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20 Aug 2010

Amstell's in the house

TV presenter Simon Amstell takes on his first acting role in BBC sitcom Grandma's House.

TV presenter Simon Amstell(Image © PA)

TV presenter Simon Amstell

Simon Amstell's mum might be cross to see that he hasn't eaten his greens.

Instead, he's left them in a neat pile at the side of his plate and, as I walk in to meet him, he greets me saying: "Hello! Would you like some spinach? Or a mushroom?"

It's that kind of oddball humour which has made him famous.

Sacked from children's channel Nickelodeon for being too sarcastic, in 2000 his superbly sharp tongue found a happy home on Channel 4's Popworld.

He and co-presenter Miquita Oliver broke the mold for TV interviews at the time by refusing to ask guests the standard questions about their music, preferring instead to tease the popstars, and make them take part in silly stunts.


It's an Amstell world


Simon Amstell's antics ranged from the childish (asking Britney Spears to lick a battery, offering Gwen Stefani a

"After six years on Popworld, Amstell became the host of pop quiz Never Mind The Buzzcocks"

piece of cheese) to the more controversial (flirting with homophobic reggae star Beenie Man).

Some acts, such as The Kooks, refused to return to the show.

After six years on Popworld, Amstell became the host of pop quiz Never Mind The Buzzcocks, taking over from the similarly acerbic Mark Lamarr and taking with him Popworld writer Dan Swimer.

While Never Mind The Buzzcocks was a new format for him, Amstell found the cutting humour was the same (he made Preston of The Ordinary Boys walk out from filming after joking about his then wife) and quit after three years.

During our meeting, the most offensive thing about him is his vegetable dodging, otherwise the 30-year-old is gentle and self-deprecating, looking out cautiously from a mop of dark curls.

Grandma's House

 

"On a more serious note, Amstell says the shows are quite different"

He's here to promote Grandma's House, a new family sitcom which he's co-written with Dan Swimer.

Set in a family house in Gants Hill, the suburb on London where Amstell grew up, and exploring the eccentricities of a close-knit family, it will draw inevitable comparisons with the Manchester-set Royle Family.

"Will it?," questions Amstell. "It's probably just because it's in a living room the whole time, but we venture to the driveway as well, you do see a driveway!" he jokes.

On a more serious note, Amstell says the shows are quite different because Grandma's House has "more conflict and probably more story", but he acknowledges that a comparison with the Bafta-winning Royle Family is not such a bad thing.

"It was probably one of the last good ones right? Or am I leaving something out?" he asks.

I mention Outnumbered and My Family.

"No, The Royle Family is the last good family sitcom in my mind," he says mischievously.

Amstell plays himself in the series, but he's not saying how closely his on-screen relatives resemble his own. "I don't want to go in to specifics because I quite like the idea of people wondering," he says, thoughtfully.


Family and Grandma's House

 

In the first episode he announces to his mum, played by The Thick Of It's Rebecca Front, that he wants to leave

"'With both Popworld and Buzzcocks, I felt we were about to start repeating ourselves', he says"

his presenting job on an unnamed vitriolic television show to pursue something more meaningful.

The comedian admits that this is reference is thinly-veiled.

"With both Popworld and Buzzcocks, I felt we were about to start repeating ourselves," he says. "Is this the more meaningful thing? I suppose so, I've always wanted to do something like this."

He continues: "Also, I realised I'd been taking the piss out of popstars for about eight years or something and I slowly realised that every time I was really just having a go at myself or my father or something. It feels a lot better for the soul, actually, attacking yourself rather than attacking innocent bystanders."

Simon Amstell swears that the version of himself in Grandma's House is "quite close to me, upsettingly so."

He goes on: "When we were writing it we realised we needed to take everything that was awful about me and put it into the show and so it's essentially me. Even when we'd finished it and I bought some new clothes and I thought, 'I won't be that idiot anymore', I'm still that idiot."

It would appear that Amstell's self-effacement is also, like his on-screen cockiness, an act. But he claims that in Grandma's House, in which he whines about being lonely, and offers his thoughts on being Jewish and gay, he is his true self.

Watching Grandma's House will certainly be interesting for Amstell's family too, who might spot some of themselves in the stories on screen.

