The Oatmeal is comedy at its best.

Just invested in this. I can’t find an imagine online with a high enough resolution to be able to see the quotations but when I think about every useful thing I do know about life, I pretty much did learn it from Peep Show, so it will no doubt be inevitably relevant.
Just to reiterate, this man is nearly 50. Not 6.
I love SmerchyGerv. Yes, that’s a name for them which I admittedly just made up, but it’s perfect
Just did a proper Gervais laugh at “‘Ooh I hope I win an Oscar.’ She doesn’t”. And also “I like to think its got AIDS”. A big post-post Freshers phlegm-y gross Gervais laugh.
Gervais never fails to make me laugh.
I don’t understand how these two find the time to produce such brilliant TV & film when all they do is laugh at each other all day. Brilliant! Definitely buying the DVD.
(via motorcycleemptiness)
Coming soon to Channel 4, Peep Show returns for a seventh series. Starring David Mitchell and Robert Webb the series follows the increasingly complicated lives of aging flatmates and best buddies Mark and Jeremy.
Mark has become a father. Burdened with a new and frightening responsibility, he finds that he can’t get a decent job and is forced to continue to work as a waiter. Worried about his relationship with his baby, Ian; worried that he’ll spend the rest of his days as a waiter; worried about his commitment to Ian’s mother, Sophie; and worried that he’s losing love interest Dobby to his rival Gerrard, Mark experiences his ‘darkest hour’.
Jeremy, on the other hand, stumbles upon a new and exciting source of income, power and responsibility. Miraculously walking away from the wreckage of his affair with Elena, Jeremy also meets a new love interest. But just as his life is looking up, he discovers that his new situation comes with complex strings attached.
This six part series follows Mark and Jeremy from the birth of Mark’s baby to ‘little Ian’s’ christening. We also meet Mark’s parents for the first time as the boys attempt to celebrate a traditional family Christmas. And a disastrous New Year’s Eve party crawl culminates with Mark and Jeremy facing choices that could end their friendship - forever.
I’ve fallen in love with Grandma’s House, its questionable acting and repetitive formula too. As the end of the series approaches, though, I’m scared that a death is looming. It’s something about the eerie theme and incidental music and the way the story has gone so far.
We already know that the actor Geoffrey Hutchings, who plays Bernie, the grandad, died this year shortly after filming. So if a second series is on the cards then he surely cannot be in it (I think the days of replacing characters with new actors are well over, no?). Does that mean he’ll be killed off at the end of this series? The character has after all been suffering - albeit somewhat jovially - with cancer throughout. Or will it be a more unexpected death?
(Source: BBC)