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Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed shows.
The Ricky Gervais Show
EMAILPRINTSERIES: HBO, Friday 9:00p (30 minutes)

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 19 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 32 votes
Read user comments
Rate this show >
Show Info
Genre(s): Animation, Comedy
Created By:
Ricky Gervais
Stephen Merchant
Karl Pilkington
First Air Date: February 19, 2010
Summary
Starring Ricky Gervais, Stephen Merchant, and Karl Pilkington
Ricky Gervais returns with an animated comedy that began as a radio show, continued in his podcasts, and now exists as a cartoon with collaborators Stephen Merchant and Karl Pilington.
Also On Metacritic
TV: Extras (UK): Season One Extras (UK): Season Two Extras: The Extra Special Series Finale Ricky Gervais: Out of England
Episode Guide & More Info: More about this show at TV.com
Also On The Web: Official Actor Site Official Show Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
The New York TimesAlessandra Stanley
Gervais serves as a bullying sidekick to Mr. Pilkington and steps out of the way, letting his strange and funny collaborator take the lead. The series is not a full-blown comedy show; it’s a collection of Web-styled sketches and proof that big laughs can come in small doses.
Read Full Review >Washington PostHank Stuever
Using the audio from the radio episodes and then supplying a sort of 1960s-style Hanna-Barbera wash of cheap animation to more fully illustrate the inanity of their conversations, Gervais has landed on something quite special that can be scorchingly funny.
Read Full Review >San Francisco ChronicleTim Goodman
Media Rights Capital, an independent production company, took an offbeat idea and made it work surprisingly well.
Read Full Review >Entertainment WeeklyAubry D'Arminio
This '60s-style animated edition of their record-breaking podcast, featuring cartoon versions of the duo and idiot savant sidekick Karl Pilkington, magnifies everything venal and childish about the original (jokes about dildos on sticks and monkeys on benders) while masking its incredible wit.
Read Full Review >New York PostLinda Stasi
Not only did I enjoy the upcoming "The Ricky Gervais Show," which is an insane animated version of his equally insane podcasts, but I laughed so loud that I practically had to be restrained in the office.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Daily NewsEllen Gray
Given that the show largely consists of the animated Gervais and Merchant sitting around a table with the notoriously round-headed Pilkington, disabusing him of one oddball notion after another, it's strange that Gervais would've chosen this show to carry his name. But true believers--or fans of "The Life & Times of Tim," whose second-season premiere follows at 9:30--may well have a yabba-dabba-do time.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles TimesRobert Lloyd
The cartoon show is the least of his series, but it is generally amusing and pretty to watch, and I like the way it rambles.
Read Full Review >Boston HeraldMark A. Perigard
Oh, you’ll laugh. But you probably won’t remember much of it the next day.
Read Full Review >USA TodayRobert Bianco
That a premise so slight yields as much amusement as it does is a tribute to Gervais and Merchant's quick wits and to Pilkington's blend of extreme gullibility and offbeat quirkiness....The purposely retro animation, which turns Gervais into a more cheerful Fred Flintstone, not only adds nothing to the mix--it subtracts.
Read Full Review >Pittsburgh Post-GazetteRob Owen
I'm still not sold on watching the show. I still think I might prefer to listen to the podcasts instead. The animation adds some humor but probably not enough to justify adding this series to my already overbooked TV viewing schedule.
Read Full Review >TV GuideMatt Roush
The chats are amusing, quirky and strangely obsessed with monkeys (which, granted, is always a funny topic), but the illustrations tend to overemphasize the throwaway moments, draining them of spontaneity and often of their original humor.
Read Full Review >New York Daily NewsDavid Hinckley
The show's only visual, literally, is cartoon animation of Gervais, Merchant and Pilkington talking. That's a bold gamble because if the words aren't grabbing the viewer, there's nothing else to hold the fort until the words get good again....So as with radio, you ignore the lulls and focus on the keepers.
Read Full Review >VarietyBrian Lowry
Animation would seem to be an ideal vehicle for this, but there's only so much it can do--in part because there's no adhesive to the episodes. The three guys sit and bullshit for 20-some-odd minutes--at times entertainingly--until the program simply ends.
Read Full Review >Slant MagazineMichael Murray
To reduce talents as large as Gervais and Merchant to caricatures seems absurd. The vitality and enthusiasm that passes between them, and the unfettered joy implicit in that, demands a human face, and without that, HBO is missing the point, creating a show that's easy to listen to, but actually hard to watch.
Read Full Review >Newark Star-LedgerAlan Sepinwall
On audio, the dynamic between the trio was hilarious enough to make Pilkington into a minor UK celebrity (he's since published several books). But animating their discussions makes them oddly uncomfortable.
Read Full Review >NewsdayVerne Gay
Pilkington's musings are sometimes amusing and always pointless, but the animation almost totally nullifies the first and intensifies the second.
Read Full Review >Boston GlobeMatthew Gilbert
Alas, HBO has come up with a dull, unimaginative interpretation of the podcast, essentially giving us animated versions of the three men sitting in a sound booth talking into microphones.
Read Full Review >Hollywood ReporterRandee Dawn
The static nature of three talking heads (even in cartoon form) is dull, and the intermittent non-studio interstitials used to illustrate the discussion fail to provide enough of a change. Watching cartoon characters laugh at one another feels recursively silly, and not in a good way.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this show is 8.2 (out of 10) based on 32 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Jason W. gave it a9:
As usual, the critics from Variety and the Hollywood Reporter balk at the unconventional aspects and totally ignore the show's merits - namely that a) it's funny and b) Merchant and Gervais mercilessly mock and ridicule not just Pilkington, but by extension all those people in the world who confidently accept illogic and thoughtless assertions, many of whom (unlike Pilkington, one assumes) wreak terrible damage to society in the process.