02 Aug 2010

Doomsayers predicting a double dip in house prices "got it wrong", experts have said.

The Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) said house prices will increase around 4% this year and continue rising every year until at least the end of 2014 thanks to a fundamental shortage of supply in the UK.

While it expects price rises to moderate from now until the end of 2011, it believes growth will firm up again in 2012 to around 5%, followed by further rise of 5.4% in 2013 and a 3.9% increase in 2014.

The CEBR's predictions are at odds with a recent forecast from the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR), which said the market would fall 8% in real terms over the next five years.

Recent industry figures also raised fears the market bounce back was over, with Nationwide's latest index revealing a 0.5% drop in prices in July - the first decline recorded by the building society since February.

This came after a slew of less positive readings from the sector as househunter numbers have dwindled amid uncertainty over jobs and the wider economy following the Government's emergency Budget.

The CEBR said: "It is unfortunate, but hardly surprising, that many commentators are currently purporting that the minor correction in house prices over recent months is a prelude to an even steeper decline that will engulf the housing market over the coming years."

"Those forecasters projecting a double dip have got it wrong," it added, saying they have "ignored the housing market fundamentals".

It said the recent declines were simply a correction after big rises at the start of 2010.

Growth next year is likely to stall after tax hikes and spending cuts, but the CEBR believes ongoing low interest rates and a shortage of new housebuilding in the UK will support prices over the long term.

15 Jun 2010

CHECK OUT THE NEWSPAPER THIS THURSDAY AND HAVE A LOOK AT WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER !!!

DONT FORGET THIS THURSDAY THE PRESTWICH AND WHITEFIELD GUIDE

08 Jun 2010

WHAT A DISSAPOINTMENT!!!!!

Where has the beautiful weather gone?

we want the sunshine back, is that to much to ask for?

oh well maybe it is after all we do live in Manchester

02 Jun 2010

A number of people have been killed and others injured after a gunman opened fire in several areas of west Cumbria.

Police believe they have found the body of the suspected gunman, Derrick Bird. A force spokesman said the 52-year-old's body was found in the Boot area.

A number of people died and others were injured in towns including Whitehaven, Seascale and Egremont.

Detectives said Derrick Bird drove into the central Lakes in a Citroen Picasso before abandoning it in the Boot area.

People who live nearby were being urged to stay indoors for their own protection.

Police were initially called after shots were fired in Duke Street, Whitehaven, at 1035 BST.

Eyewitness Peter Watson said he had seen a body lying in the road.

"When I first got here it must have just happened. There was a man lying on the ground with police stood over him and a jacket on him," he said.

BBC Look North Chief Reporter Chris Stewart said that soon afterwards a farmer is believed to have been shot dead in Gosforth, several miles to the east.

A force spokesman said: "We can confirm that a number of people have been injured after shots were fired in the Whitehaven, Seascale and Egremont areas this morning.

"There are a number of fatalities and police are working to identify the individuals and inform relatives. Ambulance crews are in attendance across the area."

The Sellafield nuclear reprocessing plant in west Cumbria closed its gates as a safety precaution and afternoon shift workers were being told to stay away until the "risk is reduced".

Helicopters were brought in from other forces to help in the hunt for Derrick Bird.

28 May 2010

Are you all watching it???

Its a must, only on for 6 days

If you have missed it get online to 4OD and check it out, you can even play along.

Go on you know you want to

18 May 2010

Spotted - Lead singer of the Gorillaz at Rupert Hayes Hairdressers on Deansgate.

He was having his hair done by the up and coming best young hairdresser Philip Norton.

Worth going in to give Philip a try he is outstanding, watch this space he will be famous.

fancy booking in ring 0161 834 8838 give him a try you wont be sorry !!!!

11 May 2010

If you want a profesional Service and your looking for the right property

Call Northern Flats on 0161-795-5301 and we will gladly assist in finding you your perfect home.

Northern Flats are the leading Letting Agents in the area, we have been in business for over 25 years and we are one of the only Letting Agents that will accomodate your needs and assist you in finding you your perfect home whether you are in full time employment or on Housing Benefits.

So don't wait around - pick up the phone a give us a call!!

05 Jan 2010
2010 brings a new web site for Northern Flats!