withahip wrote:Is that true for everyone? You - and the other UK posters here - may expect more from comedians just like you do musicians. Don't you have comedians there, though, that were inventive or funny for a few years and stay around milking the same jokes because like a bad restaurant in a good location people go back to because they know what they will get and don't have to really think? And you find yourself asking why is he still on tv in the UK?
I get how a guy that isn't anything much special back home goes to another country and gets put on a pedestal somewhere else.
A lot of people don't search out new comedians and music. Actually most don't. I would put money on that being a universal fact. Gervais is a fresh face in the U.S., so what you are so bored with now is new over here. I get the feeling in a year or so, I will be saying I can't believe I thought this guy was funny. But for now, he was a breath of fresh air at that awards ceremony.
It's probably because comedians have a short-life span and it's generally considered more of a young man/woman's game (with a few exceptions), very similar to musicians. Round these parts they do the comedy circuit, get accolades at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, maybe take their show onto radio and then it's made as a TV show where the normal rule is considered that all-time classic comedy shows shouldn't have anymore than three series. Then they might do something else, or move into some area of TV completely different. Few milk it. That would have probably happened to Gervais if he hadn't tried to crack America.
Then the next lot come along to go through the same motions.
For UK audiences, Ricky Gervais was David Brent. I don't know if this video shows up in the US, I'm not much a fan of these two, but James Corden (the fat one) does Ricky Gervais down to a tee. That's how he is to us now.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ue6fmsnZM78[/youtube]
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5wCqYyN-vI&feature=related[/youtube]