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Time Trumpet
Time Trumpet
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Time Trumpet
Time Trumpet (opening title screen)
Created byArmando Iannucci
Roger Drew
Will Smith
StarringRichard Ayoade
Matthew Holness
Adam Buxton
Jo Enright
Stewart Lee
Jo Neary
Mark Watson
David Sant
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes6
Production
Running timeapprox. 30 minutes (per episode)
Original release
NetworkBBC Two
Release3 August (2006-08-03) –
7 September 2006 (2006-09-07)

Time Trumpet is a six-episode satirical television comedy series which aired on BBC Two in August 2006. The series was written by Armando Iannucci, Roger Drew and Will Smith in a similar manner to Iannucci's earlier one-off programmes, 2004: The Stupid Version and Clinton: His Struggle with Dirt.[1] One sketch was later spun off by network in Ireland, RTÉ, into the cult television series Soupy Norman, in May 2007.

Premise

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Time Trumpet is set in the year 2031, and is a retrospective documentary on the first thirty years of the 21st century. Actors and actresses play the parts of 'today's stars' thirty years on, who are interviewed as part of the show.

These 'older selves' include David Beckham, Anne Robinson, David Cameron, Sebastian Coe, Kate Middleton, Charlotte Church, Ant & Dec, June Sarpong, Tony Blair, Alastair Campbell, Charles Clarke, Noel Edmonds, Chris Moyles, Gordon Brown, David Miliband, Bob Geldof, Saddam Hussein, Natasha Kaplinsky, Prince Harry, Jamie Oliver and Paul Burrell.

The show also includes interviews with comedians, billed in the show as "top cultural commentators slash TV pundits", speaking about the events of the past. These include Stewart Lee (also appearing as the bald-headed 'Stu Lee', the implication being that he was contractually obliged to shave his head and change his name), Richard Ayoade, Jo Enright, Matthew Holness, Adam Buxton, Mark Watson and David Sant. Additionally, Katy Wix and Tim Key appear in sketches throughout the series.

Every episode is narrated by Iannucci, who is also seen interviewing guests, but at an oblique angle and with a different physical appearance. Series co-creator Will Smith also appears in the series.

Each episode has a main theme running throughout, such as the Olympics or the war in Iraq. The main running gag is the promise of a catch-up with "an increasingly odd Tom Cruise" and features the now-elderly actor making bizarre claims such as to be "pound for pound the world's strongest man".

Episodes

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Episode Airdate Main theme Featured content
Episode 1 3 August 2006 Early 21st Century Politics
Episode 2 10 August 2006 Binge Drinking in Britain
Episode 3 24 August 2006 The War on Terror
  • The war on terror resulting in anything too terrifying or frightening banned and strip searching becoming so commonplace people now walk around naked
  • Catching up with Tim Henman
  • The Girl with the Voice of Boris Johnson
  • Cilla Black's live autopsy
Episode 4 17 August 2006 The Royal Family
  • The most popular television show of all time, Rape an Ape
  • War between Tesco and Denmark
  • A decline in popularity for the Royal Family, which leads to no one turning up at the coronation of King Charles and a royal referendum
  • The hit Polish soap opera Pierwsza miłość
Episode 5 31 August 2006 Iraq War
Episode 6 7 September 2006 The 2012 Olympics

Controversy

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The third episode, which featured a jumbo jet crashing into the British Houses of Parliament and the subsequent assassination of Tony Blair, was due to be screened on 17 August 2006, but was cancelled in the wake of the 2006 transatlantic aircraft plot, and replaced by another episode. The cancelled episode was subsequently shown a week later, without the footage of an assassinated Blair.[2] However, a related sketch was aired, involving a play on the events of 9/11, where two towers are flown into an aeroplane.

Home media

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A DVD of the series was released on 27 April 2009.[3] The assassination of Tony Blair sketch was removed from this, as were some sketches that included footage of the Olympic Games.

