Man to Man with Dean Learner
Man to Man with Dean Learner is a British comedy chat show that was first broadcast on Channel 4 on 20 October 2006 and released on DVD on 3 September 2007. It features comedians Richard Ayoade and Matthew Holness.
Originally called Deano's After Dark, the show features Dean Learner chatting to a range of guest characters including horror writer Garth Marenghi.
Production
Holness and Ayoade spent time testing out material in front of a live audience in December 2005, which laid the foundation for Man to Man; the show involved Ayoade fixed in the role of smut-peddling presenter Dean Learner and Holness playing various characters. These included Glynn Nimron, a sci-fi – or "S.F.", as he preferred it – actor with a new biography detailing his extremely close relationship with a director; Garth Marenghi, returning to promote his new Darkplace-esque movie War of the Wasps; folk musician Merriman Weir who has a penchant for rather dark songs ; and another actor, Randolph Caer, who became a social pariah after starring in one of Dean's exploitation films.Bafta Nominated composer Andrew Hewitt, who scored Darkplace, also scored sections of Man to Man.
An amount of the humour stems from Learner's dubious business activities and anachronistically androcentric tendencies – with Finnish model Satu Suominen being the target of many of his jibes, and most of the guests having some sort of business connection to Learner which is sometimes declared upfront and sometimes revealed in the course of the episode.
Episodes
Garth Marenghi
- Original Transmission Date: 20 October 2006
Steve Pising
- Original Transmission Date: 27 October 2006
Glynn Nimron
- Original Transmission Date: 3 November 2006
Merriman Weir
- Original Transmission Date: 10 November 2006
Amir Chanan
- Original Transmission Date: 17 November 2006
Randolph Caer
- Original Transmission Date: 24 November 2006
Due to the death of Caer shortly before the programme's transmission, all guests from the previous five episodes were invited on to pay their respects. Over the course of the episode it is apparent that many of these guests, and Dean himself, bear some responsibility for Caer's downward spiral, which began after Caer became a social pariah due to his role in Bitch Killer. Caer's career slide is similar to that of respected British director Michael Powell whose career never fully recovered from the critical mauling it received for Peeping Tom, a serial killer film loathed at the time by the press but which now is regarded by many, including Martin Scorsese, as a seminal masterpiece.