| Ballot Monkeys | |
|---|---|
| Created by | |
| Written by |
|
| Starring | |
| Opening theme | "Hit the Road Jack" |
| Composer | Philip Pope |
| Country of origin | United Kingdom |
| Original language | English |
| No. of series | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 5[1] |
| Production | |
| Executive producer | Jimmy Mulville |
| Running time | 25 minutes |
| Production company | Hat Trick Productions |
| Original release | |
| Network | Channel 4 |
| Release | 21 April (2015-04-21) – 6 May 2015 (2015-05-06) |
Ballot Monkeys is a 2015 British comedy series which appeared onChannel 4 in the run up to the2015 general election. The five-part series was set oncampaign buses belonging to theConservative Party,Labour Party,Liberal Democrats andUK Independence Party featuring groups of mid-level party campaign organisers as each embarks on their respective election campaign.
The series was written byAndy Hamilton andGuy Jenkin. Episodes were written and produced within hours of transmission, allowing the characters to react to recent real-world events.[2]
The series cuts between the Conservative, Labour, Liberal Democrat and UKIP buses. Apart from a brief phone call at the end of the last episode, these groups do not interact with each other. All scenes are shot inside or in the immediate vicinity of the campaign buses, and much of the humour comes from the candidates talking candidly in private about their party and campaign in ways that they would not do in public. In each party there are interpersonal conflicts between individuals.
In the Conservative group nominal leader Martin (Hugh Dennis), a frustratedone-nation conservative, clashes with the well-connected Baz (Jimmy Akingbola), who openly supports what he considers to beBoris Johnson's inevitable rise to power and is far more willing to engage in more cynical campaign ploys. Women's issues consultant Siobhan (Hattie Morahan) feels marginalised by both men. The group is completed by dim-witted and politically uninformed intern Ruby (Liz Kingsman), who the group is forced to employ as she is the daughter of a major party donor.
In the Labour group Jack (Trevor Cooper), a long time party supporter, is confused and dismayed by how the party, politics and campaigning has changed. Social media organiser Conor (Theo Barklem-Biggs) continually suggests unhelpful online strategies, mostly to the chagrin of co-ordinator Christine (Daisy Haggard). The advice of American political strategy consultant Melanie (Kathleen Rose Perkins), who frequently attempts to secure a future job in the2016 presidential election campaign, grates with her English colleagues.
Liberal Democrat Kevin (Ben Miller), dismayed at the poor electoral prospects of his party, the last five years ofcoalition government, and a recent divorce, suffers a nervous breakdown, showing increasingly erratic behaviour as the series progresses. Assistant Charlotte (Esther Smith), tries to help, but party grandee Simon (Michael Fenton Stevens) repeatedly refuses to acknowledge that a problem exists.
In the UKIP bus, communications manager Gerry (Andy Nyman), a UKIP supporter on purelyEurosceptic grounds, struggles to prevent political damage arising from offensive comments and behaviour of other UKIP members. This includes those of openly bigoted logistics manager Kate (Sarah Hadland). The bus is driven by Obi (Rhashan Stone), a friendly and resourceful Somalian immigrant. Gerry and Obi strike up a friendship, bonding over a mutual love ofStar Wars, while Kate views him with suspicion due to his race. Gerry is forced to fire Obi after he learns he is anillegal immigrant, and his replacement Mick (Steven O'Donnell) is far more aligned with Kate's bigoted worldview.
A sequel series,Power Monkeys began airing on 8 June 2016. While retaining the same up-to-the-minute production style, the new series focuses more broadly on current events, such as the EU referendum or the American election.[3]