Paul Merton in China

Paul Merton in China
Genre Comedy
Directed by Barbie MacLaurin
Presented by Paul Merton
Narrated by Paul Merton
Composer(s) Rohan Stevenson
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
Chinese
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 4
Production
Executive producer(s) Paul Sommers
Producer(s) Mark Chapman
Simon Onwurah
Production location(s) People's Republic of China
Editor(s) Doug Bryson
Alex Muggleton
Running time 60 minutes (inc. adverts)
Production company(s) Tiger Aspect Productions
Distributor Endemol UK
Release
Original network Five
Picture format 16:9
Original release 21 May (2007-05-21) – 11 June 2007 (2007-06-11)
Chronology
Followed by Paul Merton in India

Paul Merton in China was a four-part television series broadcast on Five commencing from 21 May 2007.[1] It follows the journey of writer and comedian,Paul Merton and his interpreter Emma, as they travel across the vast country, exploring Chinese culture, expansion and changes from the rule of Mao Zedong. The series was a hit for Five and Merton confirmed on Michael Parkinson's show that a second series entitled Paul Merton in India had been commissioned. The theme music from Channel Five's advertisement is Michel Legrand's Di Gue Ding Ding, which was also used as the theme music to Heston Blumenthal's series In Search of Perfection aired concurrently on BBC Two. All four episodes were released on DVD in late-October 2008.[2]

Production

  • During filming in China, he was continuously escorted around by government appointed officials, as many documentary makers in the country are; therefore Merton was mostly limited to what the officials wanted him to see.
  • While staying in a Chinese hotel, the staff were told to expect the arrival of a "Western celebrity". When Merton and his interpreter arrived at the hotel, he was greeted personally by the owner who mistakingly believed he was Paul Martin, the former Canadian Prime Minister; as "Martin" is Merton's real surname.

Ratings

The first episode was watched by 2,000,000 viewers and was the fifth-most watched programme on Channel 5. The second episode gathered 1,580,000 views and was the sixth-most watched show on the channel. The last two episodes received 2,000,000 and 1,850,000 viewers and were placed sixth and fifth respectively.

References

  1. Andrew Pettie (2007-05-19). "Great Paul in China". Telegraph Online. Telegraph.
  2. "Amazon.co.uk". "Paul Merton in China 2008 (DVD)".


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