logo
The 15 most problematic TV shows of the 21st century, from Little Britain to Baby Reindeer, ranked

The 15 most problematic TV shows of the 21st century, from Little Britain to Baby Reindeer, ranked

Independent15-03-2025
Television's past is littered with debris. From the 1970s 'comedy' racism of shows such as Love Thy Neighbour to LGBT+ stereotypes including Mr Humphries in Are You Being Served?, it's easy (if often unfair) to conjure up examples of shows whose implied attitudes are, to put it kindly, 'of their time'.
But fast-forward to the Nineties and even much-loved and more recent classics like Friends turn out to be full of moments which would cause many modern viewers to wince. And as for Sky's jaw-dropping one-episode sitcom Heil Honey I'm Home! – which mined the imagined home life of Mr and Mrs Adolf Hitler for comedy – well, the less said, the better.
TV is often an immediate and reactive medium and much of it isn't built to last. Which probably explains why so much of it, even since the turn of the century, has aged like fine milk. Here's a selection of the 21st century's biggest, nastiest or dumbest clangers to date.
15. America's Next Top Model
Ahh, America's Next Top Model. No reality show of the Noughties was quite so good at making absolutely everyone watching – regardless of gender, sexuality, colour or creed – feel like total garbage. Ostensibly a bi-annual search for the most beautiful people in the US, ANTM always had the whiff of a PG-rated snuff film devised by someone with a humiliation kink. We witnessed desperate teenage girls forced to walk down runways while trying to dodge enormous swinging pendulums, and one particular girl forced to pose sexily in a coffin shortly after being told her best friend had died. Television! Let's never do this again. Adam White
14. Brass Eye special
Chris Morris's Brass Eye is, in its initial incarnation, a work of borderline genius. But the 2001 paedophilia special was a moment when Morris's desire to confront cosy sensibilities clashed uncomfortably with his moral compass. As a media satire, it was spectacular. As an act of provocation, it was devastating. And as an exploration of taboos, it was, in the context of its era, genuinely courageous. But with hindsight, the show's tone – and Morris's satirical instincts – were too brutal and unsparing for the subject matter in question. At times, the show forgot that the people whose suggestibility it was critiquing were, in addition to being the tabloid media's target market, also its victims. It's still funny of course – but in the decades since, the laughs have started to feel more queasy. Phil Harrison
13. Mrs Brown's Boys
Brendan O'Carroll's multicamera sitcom is often cited among the worst television shows ever made – certainly, it's among the very dregs of the barrel when it comes to recent British fare. This in itself has made Mrs Brown's Boys a contentious talking point among viewers. Throw in the show's penchant for crude humour, offensive jokes and stereotypes, and an off-camera racist-joke scandal involving the show's creator-star O'Carroll (who subsequently apologised), and you're left with one of the more problematic missteps in British TV comedy. Louis Chilton
12. The Secret Millionaire
Rich people visit poor people and pretend to be poor too and muck in with the poor people and in doing so, learn about their incredible, selfless nobility in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds and drop them a few grand and then everyone hugs and cries and they all live happily ever after. This narrative arc is, of course, a slightly reductive description of The Secret Millionaire 's formula. But it's still basically accurate. Worse still, it feels like there was a real sense of emotional manipulation to this reality series, not to mention a striking reluctance to interrogate a system in which some people work hard and get rich and some people work hard and get nothing. For that reason, the generosity it paraded felt patronising and the catharsis it offered felt fake. PH
11. Citizen Khan