Legacy

[edit]
  • One sketch depicted real life Polish soap opera Pierwsza miłość becoming a hit across Europe, which was followed by a scene dubbed into English in a humorous way, changing the setting from Poland to Ireland. This ended up forming the basis of the cult television show Soupy Norman on RTÉ.
  • Alan Moore's final issue of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen includes a reference to the in series game show "Rape an Ape", as well as several references to Iannucci's The Thick of It.

American remake

[edit]

In December 2011, network in the United States, Comedy Central announced they would be remaking the series, with Iannucci as producer.[4] Ultimately, the series was not picked up by the network, and Iannucci moved on to other projects.[5]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
is a six-episode British satirical mockumentary television series that aired on BBC Two in August 2006. Written by Armando Iannucci alongside Roger Drew and Will Smith, the programme is framed as a retrospective news documentary broadcast from the year 2031, purportedly reviewing key events, cultural shifts, and political developments of the early 21st century from 2000 to 2030. It employs impersonations of aged contemporary figures—such as politicians and celebrities—to deliver deadpan, exaggerated commentary on the era's trends, often amplifying trivial or emerging absurdities into defining historical narratives for comedic effect. The series received critical acclaim for its incisive humour, earning an 8/10 rating on IMDb from user reviews, and has since developed a cult status, with retrospective analyses highlighting its prescience in satirising phenomena like pervasive digital surveillance, celebrity-driven politics, and societal obsessions that later materialised. No major controversies surrounded its production or broadcast, distinguishing it from Iannucci's more provocative works like Brass Eye.

Production

Development and Creation

Time Trumpet originated from Armando Iannucci's frustration with contemporary nostalgia programming, which prompted him to envision a satirical series that inverted the format by fabricating a future documentary reflecting on recent history. This concept drew on Iannucci's established expertise in political and media satire, honed through earlier projects such as The Day Today (1994), a news parody co-created with Chris Morris, and the character-driven mockumentary I'm Alan Partridge (1997–2002), which he co-wrote and produced. By May 2005, Iannucci was actively developing the "fake history programme" for BBC Two, initially framed as set in 2050 examining events from the early 2000s onward. The series' mockumentary style emerged as a deliberate extension of Iannucci's prior experiments with faux-documentary techniques to dissect media distortion and political spin, particularly amid the following the , 2001, attacks and the 2003 Iraq War invasion. commissioned the project in early 2006 for a six-episode run, aligning with the channel's track record of supporting Iannucci's boundary-pushing comedies like The Friday Night Armistice (1995–1999). The writing process involved collaboration with co-writers Roger Drew and , who helped craft the retrospective premise critiquing early 21st-century cultural and political absurdities through invented "future" testimonies. This team approach emphasized rapid, topical scripting to capture the era's media saturation without relying on scripted narratives, instead prioritizing edited "interviews" for satirical effect.

Cast and Crew

Armando Iannucci directed Time Trumpet and co-wrote the series with Roger Drew and , drawing on a format similar to his prior satirical specials. The production team included executive producers and Adam Tandy, alongside line producers Jack Cheshire and Jackie Ramsamy, all affiliated with . Iannucci also narrated each episode and hosted as the central interviewer, posing questions to aged-up versions of public figures and experts in a faux-documentary style set in 2031. This dual role leveraged his established satirical voice from earlier collaborations like . Key cast members featured recurring performers portraying future selves, including as an exaggerated reminiscing intellectual, in various comic roles, as multiple satirical experts, delivering deadpan commentary, and in ensemble sketches. These actors, many of whom had prior ties to Iannucci's projects such as , contributed to the show's ensemble dynamic without individual lead billing. Guest elements incorporated archival footage of figures like Tony Blair and impersonations by supporting actors for spoofed "older selves" of celebrities including Sebastian Coe and Ant & Dec, enhancing the retrospective illusion through visual and vocal mimicry.

