Alan Carr's Specstacular

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Alan Carr's Specstacular
Title card for Alan Carr's New Year Specstacular
Presented byAlan Carr
Country of originUnited Kingdom
No. of episodes10
Production
ProducerOpen Mike Productions
Production locationThe London Studios
Running time95–150 minutes
Original release
NetworkChannel 4
Release31 December 2011 (2011-12-31) –
31 December 2017 (2017-12-31)
Related
Alan Carr: Chatty Man
The Sunday Night Project
The Justin Lee Collins Show

Alan Carr's Specstacular is a special broadcast on Channel 4 presented by Alan Carr. The show features Alan and guests all competing in sketches, games and musical performances. The show was originally broadcast on 31 December 2011 as Alan Carr's New Year Specstacular and has spawned to various other specials including two Summertime Specstaculars in 2012 and a Grand National Specstacular in 2013.

The title sequence, designed by Lee Jacobs, sees Carr mischievously setting off a giant rocket in the basement of Channel 4. It blasts through the roof to the delight of the queueing crowd outside to spell out the show's title.[1]

Episodes

Episode Year Guests Viewers
(millions)
1 31 December 2011 Jonathan Ross, Micky Flanagan, Melanie Sykes, Gok Wan, Olly Murs, Kirstie Allsopp, Alesha Dixon, Bruno Tonioli, Heston Blumenthal, JLS & The Ting Tings 1.86[2]
2 31 December 2012 1.9[3]
3 31 December 2013 2.18
4 31 December 2014 Jonathan Ross, Alesha Dixon, Mark Wright, James Corden, Caroline Flack, Tulisa, Professor Green & Seann Walsh 1.85
5 31 December 2015 David Guetta, Danny Dyer, Mel B, Greg Davies, Kelly Brook, Nish Kumar & Ellie Goulding 1.79
6 31 December 2016
Tieks & Sinitta
1.57
7 31 December 2017
Binky Felstead
1.32

Summertime Specstacular

Alan Carr's Summertime Specstacular was broadcast on 8 June 2012, during the week of celebrations for the Diamond Jubilee of Elizabeth II. Carr was joined by guests David Walliams, Justin Bieber, The Saturdays, the cast of Made in Chelsea, Amy Macdonald, Carol Vorderman, Paddy McGuinness, Christian Jessen and Rizzle Kicks. Carr was also visited by Russell Brand via video link.

The special was watched by 1.746 million viewers, the second most watched broadcast on Channel 4 that week.[4]

Summertime Specstacular 2

Alan Carr's Summertime Specstacular 2 was broadcast on 17 August 2012, during Channel 4's Funny Fortnight. Guests included

Helen Glover
also appeared.

The special was watched by 1.37 million viewers.[4]

Grand National Specstacular

On 19 March 2013 Alan Carr's Grand National Specstacular was announced by Channel 4 as part of their line-up of programming building up to the 2013 Grand National.[5] The 95-minute special was broadcast on 5 April 2013, on the eve of the Grand National, and featured Jonathan Ross, Paddy McGuinness, Kimberley Walsh, Louis Walsh, James Nesbitt, Abbey Clancy, Rylan Clark, Alex Brooker, Russell Brand and Clare Balding, with music performed by Madness.

Miranda Hart was scheduled to appear but could not after injuring her knee earlier in the week.

The celebrities played games and drew out which horses they got in the sweepstake.

The special pulled in 1.49 million viewers.[6]

Alan Carr's Christmas Cracker

On 25 December 2018, Alan Carr hosted a Christmas extravaganza in his own inimitable style from his very own Alpine Log Cabin. Guests included Channing Tatum, Emilia Fox, Danny Dyer, Lily Allen, Sharon Horgan, Olly Murs, Russell Howard, Alesha Dixon, Freddie Fox, Dani Dyer, Vicky McClure, Martin Compston, and Chris Kamara, plus surprise sketches and merry musical performances.

Controversy

During the 2013 festivities, the guests discussed adult themes, including Gok Wan telling Carr to "fuck off" and joking that he would not perform oral sex on him, Blumenthal talking about a strap-on sex toy and Ross commenting on a full-frontal naked picture of N-Dubz star Dappy.[citation needed] Following the show, Channel 4 received fifty-seven complaints from viewers, and it was believed that government-approved regulatory authority for the broadcasting, telecommunications and postal industries, Ofcom, would investigate the show.[7] However, after consideration, Ofcom has confirmed that the show had met "generally accepted standards" for a show aired after the 9pm watershed. A Channel 4 spokesman said: "It was an irreverent end-of-year party, appropriately scheduled post-watershed with clear warnings."[7]

References

  1. ^ "Alan Carr's New Year Specstacular - Laura Hulme". laurahulme.com. Archived from the original on 17 July 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  2. ^ Millar, Paul (2 January 2012). "Channel 4's Alan Carr New Year's marathon seen by 2m". Digital Spy. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  3. ^ Sweney, Mark (2 January 2013). "BBC1's New Year Live raises a toast to 10.3 million". Guardian. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  4. ^ a b "Top 30 Programmes". BARB. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  5. ^ Fletcher, Alex (19 March 2013). "Grand National coverage expanded on Channel 4". Digital Spy. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  6. ^ "Top 10 Programmes - BARB". BARB. Archived from the original on 18 July 2014. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  7. ^ a b "'Alan Carr's New Year Specstacular' cleared by Ofcom". imediamonkey.com. 8 February 2013. Archived from the original on 2 January 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2013.

External links