Citizen Khan was lauded as the TV homecoming British Muslims had long been waiting for. Years of relentless media attacks had left the community desperate for some light-hearted observational comedy. Released in 2012, it ran for a full four seasons before it was mercifully cancelled. Created by Adil Ray, the BBC satire follows community leader Mr Khan as he navigates his personal and family life in the Midlands. But the gags fell flat, and it's not because we're all straight-faced religious headbangers who can't take a joke. The show divided audiences both Muslim and non-Muslim. Critique about it being blasphemous got mixed up with backlash about its racialised stereotyping, reinforcing tropes about Muslims. From Mr Khan's patriarchal ways to his cheapness with money, it felt more like the kind of performance someone ignorant would expect, geared towards an outside audience, rather than a funny caricature of anyone I actually know. Maira Butt
10. Bo' Selecta!
The sketch show created by Keith Lemon comedian Leigh Francis was criticised throughout its time on air (2002-2009) for its racist caricatures, which included the use of blackface. Francis portrayed Black celebrities such as Michael Jackson, singer Craig David and talk show host Trisha Goddard, often using latex masks. Francis apologised for the series in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020, stating: 'Back then I didn't think anything about it, people didn't say anything, I'm not going to blame other people. [...] I just want to apologise, I just want to say sorry for any upset I caused. I guess we're all on a learning journey.' The series was subsequently removed by Channel 4 from the online streaming catalogue. LC
9. Entourage
HBO's inside-showbiz dramedy Entourage – loosely inspired by the hedonistic friend group of Mark Wahlberg – was a perfectly watchable, well-made series for much of its eight-season run. It was also a hotbed of misogyny, racism, homophobia, and materialism, a show with a gaping moral vacuum at its centre. A-list glamour aside, Entourage was toxic from the get-go – Hollywood superstardom has seldom seemed this seedy. LC
8. The IT Crowd
For the most part, this workplace dweeb-com remains a very funny, tonally precise comedy classic, which arguably launched the careers of Katherine Parkinson, Chris O'Dowd and Richard Ayoade and cemented the reputation of creator Graham Linehan as a leading light in TV comedy. But there is one episode which, with the benefit of hindsight, feels like a tough watch. Douglas's breakup with a transgender woman upon learning of her gender identity (an incident followed by a spectacular fight) has a distinctly less savoury look given Linehan's subsequent years, which have seen the Irish writer engage in what many have characterised as a campaign of transphobic rhetoric. (He has described himself as a 'gender critical activist'.) It's not that The IT Crowd is no longer funny, just that the context surrounding its creator has changed more radically than anyone could have imagined. PH
7. The Idol
The Idol, HBO's music industry drama starring Lily-Rose Depp as a troubled pop star, was shrouded in murk even before its release. It was optimistically oversold as HBO's next Euphoria, and had a shiny veneer thanks to the involvement of hitmaker The Weeknd, who co-wrote and starred in the series as a sordid cult leader. But things came tumbling down when early episodes of the series underwent a series of reshoots. An investigation saw 13 unnamed sources from the production claim that set conditions were chaotic and that the inclusion of several sex scenes made them uncomfortable (HBO later admitted that the production of early episodes did not meet certain unspecified standards). Critics labelled it 'sexist', 'torture porn' and 'one of the worst TV shows of the year' – largely due to the uncomfortable dynamic between Depp and The Weeknd's characters. The latter's acting skills were singled out and eviscerated by reviewers. It's no surprise HBO cancelled it after one season. The only saving grace was the soundtrack – it was actually pretty catchy. Ellie Muir
6. Beast Games