Filming and Broadcast Details

Time Trumpet was produced by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and broadcast on BBC Two in the United Kingdom. The six-episode series premiered on Thursday, 3 August 2006, with episodes airing weekly thereafter on Thursdays at 22:00 GMT, each running approximately 30 minutes. The broadcast schedule included: Episode 1 on 3 August, Episode 2 on 10 August, Episode 3 on 17 August, Episode 4 on 24 August, Episode 5 on 31 August, and Episode 6 on 7 September 2006. Filming primarily involved the assembly and editing of existing archival footage from news and media archives spanning the early , supplemented by newly recorded studio segments featuring actors as fictional future historians and commentators. Production took place in the UK under Armando Iannucci's direction, though specific studio locations or dates have not been publicly disclosed in available records. The format relied heavily on techniques, including voiceovers and satirical overlays, rather than extensive on-location shooting.

Format and Content

Premise and Structure

Time Trumpet is framed as a purportedly broadcast from the year 2031, examining key events spanning the initial three decades of the . The series employs a format wherein actors portray aged versions of contemporary public figures, including politicians and celebrities, delivering "reflective" talking-head interviews that exaggerate or fabricate hindsight interpretations of historical developments. This setup parodies the structure of conventional nostalgic television s, such as those featuring archival footage interspersed with expert commentary, to underscore the distortions inherent in analysis. The program consists of six episodes, each approximately 30 minutes in duration, which aired weekly on commencing on August 3, 2006, at 10:00 p.m. The episodic format maintains a consistent aesthetic, blending scripted interviews with simulated clips and pseudo-archival material to construct narratives of "future history." This blend facilitates a satirical lens on and , presenting absurd extrapolations of early 21st-century trends as settled historical fact without delving into specific topical content.

Key Themes and Satirical Targets

Time Trumpet employs a retrospective format set in 2031 to satirize early 21st-century events through hyperbolic hindsight, amplifying real trends into absurd outcomes to underscore societal and political follies. Recurring motifs include media sensationalism, where coverage of crises like the Iraq War is mocked via fictional future analyses portraying leaders in states of delusional remorse, such as Tony Blair depicted wandering Baghdad amid guilt over the conflict's debacle. This approach highlights causal disconnects in policy decisions and their long-term repercussions without sparing establishment figures across the political spectrum. The series ridicules rising and reality television's dominance, portraying the era's proliferation of shows like Big Brother as infecting airwaves with vapid excess, exaggerated into dystopian spectacles such as child plastic surgery programs or primate assault contests in spoof retrospectives. Figures like are lampooned leading inquiries into , while singers such as face grotesque fates, critiquing the that elevated non-entities to cultural arbiters. Broader societal absurdities form another core target, with exaggerations of consumerist —like a chain annexing foreign territories—or unchecked personal anomalies, such as a presenter's pathological growth, to expose underlying irrationalities in early-2000s trends from policy to . The satire maintains an equal-opportunity edge, deriding left-leaning politicians like alongside conservative successors and media-driven fads, prioritizing ridicule of institutional over partisan alignment.

Episode Guide

Episode 1 (3 August 2006) examined key political events of the mid-2000s, including Tony Blair's resignation and the subsequent leadership transition to , alongside incidents involving celebrities such as . Episode 2 (10 August 2006) focused on the binge drinking epidemic in Britain, featuring aged versions of and Dec conducting a into the . Episode 3 (17 August 2006) satirized the war on terror, depicting exaggerated government responses to public fears and including a fictional terrorist attack on the Houses of via aeroplane. Episode 4 (24 August 2006) addressed ongoing security concerns from the , incorporating perspectives from sports figures like and . Episode 5 (31 August 2006) explored and technological advancements projected into the late 2000s and beyond. Episode 6 (7 September 2006) provided a broad on global events up to 2030, touching on cultural shifts such as cosmetic surgery trends among celebrities and religious broadcasting scandals. Each episode aired weekly on and ran for approximately 30 minutes.

