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  1. May 18, 1997 · The watchdog for television standards has gone out of its way to praise the controversial Channel 4 satire Brass Eye despite upholding complaints from two Tory MPs who were fooled into appearing ...

  2. Unless you're not from Britain and so fewer British comedies are exported I wouldn't say Brass Eye has been forgotten. It may not be in the mainstream of British popular knowledge but other than that it's pretty widely respected and known about. Anyone with knowledge of British comedy beyond the biggest hits should have heard of it.

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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Brass_EyeBrass Eye - Wikipedia

    Brass Eye (stylised as brassEYE) is a British satirical television series parodying current affairs news programming. A series of six episodes aired on Channel 4 in 1997, and a further episode in 2001. The series was created and presented by Chris Morris, written by Morris, David Quantick, Peter Baynham, Jane Bussmann, Arthur Mathews, Graham ...

  5. Jul 28, 2016 · Brass Eye, a parody of a 60 Minutes-like newsmagazine show, had been dormant after airing one season in the UK in 1997. But it returned four years later for this surprise broadcast, one that saw ...

  6. Nov 3, 2017 · The media world Brass Eye mocked has arguably gotten worse, and there’s no way a programme like it could be made now. As the moral panics Morris satirised swirl around us, a package of Brass Eye ...

  7. Jan 30, 2017 · A s Brass Eye turns 20, it’s worth remembering that it probably shouldn’t have made it to our screens at all. When Chris Morris’s epochal media satire first aired, the broadcasting code ...

  8. Jan 29, 1997 · February 12, 1997. Tomorrow's World meets Watchdog meets Wired. Science gets the Brass Eye treatment. A number of celebs again espouse their scripted knowledge of 'mad' experiments and covered up and untold stories of electricity falling from pylons and frogs being grown with rabbit's feet. Expand.

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