Jimmy 'MrBeast' Donaldson – vapid savant of the YouTube algorithm and totemic household name for anyone under the age of 25 – was always going to attract a fair amount of criticism for Beast Games. His Squid Games -esque Prime Video series saw 1,000 contestants battle for a prize pool of $5m (£3.94m), supposedly the biggest game show prize ever, through a series of 'nail-biting, physical, mental, and social challenges'. Before the series even aired, however, a number of contestants filed a lawsuit against the show, alleging, among other things, that the production had failed to pay them correctly, failed to provide meal breaks, rest breaks and basic hygiene access, and exposed them to 'dangerous circumstances and conditions as a condition of their employment'. Donaldson has claimed that the accusations were 'blown out of proportion', stating that a formal review of the production process had been launched. LC
5. Benefits Street
The production company behind Benefits Street were also the people responsible for the bunting-strewn celebration of 'Keep Calm and Carry On' twee-core The Great British Bake Off. And it all makes sense really. While Bake Off is a celebration of Britain in all of its idealised, village fete, crumpets for tea loveliness, Benefits Street was its negative mirror image – a grimly orchestrated demonisation of the poor and vulnerable; seeking out and foregrounding the most feckless, semi-criminal and disreputable inhabitants of James Turner Street in Birmingham while largely refusing to address the systemic neglect underpinning their dysfunction. Dropping during the ugly, divisive austerity era, it seemed perfectly designed to underpin the implicit agenda of its time: do these people really deserve society's help? PH
4. Baby Reindeer
One of the best pieces of television on this list, comedian Richard Gadd's Netflix miniseries Baby Reindeer was an occasionally funny, often harrowing look at trauma, abuse and obsession, drawing on Gadd's own experiences with a stalker. Baby Reindeer was inherently messy – both ethically and thematically, in a way that actually made the series a lot more interesting. But after the woman who alleged to have inspired the stalker character ('Martha') went public, objecting to the way she claims the show presented her, Netflix was hit with a multi-million-pound lawsuit. A spokesperson for Netflix said: 'We intend to defend this matter vigorously and to stand by Richard Gadd's right to tell his story.' LC
3. There's Something About Miriam
This 2004 Sky One dating show saw a group of British lads vie for the affections of one woman, à la The Bachelorette. The 'twist', though, was that the woman, Brazilian model Miriam Rivera, was transgender – and the six male contestants were only informed about this at the end of the series. The whole affair was grossly insensitive, transphobic and unethical; the male contestants issued a lawsuit that was eventually settled out of court. Rivera, meanwhile, was the victim of unconscionable torment from the tabloid press, and died by suicide in 2019. LC
2. Little Britain
With hindsight, Matt Lucas and David Walliams's sketch show now feels less like a TV comedy and more like a living, breathing illustration of why 'wokeness' was a necessary corrective to, well, whatever the hell that was – namely two white, privately educated men joining forces to black up, make fun of teenage single mothers on council estates, dick around in wheelchairs and generally parade their privilege like it was going out of fashion. Which, thankfully, it was. Although sadly, the pair's dodgy follow-up sitcom Come Fly with Me suggested few lessons had been learned. PH
1. The Jeremy Kyle Show
Duty of care? That stuff's for losers. Surrounded by hulking security guards (who were the only thing standing between him and the smack in the chops he so richly deserved) and backed up by a production team who, according to a Channel 4 documentary, were encouraged to prime their already volatile guests for maximum hysteria, Jeremy Kyle was a ringmaster, presiding over the early 21st century's small-screen version of bear-baiting. To watch clips from The Jeremy Kyle Show now (you'll have to go to YouTube as ITV has clearly tried to bury it) is to be astounded that this deranged cocktail of voyeurism, class-based disdain and unadulterated public bullying was ever allowed on air. And yet it ran for 17 series and was cancelled only after the suspected suicide of a participant. A vision of dystopia orchestrated for daytime TV, helping no one, belittling everyone. Most of all, its viewers. PH
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'I hate modern dating after hosting one of Netflix's biggest ever shows'
'I hate modern dating after hosting one of Netflix's biggest ever shows'

