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・ The Day the Pig Fell Into the Well
・ The Day the Ponies Come Back
・ The Day the Sky Exploded
・ The Day the Sun Turned Cold
・ The Day the Sun Went Out
・ The Day the Universe Changed
・ The Day the Violence Died
・ The Day the World Broke
・ The Day the World Ended
・ The Day the World Gets 'Round
・ The Day the World Stood Still
・ The Day the World Went Away
・ The Day They Robbed the Bank of England
・ The Day They Shot a Hole in the Jesus Egg
・ The Day Time Ended
The Day Today
・ The Day We Almost Died
・ The Day We Caught the Train
・ The Day We Died
・ The Day We Fight Back
・ The Day We Find Love
・ The Day We Had Hitler Home
・ The Day When I Was Born
・ The Day Will Come
・ The Day Will Dawn
・ The Day You Come
・ The Day You Went Away
・ The Day's Parade
・ The Day's War
・ The Day's Work


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The Day Today : ウィキペディア英語版
The Day Today

''The Day Today'' is a surreal British parody of television current affairs programmes, broadcast in 1994, created by Armando Iannucci and Chris Morris. It is an adaptation of the radio programme ''On the Hour'', which was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between 1991 and 1992. ''On the Hour'' was written by Morris, Iannucci, Steven Wells, Andrew Glover, Stewart Lee, Richard Herring, David Quantick, and the cast. For ''The Day Today'', Peter Baynham joined the writing team, and Lee and Herring were replaced by Graham Linehan and Arthur Mathews. The principal cast of ''On the Hour'' was retained for ''The Day Today''.
''The Day Today'' is composed of six half-hour episodes and a selection of shorter, five-minute slots recorded as promotion trailers for the longer segments. The six half-hour episodes were originally broadcast from 19 January to 23 February 1994 on BBC2. ''The Day Today'' has won many awards, including Morris winning the 1994 British Comedy Award for Best Newcomer. All six episodes are available on BBC DVD, having previously been issued on VHS.
==Programme format==

Each episode is presented as a mock news programme, and the episodes rely on a combination of ludicrous fictitious news stories, covered with a serious, pseudo-professional attitude. Each episode revolves around one or two major stories, which are pursued throughout the programme, along with a host of other stories usually only briefly referred to. In addition, the programme dips into other channels from time to time, presents clips of fictitious upcoming BBC programmes, and conducts street interviews with members of the public, in a segment titled "Speak Your Brains".
The programme frequently comments on other programmes, most often a spoof soap opera called "The Bureau", set in a 24-hour bureau de change, incorporating clichéd soap opera-style plots, which apparently produces and airs 2,000 episodes between the first and third segments of ''The Day Today'' and becomes a hit in Italy. The programme also contains clips from a spoof documentary series called "The Pool", featuring a public swimming pool and its neurotic staff, Morris' character explaining that ''The Day Today'' has funded a documentary on every public building in the country. The final episode features reports from the fictitious documentary "The Office", which follows office workers as they go on a retreat with an efficiency expert. Other non-news segments of the programme include the occasional "physical cartoons" of current events set in the studio. Chris Morris frequently parodies entirely separate channels, including "RokTV" (spoofing MTV); reporting on the fictitious and psychotically violent African-American rapper "Fur-Q"; and "Genutainment", a segment which reports on a sheepdog averting a helicopter disaster (a parody of the real-life rescue show ''999'').
The programme occasionally features producer Armando Iannucci and writer Peter Baynham, the latter playing Gay Desk reporter Colin Poppshed, among other characters. John Thomson, Graham Linehan, Tony Haase, and Minnie Driver also appear. Michael Alexander St John provides the voiceover stings, as he did in ''On the Hour''.〔Emily, Smith, The Steve Coogan Handbook, p.354〕
Much of the programme's humour derives from its excessively brash style of reporting, and its unnecessarily complex format. The opening sequence of each episode is lengthy and complicated, a parody of the overuse of computer-generated credit sequences on news programmes, and the theme tune is deliberately overdramatic and self-important. One episode presents false adverts featuring depictions of ''The Day Today'' being broadcast in bizarre locations; the night sky over Paris, the sides of the Great Pyramid in Egypt, the International Hackenbacker Building in Chicago, and the handles of 400 million petrol pumps across the globe; this is a parody of CNN International's promotions advertising the hotels in which the channel could be seen. Morris presents aggressively, often arguing with reporters and guests on-air and at one stage provoking a war between Australia and Hong Kong.
The programme frequently lambasts Conservative politicians in office at the time of the programme's production. Statesmen repeatedly lampooned by the series include John Major, Michael Heseltine (who had his picture swapped with a Bosnian old woman), Chris Patten, Douglas Hurd, Virginia Bottomley, Michael Portillo, and US President Bill Clinton.
Each episode is brought to an interrupted ending with just enough time to quickly overview the following day's newspapers (a parody of Jeremy Paxman on BBC2's ''Newsnight'') printed with absurd headlines such as "Lord Mayor's pirouette in fire chief wife decapitation", and a final humorously misused video. Each episode ends in a familiar style for news reports, with the camera panning out as the studio lights dim on Morris. Instead of shuffling his papers in clichéd newsreader style, Morris takes advantage of the dimming lights to perform bizarre activities; putting lots of pens in his jacket pockets, placing a tourniquet around his arm in preparation to inject heroin, removing his normal hair to reveal long blonde locks underneath, and, in the last episode, prostrating himself before the newsdesk.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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