TV Review | Tosh.0 1.1, 1.2
I don’t like Daniel Tosh as a comedian. His snarky sense of humour, as seen on Daniel Tosh: Completely Serious, doesn’t appeal to me. He’s less predictable than Dane Cook, a man Tosh is often compared to, and his stuff is intelligently written. I don’t find Tosh funny, but he’s not the worst comic I’ve seen.
Tosh is a good choice to star in a show making fun of viral videos. Tosh.0 (The Comedy Network: premiered June 10, 10:30 PM ET/PT) is Comedy Central’s answer to G4′s Web Soup and VH1′s Web Junk 20. Naturally, there’s a “Tosh.0 is a ripoff of Web Soup” thread at G4tv.com’s forums.
Tosh.0 is fairly low-concept – show a video, watch Daniel Tosh make fun of it. Specific segments like “Web Redemption” are added in to break the monotony, but it’s Tosh making fun of viral video culture for the most part. The show would be straight filler if not for the individual segments.
“Web Redemption” is the best segment on the show. Internet celebrities like Afro Ninja and Miss Teen South Carolina 2007 are given a chance to make right their popularized wrongs. While this segment could easily become mean-spirited, Tosh.0 doesn’t go that route. Tosh.0 should pick more recent videos for the segment, since the Internet rots faster than one can say “full of fail.”
“Celebrity Video” is another matter. In the debut episode, Dave Attell and Bree Olson play beer pong. Being a porn star, Olson plays her own predictable way.
David Koechner orders roses in the second episode, delivering a special message to his wife in the process. I’m amazed at seeing David Koechner on television. Add to that a Kato Kaelin appearance in the first episode, and it’s like 1996 just farted in my face. I know Koechner’s a character actor, but his name doesn’t scream “Internet culture.” I don’t even know if Koechner’s name screams.
Tosh.0 is too slight to be anything. The premise is thin. The show’s not bad, but there’s little substance to it. There is almost no difference between Tosh.0 and Most Outrageous Moments, which is the kiss of death if you’re trying to sell Daniel Tosh to a general audience. I’ll be amazed if Comedy Central gets more than one season out of this thing.

The original Gong Show
Acts usually
The main problem with The Gong Show with Dave Attell is that it’s too stiff. The host and panelists find it more necessary to deliver stinging one-liners to contestants/each other than to have fun with the format.
The Gong Show with Dave Attell isn’t as cheerfully haphazard as the original Gong Show, but it’s better than
Parodies of Christmas specials are hard to pull off. Christmas sentiment tends to erode edgy comedy. Take Dave Foley’s The True Meaning of Christmas Specials from a few years ago – Foley apes Bing Crosby-style specials too much for the show to be funny.
Sadly, Stephen Colbert’s more a Foley than a Smigel with A Colbert Christmas: The Greatest Gift of All! (
A Colbert Christmas: The Greatest Gift of All! is also scattershot in its musical numbers. Willie Nelson’s paean to weed isn’t funny despite Colbert’s best choral efforts. John Legend’s ode to nutmeg/excuse for sexual double entendres is. Toby Keith’s middle finger to political correctness could have been better. Feist is just there to be Feist.
South Park is a bit late with its High School Musical parody. Twilight is more trendy right now, and South Park just made fun of it last week. I wonder why South Park didn’t take care of High School Musical two years ago, before the cancer became terminal.
Bridon’s father essentially makes “Elementary School Musical.” The man is a parody of the abusive-father-figure archetype, and he earns the biggest laughs in the episode. Although Mr. Gueermo’s role is predictable, he makes up for this with nicely over-the-top movements. The posters for A Chorus Line and Phantom of the Opera are a nice touch.
“Pandemic 2 – The Startling” repeats itself ad nauseam for twenty-odd minutes. Craig feels the need to explain why Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny get into dangerous situations all the time. That’s great, he’s explaining the South Park formula, very “meta.” Trouble is, he’s not funny.
Randy’s subplot isn’t much better. He’s still holding the video camera. His wife Sharon gets angrier at him the more he gets shots of the guinea creatures. Randy talks about being startled a lot and tells his daughter Shelley to wave at the camera. Nothing about this is hilarious, but the joke keeps on going like a Peter Griffin/giant rooster fight. It’s never a good sign when I can compare South Park unfavourably to Family Guy.