Metro

timean hour ago

  • Metro

'I hate modern dating after hosting one of Netflix's biggest ever shows'

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video In a world of reality TV showmances, wannabe influencers and frustratingly toxic men, Love Is Blind UK hosts Emma and Matt Willis are a breath of fresh air amid the deluge of dating shows. I was completely charmed by the celebrity couple last year when I interviewed them for the first season of the long-awaited UK spin-off of one of Netflix's most popular reality shows. They were endearingly nervous about their debut as a married couple helming a show about finding love, shared playful quips about what to order for lunch and had a quiet confidence that proved their real-life and on-screen chemistry. When I met up with them again this year for Metro to discuss season 2, which launches today, the nerves had evaporated, but all the charm had, happily, stayed. For those not in the know, the premise of the hit reality show is all about proving that lasting love is so much more than skin deep. Wake up to find news on your TV shows in your inbox every morning with Metro's TV Newsletter. Sign up to our newsletter and then select your show in the link we'll send you so we can get TV news tailored to you. So, 30 people ready for marriage date each other in 'pods' for a week, getting to know each other from behind a wall without seeing each other, and the lucky couples who make a connection get engaged. By the end of the experiment, after meeting one another in the flesh and spending time together in the outside world, they must decide whether they will say 'I do' at the altar. Throughout the process, our trusty co-hosts jet in and out to guide them through from one stage to the next. As we kick off our chat about their return, the 17 years of marriage between the Big Brother presenter and Busted star shines through when I point out their matching blue clothes. 'Last year, we were quite nervous. This year, we were much more relaxed,' Emma says about returning to the show. They were well aware of the tough task ahead of them when launching the latest spin-off (there are currently eight international versions). 'We really wanted the UK one to be as good as all of the others and I think it surpassed our expectations, because it had everything. 'It had heart, it had a very British sense of humour,' the TV host adds, with hopes that season two meets the high standard season one set for fans. The British power couple, who share three children, have had their ups and downs over the years, but if hosting Love Is Blind has made them 'grateful' for one thing, it is that they met in the early 2000s before online dating took off. 'The one thing I've taken [from hosting the show] – and it's not so much a reflection on our relationship, but a reflection on the world of dating generally – is, I'm really glad I'm not single,' Emma says. 'I wouldn't want to be on dating apps. I know a lot of people on them, and they just moan about them all the time. I think I'd get so frustrated with doing everything on a device.' The idea of meeting organically (a more and more foreign concept for Gen Z) is what attracted them to this show in the first place. 'I think that is a whole world better than trying to navigate [the] beginning of a relationship through a phone, which must be so difficult,' Emma adds. Matt agrees: 'Absolutely, I think messages can get so misconstrued.' When I ask them about their dating app green and red flags, we briefly go on a side tangent about the turn-off factor of posting a photo of yourself holding a fish (it's a whole thing) to a completely baffled Emma. As such, Matt decides a fish picture 'doesn't sound cool' while Emma ponders hers would 'probably be an overly posed picture'. 'I think if it were someone in a pair of shorts and nothing else… I'm getting the ick just thinking about it,' she jokes. So, naturally, I ask if the show had been around when they were single, would they have gone on it – and their answers explained a lot about why they are such a perfect fit. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Emma called the process 'fantastic' but had one caveat. 'I don't know if I could get married after six weeks because I'm a chronic overthinker and I like to know everything,' she admits with a wry smile. Matt, on the other hand, is ready to leap headfirst, joking, 'I could. I'd be like, 'Let's do it.'' He shares: 'I think it'd be really fun to see what that experience is like, talking to someone and doing the experiment. I think it'd be such an exciting thing to do.' Lucky for them, neither has to worry about getting hitched to a near-stranger in six weeks or navigating the treacherous world of Tinder. They'll happily watch on, however. Season one saw plenty of highs and lows, with fan-favourite couple Bobby and Jasmine recently announcing they're expecting their first child. It's clear both Emma and Matt are delighted, with the former recalling that the loved-up pair were 'hook, line and sinker from the beginning', and she could tell they were 'totally smitten' right up to the reunion. Matt adds he's 'so stoked for them'. Of course, the premiere season also included some controversial characters, not least Sam, who was briefly engaged to Nicole (now married to Benaiah), who became the latest 'toxic' reality TV man to spark concerned fan discourse. Viewers can expect different things from the new episodes, Emma teases. 'I think they're a really likeable cast. There's not really any divisive characters, I don't think. Obviously, Sam last year was quite a divisive character. I don't think we have a Sam,' she says. Love Is Blind marks the latest show the pair have jointly tackled in recent years, in addition to their candid therapy docuseries, Change Your Mind, Change Your Life. While working together might be out of the question for some couples, that's not the case for these two. Matt explains: '[I love] everything about [my] job, but then I always have to be away from Emma, away from the family. So the chance to work with her is brilliant. 'I've always been jealous of her job. I've been in a sweaty tour bus with stinky boys. This is way more fun, got a glam squad now, love it.' As for what's next, Emma is clearly enthusiastic about the future of their professional partnership, saying they're ready to do 'eight more seasons' of Love Is Blind. But they have other ideas brewing as well. 'I'd like to do something adventurous. I don't know if it's a travel show – just some kind of adventure. I love shows like Race Across the World. I think that's so much fun, but there's a point to it,' Emma says. More Trending As in sync as ever, Matt agrees. Who knows what's next for this dynamic duo, who are proving themselves to be a formidable force on British reality TV. For now, however, they have a brand new cohort of unlucky-in-love singles to welcome to the pods. So, let the blush-inducing courtship commence. The first four episodes of Love Is Blind UK season two are out now. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. View More » MORE: Season 2 of Netflix's 'ghoulish delight' lands 50,000,000 views in just days MORE: Netflix fans rush to binge 'funniest British TV comedy ever made' MORE: Cate Blanchett reveals how her Squid Game cameo was kept secret – and teases spin-off

