27 March 2001 (2001-03-27) – 13 December 2004 (2004-12-13)
2DTV is a Britishsatirical animated television series which was co-created and produced by Giles Pilbrow forITV. It premiered on ITV on 27 March 2001 and was nominated for theRose d'Or Award in both 2002 and 2003.[2][3]
The programme was considered the spiritual successor ofSpitting Image, a 1980s series that also featured work by Pilbrow.[4] The show's style also paid homage to the animation studioHanna-Barbera.[5] The voice cast includedJon Culshaw,Jan Ravens andMark Perry.2DTV ran for five series before being cancelled in 2004 due to falling viewing figures.[6] It was succeeded in 2008 by the short-lived seriesHeadcases.[7][8]
2DTV employed the samesatirical style asSpitting Image but usedanimation rather than puppets. The animation was produced using computer graphics, frequently with animators working up to the day of broadcast. The producer, Giles Pilbrow, was a veteran ofSpitting Image, as were some of the show'svoice artists.
The series was directed by Tim Searle.2DTV was first broadcast in 2001, but an un-broadcast pilot episode was recorded nearly six months earlier. The pilot episode featured the residentnewsreader played byAlistair McGowan, but the character was not carried over when the full seven-part first series was commissioned byITV. Each episode in the first series lasted ten minutes.
A second seven-episode series began broadcasting in 2002, with each episode again lasting ten minutes. The series spawned its own official single in July 2002, "Shoot the Dog", performed byGeorge Michael.[9] The music video features an animated Michael, plus several other characters from2DTV performing the song.[10]
A commercial for the home media compilationThe Best of 2DTV was banned by theBroadcast Advertising Clearance Centre in 2002.[11] The commercial depictedGeorge W. Bush taking one VHS out of its case and putting it in histoaster. Ofcom stated that advertisements for products cannot appear to be endorsed by someone without their permission – in this case, George W. Bush.[12] The original advert was reworked into a sketch in which Bush writes a letter complaining about being portrayed as a moron by the media, then proceeding to "post" the letter in his toaster. The programme creators subsequently proposed another commercial, this time satirisingOsama bin Laden, but they were informed that this would also be banned on the grounds that Bin Laden would have to give permission for his image to be used.[13]
Another commercial satirisedDavid Beckham compiling his list for Christmas, asking hiswife; "how do you spell DVD?".[14] A ban was later overturned on the grounds that the commercial was legitimate satire and the commercial was shown unedited. The programme's creators claimed that the controversy generated more interest in the show than the adverts could ever have done alone.[15]
For the third series, each episode was extended to 20 minutes, including advertisements. After the third series, many of the original cast members, includingJon Culshaw,Jan Ravens andMark Perry, decided to leave following an announcement that the fourth series would be extended to 30 minutes per episode. New cast membersLewis MacLeod,Kate O'Sullivan andEnn Reitel took over, appearing alongside the only remaining original cast member,Dave Lamb. All four returned for the fifth series in 2004, but due to falling ratings, its broadcast was placed in the so-calledgraveyard slot, and the show was officially cancelled at the end of that year.