Reception

Critical Response

Time Trumpet garnered positive critical acclaim for its innovative format, which retrospective news programs by projecting absurd future outcomes from events. A contemporary review in the Telegraph praised the series as "as biting as it gets," likening its sharp to "a piece of sharp Cheddar" and commending the straightforward premise of a 2031 broadcast reviewing the early . In a 2021 Guardian retrospective, the show was hailed as a "savage cult comedy" that presciently spoofed societal trends like nostalgic TV obsession and political follies, including Tony Blair's guilt-ridden legacy and the rise of figures like , with the article noting its enduring brilliance 15 years post-broadcast. Armando Iannucci's direction was credited for deftly blending with faux-documentary elements, allowing incisive commentary on media and cultural shifts. The series also received recognition as an underrated gem in British television satire; a 2016 Guardian piece grouped it with other overlooked shows, appreciating its talking-heads structure featuring comedians like and to parody within established British comedic traditions. Criticisms focused on execution flaws, such as uneven pacing and reliance on over sustained wit. Early viewer-critic forums, including discussions from 2006, labeled the premiere episode a "huge " due to what participants saw as underdeveloped resembling "a poorly thought out review," though these reflected initial audience rather than aggregated professional consensus. recorded no formal critic scores at the time, underscoring the show's niche appeal amid limited mainstream review coverage.

Audience and Ratings Data

The series premiered on on 3 August 2006, drawing an initial audience of approximately 1.3 million viewers and a 7% share. Subsequent episodes experienced a decline, with the later instalments averaging around 900,000 viewers. These figures represented modest performance for a comedy slot during the summer period, where peak-time programmes often hovered in the low millions amid competition from multichannel viewing. Despite the unremarkable broadcast metrics, Time Trumpet cultivated a dedicated in subsequent years, particularly among fans of satirical comedy. Retrospective discussions on platforms like frequently praise its prescient humour and , with users highlighting segments such as the mock future retrospectives on celebrities and politics as enduringly sharp. This grassroots appreciation has positioned it alongside other works in online recommendations for "underrated" British television.

Awards and Nominations

Time Trumpet did not receive any major awards or nominations following its 2006 premiere on . Industry records, including those maintained by , list no formal recognitions in categories such as best series, writing, or at events like the British Comedy Awards or BAFTA Television Awards. This absence contrasts with creator Armando Iannucci's later project , which earned for Outstanding Comedy Series in 2015, 2016, and 2017, alongside multiple nominations for writing and direction. The series' recognition thus leaned toward enduring appreciation for its prescient rather than immediate institutional validation through prizes.

Controversies

Episode-Specific Disputes

The third episode of Time Trumpet, broadcast on on August 17, 2006, included a sketch portraying a jumbo jet crashing into the Houses of Parliament as part of a mock "Terrorism Award" retrospective, followed by the fictional assassination of then-Prime Minister . Viewers lodged complaints citing insensitivity to the , which killed 52 people and injured over 700, despite the episode airing more than a year afterward. Ofcom documented four such complaints against the program for breaches of generally accepted standards, though none were upheld as warranting sanctions. Earlier episodes elicited fewer responses; the on August 3, 2006, received one similarly flagged under standards, potentially related to satirical depictions of political figures and events. Additional viewer feedback across the series occasionally highlighted perceived one-sided targeting of Labour government policies, such as foreign interventions and domestic , but these did not escalate to regulatory action. No edits or statements addressing specific episode content were issued in response to the disputes.