What time is Alien: Earth out on Disney+ and Hulu?
What time is Alien: Earth out on Disney+ and Hulu?

Scotsman

time2 hours ago

  • Scotsman

What time is Alien: Earth out on Disney+ and Hulu?

Alien: Earth is set to crash land on Disney Plus this week 🚨 Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Alien: Earth is set to make its highly anticipated debut. The TV show is a spin-off of the iconic horror franchise. But when exactly will the episode be out? On Earth no-one can hear you scream… wait that's not how it goes? The iconic Alien franchise is coming home to our planet and the small screen. Xenomorphs will be scrambling across your TV over the coming weeks. Noah Hawley, who previously adapted Fargo for television, is at the helm of this highly anticipated horror sci-fi series. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Alien: Earth is the latest entry in the iconic franchise and it is about to crash land on Disney Plus/ Hulu. Here's all you need to know: What time is Alien: Earth out on Disney Plus? Alien: Earth is coming to Disney Plus | Disney Plus The show is set to air on FX in the US and will stream on Hulu via Disney Plus for American audiences. For those outside the states, particularly in the UK, it will be available to watch on Disney+. Alien: Earth will start with a two-episode premiere today (August 12) that will be available from 8pm ET/ 5pm PT in America. However, it will not land on Disney Plus for UK and European audiences until Wednesday (August 13). Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It will be available to watch from 1am British time. Meaning it will be waiting for you on Wednesday after work. Why does it come out later in the UK? Due to the difference in time zones between America and the UK, it means that episodes of the show will arrive on this side of the pond a day later. The show will be released weekly on Tuesdays (starting August 12) in the US, but British audiences won't get the episodes until Wednesdays (from August 13). It is a similar situation that has been seen plenty of times this year with shows like Andor, Daredevil: Born Again and more. How many episodes will be available this week? Alien: Earth is set to begin with a two-episode premiere. It means fans can tuck into a double helping of Xenomorph terror, if they are so inclined. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The show is set to have eight episodes in total in its first season. Episodes three through eight will be released one per week. It is due to conclude on September 23/24 based on the current schedule. What to expect from Alien: Earth? The synopsis for the show, via Disney, reads: 'When a mysterious space vessel crash-lands on Earth, a young woman (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet's greatest threat in FX's highly anticipated TV series Alien: Earth from creator Noah Hawley. 'Alien: Earth is set in 2120 when five corporations - Prodigy, Weyland-Yutani, Lynch, Dynamic and Threshold - wield the power of nations, and proprietary advancements in technology provide the promise of a new tomorrow.' If you love TV, check out our Screen Babble podcast to get the latest in TV and film. Surprisingly cheap way to stream Sky Atlantic, Netflix and more (aff) £ 22.00 Sky TV Buy now Buy now Sky's latest TV deals are more affordable than you might expect – with the best value arguably being the Ultimate TV package. For just £22/month, you get Netflix, Discovery+, Sky Atlantic and over 35 extra channels including Sky Max, Sky Witness, Sky Documentaries and more. There are no upfront fees, and it's a 24-month contract. If you're after the basics, Essential TV starts from £15/month with Netflix and Sky Atlantic included, while sports fans can add Sky Sports for £35/month. All three plans offer strong value for new Sky customers.

