The Herald

Tough times lead to dark humour

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Damned

Channel 4, 10pm

AS the latest series of Jo Brand’s social worker sitcom Damned draws to a close, it looks like Al (Alan Davies) is ready to pack in his job and make a fresh start in Scotland. Davies can understand why his character is feeling that way. The comedian and actor says: “He is suffering from burnout, I suppose you’d call it. He’s starting to become disillusio­ned with the department being under resourced and underfunde­d, not being able to deliver the service that he wants to.”

It’s a situation many real social workers will be able to relate to. Davies says: “It reflects the reality of children’s social services. Quite a lot of people leave because they find it so demanding and difficult, and there’s quite a lot of sick days, they get stressed, and there’s quite a lot of work that you’d like to do but the caseload’s too heavy...

“It’s an ongoing, underrepor­ted scandal, really, how children aren’t prioritise­d in public services in the way that you would assume they would be, given that they are innocent victims of so much.”

So, perhaps it’s not surprising that Davies thinks he wouldn’t have been cut out for the job in real life. When asked what sort of social worker he would have made, the QI regular says: “I don’t know if I’d really be cut out for it at all. I really don’t know how people who do the job cope. It’s quite heroic in lots of ways.

“It’s difficult, and often the work they do of course is not highlighte­d until a mistake is made or something terrible happens to a child – then the world falls on them.”

Although that makes Damned sound unbearably grim, regular viewers will know that the cast and Brand’s fellow writers Morwenna Banks and Will Smith are great at finding the humour in some otherwise dark situations.

Davies explains: “I think with Damned it’s a very

difficult line to tread because you want to have some authentici­ty about the cases that they have to deal with and you are often dealing with very sad and difficult situations.

“So they might not apparently lend themselves to humour but [then you have] the office politics and the interplay of the various points of view...”

He adds: “But once our social workers are out in the field and meeting the cases, the actual children who are depicted in the show, we’re quite keen to make sure those

people aren’t the butt of the humour, that they are taken seriously. So the jokes normally fall on us.”

Rose (Brand) may be feeling like the butt of the joke this week, as she discovers the pitfalls of dating the boss’s brother - especially as Lee (Nick Hancock) is making a last ditch attempt to win her back.

Meanwhile, Nitin (Himesh Patel) tries to guide Nat (Issy Suttie) through her pregnancy, and Martin (Kevin Eldon) and Mimi’s (Lolly Adefope) unorthodox living arrangemen­ts come under scrutiny.

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Jo Brand plays social worker Rose Denby in the sitcom, where the jokes fall on the workers.
„ Jo Brand plays social worker Rose Denby in the sitcom, where the jokes fall on the workers.

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