Broader Criticisms of Tone and Accuracy

Critics have questioned the series' tone for exhibiting an overly cynical and misanthropic edge, with some contemporary viewers describing early episodes as plodding or reliant on superficial editing that failed to sustain comedic momentum. This uneven execution was attributed to an overambitious format blending with , resulting in sketches that occasionally felt forced or disconnected from the central premise. Debates over have arisen in broader discussions of , where shows like Time Trumpet—focusing heavily on the shortcomings of the administration and its alliances, such as the partnership with Bush—have been grouped with topical comedies accused of reflecting an institutional left-leaning slant, potentially underemphasizing conservative viewpoints or opposition figures. Defenders of the series counter that its mockery extends equally to media hysteria, celebrity narcissism, and apolitical absurdities like reality TV and environmental fads, aligning with Iannucci's tradition of lampooning systemic incompetence rather than partisan advocacy. On factual liberties, the show's speculative depictions of future events, such as societal collapses or failures, prioritize hyperbolic exaggeration for satirical effect over , leading some to critique apparent "predictions" (e.g., amplified influence or political scandals) as retrospective coincidences rather than prescient analysis of causal trends. This perspective posits that the series' insights stem from amplifying observable patterns—like tabloid-driven discourse or governmental spin—rather than novel foresight, with enhancing perceived accuracy post-broadcast in 2006.

Distribution and Media

Initial Broadcast

Time Trumpet premiered on in the on , 3 August 2006, at 10:00 PM, marking the start of its six-episode run as a satirical series written by . The initial episodes aired weekly on evenings, with the first three installments broadcast on 3 August, 10 August, and 17 August 2006. A 10-minute preview segment had aired two weeks earlier, providing an early glimpse into the series' futuristic retrospective format. The scheduling positioned Time Trumpet within BBC Two's mid-2000s slate of edgy, intelligent comedies, including contemporaries like Iannucci's , which debuted earlier that year and contributed to the channel's reputation for political and social satire. No significant scheduling disruptions or viewership peaks tied to external events were reported for the initial broadcast, reflecting its niche appeal amid a summer programming period focused on lighter, experimental content. International reach during the original airing remained limited, primarily confined to the UK broadcast with no confirmed simultaneous or immediate transmissions on overseas networks such as . The series concluded its first run on 7 September 2006, after which repeats were occasionally scheduled on , though these did not substantially alter the modest initial exposure.

Home Video Releases

The complete series of Time Trumpet was released on DVD in the on 27 April 2009 by 2 Entertain, a division of . The single-disc edition compiles all six episodes into a total runtime of 167 minutes. Formatted in PAL video standard for Region 2 compatibility, the DVD is primarily accessible to European players and requires multi-region hardware for playback elsewhere, such as in . No verified details on bonus features, such as audio commentaries or deleted scenes, appear in distributor listings or reviews from the era. No official releases occurred in other regions, including Region 1 for the , and no publicly available sales figures or commercial performance metrics have been reported, aligning with the series' niche appeal as a rather than a mass-market product. Early formats, such as downloads or streaming rentals, were not pursued by the at the time of initial output.

Modern Availability and Accessibility

As of 2024, Time Trumpet remains unavailable on major official streaming services, including , where episode pages indicate content is not currently accessible. The series has not been re-released in digital formats by the or other broadcasters since its original DVD edition in 2009, limiting legal viewing options to . DVD copies, primarily in Region 2 PAL format, are obtainable through secondary markets such as and , often as imports unsuitable for standard U.S. or players without compatible hardware. No official Blu-ray, 4K remaster, or high-definition upgrades have been produced, with preservation efforts relying on fan-uploaded content rather than institutional initiatives. Unofficial accessibility persists via YouTube, where individual clips—such as segments featuring David Cameron or Jamie Oliver—circulate, though full episodes are subject to removal due to copyright enforcement. Coverage in outlets like The Guardian (2021) and Collider (2024) has highlighted this fragmented access amid renewed interest in the series' prescient satire, yet prompted no announcements of expanded distribution or revivals through 2025.