Amanda Holden joined by lookalike daughters in sweet holiday snap
Amanda Holden joined by lookalike daughters in sweet holiday snap

Daily Mirror

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Amanda Holden joined by lookalike daughters in sweet holiday snap

Amanda Holden is enjoying family time on a lavish holiday in Greece and took to social media to share a sweet snap alongside her daughters with her followers Amanda Holden shared a loving photo with both her daughters as they enjoyed a lavish holiday together. The Britain's Got Talent judged, 54, took to Instagram to share the sweet snap, although she admitted the moment was to be short lived. ‌ Amanda and her children, Lexi, 19, and Hollie, 13, posed for the camera while sitting on a rock by the sea. They all beamed in the image, while Amanda gazed away from the camera. ‌ Amanda donned a lightweight white dress and went barefoot, while her daughters matched in sleeveless looks. Captioning the post, Amanda gushed: "And then there were 3 … just for a day or so," before adding love heart emojis and a crying with laughter face. ‌ Fans were quick to compliment the trio in the comments section. Former Pussycat Dolls star Ashley Roberts wrote: "Gawjus," while sharing an emoji with love heart eyes. Melissa Odabash also penned: "Total beauties," while Kaniz Ali said: "Absolutely stunning you all. Sooo pretty." ‌ Also appearing in the comments section was Amanda's best friend, Alan Carr, who had recently been holidaying with her. Her wrote: "Missing you already," alongside a love heart emoji. She had shared a stunning sunset snap with the Chatty Man star at the weekend. Labelling it "my and my other hubby," Amanda hugged into her best friend as the sun set behind them. She revealed using a hashtag that they were in Varkarola in Greece. The Corfu spot was once the setting for an ITV comedy-drama about a British family adjusting to life on the Greek island of Corfu. Posting to her Instagram Story, Amanda revealed just how much she and her daughter, Hollie, also nicknamed 'HRH', loved the show it featured in. "If you know you know," she wrote on Sunday. ‌ "The Durrells... @ionianestates." The TV star also added: "Me and #HRH were big fans of The Durrells. TV show." Airing from 2016 to 2019, The Durrells was a popular ITV comedy-drama about a British family adjusting to life on the Greek island of Corfu in the 1930s. The series was looesely based on a true story. It followed Gerald Durrells' Corfu Trilogy, with the ITV series primarily filmed in the village of Danilia. A number of famous faces starred on the show, including Keeley Hawes as Louisa Durrell. Amanda has been regularly updating her followers during her holiday. She also showed off her incredibly toned figure in a tiny bikini as she twinned with her 19-year-old model daughter. ‌ The pair looked stunning as they soaked up the sun and enjoyed some family time while on a boat. The 54-year-old stunned in a white bikini paired with a bandana tied around her head and some stylish oversized sunglasses. Amanda looked relaxed as she lay by the sea with a drink in one hand.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store