wendell borton wrote: » I think it could be really good if done properly. Its a theme that lends itself to dark humour with some cutting satire.
lertsnim wrote: » I can't wait till someone does a comedy series based on the Holocaust.
the_syco wrote: » Gonna keep an open mind about this one; it could be epic, or it could fail badly. We shall see.
My name is URL wrote: » Whatever about how good it might be, it's an insensitive thing to make a comedy about considering how ignorant most Brits are of that part of their history. It'd be like the yanks making a sitcom about the plight of Native Americans under Andrew Jackson =/
Harry Palmr wrote: » At least its been written by a Paddy.
Allyall wrote: » No it's not. It's being written by a guy living in Dublin. But he's not Irish.
petrolcan wrote: » No more bizarre than a comedy set during the Korean war. Or WWI. I actually see it as potentially positive as most in Britain aren't that aware of the famine.
mikom wrote: » irish central, who named Pope Francis as their person of the year 2014, as he "has transformed the Catholic landscape in a way unseen since the heyday of Pope John 23rd". Now there is comedy. Scuse me while I puke.
GalwayGuitar wrote: » Potentially positive? Are you for real? The English will have a great laugh at the thick Paddies who couldn't grow their potatoes.
Highflyer13 wrote: » I'm not a religious guy myself but he seems like a very progressive pope. He certainly is making a lot of strides on various issues such as corruption in the church and marriage equality and more
petrolcan wrote: » I'm being perfectly serious. It may show many Britons a history they aren't very aware of, it may even encourage some to do a little bit of research.
ballsymchugh wrote: » channel 4 haven't had much luck with irish based comedy since Fr Ted. that london irish program they had last year was pure muck.
Aineoil wrote: » My parents in their 70's and 80's still fail to see that Father Ted is funny. If in 1995 you told the forum that there was going to be an irreverent sitcom about priests some people might not have been too happy.
Heil Honey I'm Home! is a British sitcom, written by Geoff Atkinson. It centres on fictionalised versions of Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun, who live next door to a Jewish couple, Arny and Rosa Goldenstein.
creolebelle wrote: » Racist and incredibly insensitive since people are still dying from hunger everyday
pragmatic1 wrote: » Exactly. I'd like to see one done on the Trans-Atlantic slave trade too. Doubt they'd have the balls, but it's alright to slag off auld Paddy.
AboutaWeekAgo wrote: » Pretty silly logic there mate. People are also dying from meth abuse everyday, was Breaking Bad also insensitive?