
*Premise spoilers*
It’s time to return to this bureaucracy-based comedy of errors, moving on from Twenty Twelve to W1A now. Despite a completely different setting/subject matter and only a few of the same characters, the two shows have much the same sensibility. The particular crises the characters are facing come from a different field, but they deal with them in much the same ineffectual way.
Post-Olympics, Ian gets a job as Head of Values at the BBC. His first day is an overwhelming swirl of meetings, expectations, and stuffy fish-out-of-water-ness. As he struggles with the open office plan, he’s handed his first dilemma: an upstart from Cornwall who’s arguing that Cornish voices and issues are underrepresented at the BBC. Elsewhere, plans for a new food competition show are imperiled when one of the prospective hosts falls through.
We’ve got some new characters of the week to introduce. We’ll start with Anna Rampton, Head of Output. She’s played by Sarah Parish, who I’ve seen in a number of things but who I’ll always associate with the Rachnoss Queen from Doctor Who’s “The Runaway Bride.” Anna is steering the ship with regard to this new show, Britain’s Tastiest Village. After discouraging reports from the show’s producers, they meet with another potential host to pitch the series. She’s also involved in some of the same senior meetings that Ian is.
As for Ian, he is just floundering here. He’s enthusiastic about his impressive new job, but he can’t get his footing. He’s thrown into meetings and has crises dropped into his lap before he even knows what’s going on, and when he is slightly prepared, he’s immediately preempted by more pressing concerns. There’s a fun sequence of him trying in vain to find somewhere to work, but every open computer has a sign on it that says something like “THIS IS NOT A HOT DESK!” and “FUCK OFF.” When he tries to listen to the Cornish guy’s grievances, Ian doesn’t even know where to go where they can both sit down. I also like a bit where he tries to arrange for the intern to unobtrusively pop in while he’s leading a meeting to bring him a cappuccino.
Over the course of Twenty Twelve, it became obvious how many of the characters had particular repeated dialogue quirks—not flashy enough to be a catchphrase, but lines that came up over and over again, peppering their speech. I’m already seeing it with some of these new characters, like one who keeps saying, “I’m not being funny or anything,” to emphasize her point. It got more than a little old on the original show, and I suspect the same will probably happen here.
Some good narration from David Tennant today! Here are my favorite bits:
- Ian’s new job is described as “Head of Values at the BBC, a key and very senior new post, specifically credited in the light of recent learning opportunities at the corporation.”
- “Meanwhile in Tommy Cooper, the daily senior team damage limitation meeting, chaired by Director of Strategic Governance Simon Harwood, is already underway” – I just love that the senior team comes together for a “damage limitation meeting,” and they have to do it every day!
- After giving lengthy introductions to everybody else on the senior team, I like that Tennant wraps it up with, “...and two other people.”

