Dave Gorman

Dave Gorman

Date of birth: 02-03-1971
Dave Gorman started stand-up in 1990, when still a teenager, after dropping out of his mathematics course at Manchester University. But it took five years for him to start gaining recognition, hosting both the Comedy Zone showcase at the Edinburgh Fringe and appearing on Granada's Stand-up Show in 1995. Writing work began to come in, and he worked on Jenny Eclair Squats, The Fast Show and the Mrs Merton Show.

In 1998, he performed his first solo show, Reasons To Be Cheerful, deconstructing the lyrics of the Ian Dury song, which he followed the next year with Better World, in which he asked local newspaper readers how he could improve the world, then acted n their suggestions. This documentary-style show came into its own in 2000's Are You Dave Gorman? in which, egged on by flatmate Danny Wallace, he travelled the world to try to find 52 namesakes.

Are You Dave Gorman? was nominated for the Perrier award, and won the HBO Comedy Jury Award for Best One Person Show at the US Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen Colorado. It was subsequently made into a BBC Two series, The Dave Gorman Collection, and a successful book.

His second TV series, also broadcast on BBC Two, was Dave Gorman's Important Astrology Experiment, a cod-scientific test to see if he could improve his love, health, and wealth over six episodes if he followed his horoscopes. His twin brother Nick, completely ignored the astrologers, so acted as a control.

In 2003, he embarked on another bizarre quest; this time tracking down people responsible for Googlewhacks - web pages that contain a unique pairing of words, so they are the only result returned when you type the phrase into the search engine. The show, which virtually drove him to a nervous breakdown, started at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, transferred to Edinburgh and a UK tour, and again spawned a bestselling book as well as a live DVD.

Since 2005, Gorman has also hosted the Radio 4 show Genius, in which members of the public submit their brilliant ideas to be put to the test, which transferred to BBC Two in 2009. He has also starred in Rob Brydon's Annually Retentive, a show showing a behind-the-scenes view of a fictional comedy panel game, as himself.

In 2007, he released his documentary feature film, America Unchained, in which he tried to cross America without using chain restaurants, hotels or gas stations. Again, a book accompanied the film.

In 2009, he announced a return to more traditional stand-up - but cycling between the 32 venues in his UK tour.

Read More

Goodish news! Dave Gorman is back

Comedian's PowerPoint show returns to TV after seven years

Dave Gorman is bringing back Modern Life Is Goodish after a seven-year hiatus.

The comic is recording four more hour-long shows for the soon-to-be-rebranded U&Dave channel, which will air air later this year.

He said: ‘I'm delighted to be getting back in the Goodish saddle. It's been seven years since I hung up my Modern Life Is Goodish clicker and in that time, life has definitely got seven years moderner - so there should be plenty to get my teeth into.’

The original show ran for 36 episodes over five series on Dave between 2013 and 2017, attracting 1.5 million viewers per episode at its peak. 

However Gorman called it a day because of the demanding workload, which required 100-hour weeks in the build-up to each episode being recorded, finalising the scripts and the accompanying PowerPoint  presentations.

Chortle last month reported that the comic was preparing for a return to TV, but at the time details were under wraps. 

UK TV commissioning executive Mark Iddon said today: ‘I’m massively thrilled to announce the return of Modern Life Is Goodish to the U&Dave audience. 

‘Dave Gorman’s unique comedic insights and witty PowerPoint presentations have always resonated with our audience. His ability to dissect the quirks of modern life with humour and intelligence is unmatched. I can’t wait to dive back into the joyous and thought-provoking observations that make modern life not just good, but goodish.  In a world where everything's "meh", we could use a dose of "ish".'

Dave Gorman Modern Life Is Goodish production credits

Produced by: Avalon
Directed by: Paul Wheeler
Series producer: James Fidler
Executive producers: Jamie Issacs and Dave Gorman
Commissioners: Mark Iddon, Cherie Hall and Hilary Rosen 

Thanks for reading. If you find Chortle’s coverage of the comedy scene useful or interesting, please consider supporting us with a monthly or one-off ko-fi donation.
Any money you contribute will directly fund more reviews, interviews and features – the sort of in-depth coverage that is increasingly difficult to fund from ever-squeezed advertising income, but which we think the UK’s vibrant comedy scene deserves.

Read More

Published: 4 Jul 2024

Fringe Bill | First Edinburgh line-ups unveiled

Fringe Bill

Bill Bailey, Mel and Sue and John Shuttleworth will…
20/05/2003

Wizards of Oz

Lee Mack, Daniel Kitson and Dave Gorman are among…
16/02/2003

Skip to page

We see you are using AdBlocker software. Chortle relies on advertisers to fund this website so it’s free for you, so we would ask that you disable it for this site. Our ads are non-intrusive and relevant. Help keep Chortle viable.