. As we talk about our lives and interview comedians and celebritie­s about theirs, they show their reality, complainin­g about their lives and talking about the things that we all go through, whether it’s trying to get a (child) seat in a car or struggling with a night feed.

“There’s a vulnerabil­ity that you maybe don’t get in a chat show appearance where you talk for seven minutes, and four minutes of that is about your new film.”

The podcast has become a huge hit which the pair, who are good friends, intend to continue.

During lockdown Josh’s wife, TV producer Rose Hanson, had their second baby and he says he relished the time at home, although he doesn’t want any more children.

The podcast did at least give him a reason to shut himself into a room.

“My wife does more (of the childcare) because I’m upstairs doing interviews,” he says deadpan. “I’m chatting on Zoom and calling it a job.

“But you want to be around, you want to be present, you want to remember your children’s lives because, before you know it, the sands of time will have gone through your fingers.”

During lockdown he found time to write his childhood memoir, Watching Neighbours Twice A Day... in which he recollects growing up on Dartmoor in the 90s and watching an inordinate amount of TV.

The book features a mix of events which framed his youth and is filled with his memories of the pop culture of the time, from Neighbours to

Memories of Neighbours are more vivid than bike rides

TFI Friday, the Spice Girls to Blur, along with a mixture of iconic news stories including the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, as well as comedy influences of the time.

He writes from a viewpoint that his actual life wasn’t very exciting, unlike events in the wider world.

“I lived an exciting life vicariousl­y through the television. If people ask me for my childhood memories, the truth is the scenes in Neighbours or events in Gladiators are far more vivid to me than bike rides.”

Watching TV comedy as a youngster in the 90s spawned his love of the genre. His parents, whom he describes in the book as a couple of ‘old hippies’, loved alternativ­e comedy, immersing themselves in the political diatribes of Ben Elton and the wacky shenanigan­s of The Young Ones, and let 10-year-old Josh watch it irrespecti­ve of the watershed.

“I’d be watching Bottom, which is sex-obsessed, violent and everything you shouldn’t be showing children. But everyone was talking about it at school, so everyone else must have been watching it too.”

While many other kids pursued the wide open spaces Dartmoor had to offer, Josh preferred to explore the TV comedy world.

“The 90s was the golden age of British television comedy. Each week there would be four or five brilliant TV shows, whether it was Alan Partridge or Fantasy Football League or Harry Hill. British comedy was so exciting compared to everything else that was on TV.

“I don’t think I consciousl­y thought, I want to be a comedian, but subconscio­usly it was such a big part of my life growing up. That whole world seemed so exciting, young and vibrant compared with everything else.”

After leaving Manchester University, Josh held down a variety of office jobs and worked for a short time as a sports journalist. He began doing stand-up in his early 20s, coming up alongside the likes of Sara Pascoe, James Acaster and Rob Beckett – but not in the cutthroat, competitiv­e environmen­t you might imagine. Indeed, they are all good friends.

But it was a hard slog in the early days, he agrees. “It was tough. For two years I’d be doing gigs above pubs to noone, and I’d be travelling around for no money. It’s a lot of hard work to get anywhere because you’re doing the toughest gigs you’ll ever do when you are worst at it.

“Now, you get to perform to 1,000 people in a purpose-built theatre who want to come and see you and you are the best you’ve been, because you have 12 years’ experience. It’s in the wrong order.”

When the pandemic struck he was in the middle of a UK stand-up tour, Bit Much, which has resumed.

“The good news is, I’m so unsatirica­l and untopical that every joke still stands,” he says, smiling. “I’m interested in the minutiae observatio­ns of everyday life. I have no jokes about Brexit but I do have five minutes on advent calendars.”

Yet when the show was postponed, he didn’t miss touring.

“I really enjoyed having my evenings to myself for the first time in a decade. These days I’m normally done by 7.30pm when my daughter’s in bed, but I’m going to have to start working in the evening again.”

While he says he doesn’t have a career masterplan, he does want to do new stand-up tours, write more books, do different TV shows.

Of course, fatherhood has affected his lifestyle.

“Some people are much more tired once they’ve got children. I would say I’m less tired because I’m just not hungover. I used to go out on a week night and have four pints and be tired the next day. I don’t do that anymore.

“I don’t need to do any of these things to have a good time now. I really like my life. I like my job. I love my family. But don’t worry, when they’re seven I’m going back on the lash.”

Watching

Neighbours Twice A

Day... How ‘90s TV (Almost) Prepared

Me For Life by Josh Widdicombe is published by Blink, priced £20

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 ?? ?? Josh with Alex Brooker on The Last Leg
Josh with Alex Brooker on The Last Leg
 ?? ?? With his wife Rose Hanson
With his wife Rose Hanson
 ?? ?? Performing stand-up
Performing stand-up

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