People Just Do Nothing
People Just Do Nothing is a British television mockumentary sitcom, created and performed by Allan Mustafa, Steve Stamp, Asim Chaudhry and Hugo Chegwin.
People Just Do Nothing
- Steve Stamp
- Allan "Seapa" Mustafa
- Hugo Chegwin
- Asim Chaudhry[a]
- Steve Stamp
- Allan "Seapa" Mustafa
- Lily Brazier (add.)
- Asim Chaudhry (add.)
- Hugo Chegwin (add.)
- Ben Murray (add.) (s. 1–2)
Jack Clough
- Allan "Seapa" Mustafa
- Hugo Chegwin
- Asim Chaudhry
- Steve Stamp
- Daniel Sylvester Woolford
- Lily Brazier
- Ruth Bratt[1]
- George Keywood
- Olivia Jasmine Edwards
- Hugo Chegwin
- Harry Craze
- Allan "Seapa" Mustafa
- Steve Stamp (s. 2)
United Kingdom
English
5
27 (list of episodes)
- Ash Atalla
- Jon Petrie (s. 4–5)
- Jon Petrie (s. 1–3)
- Jack Clough (s. 4–5)
- Jamie Cairney (s. 1)
- Si Bell (s. 2)
- Matthew Wicks (s. 3–5)
Gareth Heal
25–30 minutes
20 July 2014
17 December 2018
The programme follows the lives of MC Grindah, DJ Beats and their friends, who run Kurupt FM, a pirate radio station broadcasting UK garage and drum and bass music from Brentford in West London.
The programme originally began as a series of online shorts that became popular enough that the group were asked to make a pilot episode for BBC3's Comedy Feeds. The first series was released on BBC Three in July 2014, with the fifth and final series airing on BBC Two in 2018.[2] A film continuation, People Just Do Nothing: Big in Japan, was released in August 2021.
In 2017, the show won the BAFTA award and Royal Television Society award for Best Scripted Comedy.[3][4] Many of the actors in the show have gone on to tour as a musical act, in character as their personas from Kurupt FM.
Production[edit]
Conception[edit]
The four main actors were friends for years before they began making the show. They were brought together through Hugo Chegwin; he had known Steve Stamp since childhood, became friends with Asim Chaudhry at college, and met Allan Mustafa through a mutual friend. They all had experience DJing or MCing on pirate radio in their youth, and no ambition to be actors. Mustafa said, "I rapped at the time, but we never really ended up making music. We just watched The Office a lot and smoked weed."[8] In the late 2000s, Chegwin and Stamp had a "fake garage crew" on a real station called KuruptFM. Chegwin and Mustafa began creating characters and filming them, and were further inspired when they watched the BBC documentary series Tower Block Dreams, about London and Essex's underground music scene, and found the participants amusing. MC Grindah was based on a pirate radio boss from the series. Stamp and Chaudhry became involved, and the foursome began improvising material and putting it on YouTube under the name "Wasteman TV".[8][5]
The YouTube videos were seen by producer Jon Petrie, who worked with Ash Atalla at Roughcut TV. Petrie later explained, "It wasn't fully-formed, but the more you watched it, the more you could see there was proper detail to the characters. I had no idea about garage, really, but I just loved them as comic creations." Atalla arranged to produce a pilot episode for BBC Three, released in August 2012. The pilot was the most shared video on iPlayer that month, and the BBC ordered a full series.[8]
Many journalists have commented that the show is heavily influenced by The Office. David Renshaw has said, "At times, Grindah’s delusion in relation to his own success, talent and likeability is a mortifying dance away from full David Brent."[9] Chabuddy G has been described as "an Asian Del Boy", of Only Fools and Horses.[10] The actors have named their primary influences as The Office, This is Spinal Tap, Alan Partridge, Ali G, Laurel and Hardy, and Mike Leigh.[10]
Writing and filming[edit]
Writing credits go to Allan Mustafa and Steve Stamp,[11] but the cast are given freedom to improvise their dialogue and sometimes film scenes spontaneously.[10] By the third series, Mustafa estimated that material was "70/30 percent improvised". Chaudhry explained, "When you've been doing a character for six years, you can just snap into it – you know how they'd react in any situation", adding that he is continuously inspired by his father, "because he's like a real Chabuddy G, just not as ridiculous".[8] The dialogue is often heavy with 21st century London slang. Much of the filming took place at Chesterton Court on the South Acton housing estate, before it was demolished.[10] Series three was shot in Peckham, south-east London.[8] All locations are based on the Haverfield Estate in Brentford, where Chegwin and Stamp grew up.[10]
Reception[edit]
Critical response[edit]
People Just Do Nothing has received positive reviews. After the release of the first series, Alex Fletcher of Digital Spy called it "the best British comedy in years", and lamented that few people were aware of its "comedic genius". He added, "it packs in more genuine belly laughs in one episode than most recent sitcoms have done in their full lifetime, and [has] nailed that quintessential British sense of humour where we're able to laugh at our own humiliating inadequacies ... it feels like it belongs in the company of modern comedy greats such as The Office, Peep Show and Phoenix Nights."[6] Gerard O'Donovan of The Telegraph gave the pilot episode four stars out of five, and said, "Entertaining, and absolutely of its time, People Just Do Nothing certainly serves up some good laughs and I look forward to the next three parts."[13]
For the second series, David Renshaw of The Guardian said it was "a welcome return from the gang", and commented "Despite its larger-than-life characters, People Just Do Nothing’s success lies in its believability ... You get the feeling that if you drove out to Brentford you might actually run in to them." He especially praised the comedy provided by DJ Steves and Chabuddy G.[9] Rachel Aroesti, also of The Guardian, said "the episode where Grindah panics after taking a pill at his club night has good claim to be the comic highlight of 2015".[7]
Aroesti gave the third series a highly positive review: "In an age of bleak comedy that barely makes you snigger, one show has been keeping up the lost art of making people laugh – the hilarious, half-witted pirate radio mockumentary." She added, "[the show] is not an old-fashioned sitcom by any stretch – it’s understated, meta and set in a niche subculture – but it is truly traditional in its comedy: beats are hit and joke quotas filled, scene in, scene out." She appreciated that the series also "decided to go for the dramatic jugular. The final episode of this series offered fans a precious opportunity to laugh and cry at exactly the same time ... By making you care about the characters (even the monstrosity that is MC Grindah – a David Brent with malicious intent), viewers will now have two reasons for tuning in."[7]