Legacy

Cultural Impact and Retrospective Analyses

Time Trumpet has garnered a among enthusiasts of British satire, particularly within Armando Iannucci's oeuvre, where it is praised for pioneering a style that blends archival footage with fabricated future testimonials to critique media retrospectives. This format influenced subsequent satirical works by emphasizing visual and talking-head , elements that echoed in Iannucci's later projects like . Retrospective reviews position the series as an underrated gem in the British comedy landscape, with a 2016 Guardian assessment noting its role in assembling talents such as and for sharp political lampooning. Analyses of its cultural footprint underscore how Time Trumpet challenged viewers' perceptions of authenticity through innovative techniques, prompting Iannucci to observe that such methods could erode trust in televised reality. Despite initial viewership declines from 1.3 million for its debut episode, later evaluations credit it with advancing satire's capacity for multimedia absurdity, distinct from predecessors like . A 2021 Guardian retrospective lauds its "savage" tone as a benchmark for spoofing nostalgia-driven TV, attributing its longevity to prescient media deconstruction amid evolving fake-news dynamics. These assessments, drawn from outlets reflecting on Iannucci's trajectory, affirm the series' niche but substantive imprint on satirical discourse, prioritizing structural innovation over broad commercial success.

Predictive Elements and Eerily Accurate Satire

The satirical elements in Time Trumpet, framed as a 2031 retrospective on the early , frequently extended observable trends in media sensationalism, celebrity excess, and political overreach into hyperbolic scenarios, yielding some alignments with later realities while many remained unfulfilled absurdities. For instance, the spoof reality program Spicey Slicey, which depicted children undergoing extreme , mirrored the post-2006 surge in cosmetic procedures among adolescents, with the American Society of Plastic Surgeons reporting a 2% annual increase in teen surgeries from 2006 to 2019, driven by cultural normalization of via reality TV and influencers. Politically, the series portrayed then-Prime Minister as a guilt-ridden figure haunting amid fallout, presaging the real-world Chilcot of 2016, which criticized Blair's decisions and fueled public remorse narratives, as evidenced by his own 2010 memoir A Journey admitting personal anguish over the conflict's costs. Similarly, a segment forecasting , then Tory leader, inflicting "catastrophically terrible" harm aligned broadly with his 2016 referendum, which empirical analyses attribute to exacerbating UK economic divisions, with GDP growth forecasts revised downward by 2-3% long-term by bodies like the Office for Budget Responsibility. These resonated as causal extensions of Blair-era interventionism and Cameron's emerging risk-taking persona, rather than . Media satires, such as the grotesque Rape an Ape game show, lampooned escalating reality TV depravity, paralleling the trajectory of programs like Big Brother spin-offs and I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here!, where participant scandals and ethical lapses proliferated, culminating in Ofcom fines for misconduct in over 20 UK reality formats by 2015. Yet, the show's causal realism faltered in unmaterialized excesses, including Jamie Oliver engineering "talking meat" via cloning or broadcaster Vernon Kay's body uncontrollably expanding, highlighting how satire amplified trends without prophetic precision—logical hyperbole from early-2000s foodie fads and celebrity tabloid frenzies, but detached from empirical feasibility. Overall, alignments stemmed from discerning pattern extrapolation—e.g., tabloid-driven body dysmorphia trends yielding normalized enhancements—tempered by deliberate misses underscoring the format's comedic intent over foresight, as writers drew from contemporaneous expert consultations on cultural trajectories rather than speculative .

Adaptation Attempts

In December 2011, announced plans for a U.S. of Time Trumpet, with serving as co-executive producer; the remake was envisioned as a satirical set 30 years in the future, reimagining recent American events through fictional retrospectives akin to the original British series. Despite the commission, the project did not advance to pilot production, scripting beyond initial stages, or broadcast, effectively stalling by 2012 amid Iannucci's growing commitments to other ventures such as . No episodes were ever aired, and subsequent industry reports on Iannucci's projects omit any reference to its completion or revival. No further adaptation efforts, whether for U.S. or international markets, have been publicly announced or pursued as of October 2025, reflecting the challenges of transplanting the original's niche, UK-centric satirical format to broader audiences.

References

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