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

David Beckham to guest edit edition of Country Life Magazine
David Beckham to guest edit edition of Country Life Magazine

South Wales Argus

time4 minutes ago

  • South Wales Argus

David Beckham to guest edit edition of Country Life Magazine

The former England captain and businessman will join the editorial team for the October 22 edition of the magazine with the aim of celebrating what the countryside means to him and his family. He follows in the footsteps of Royal Family members who previously joined the editor-in chief Mark Hedges at the helm, including the King, the Princess Royal and the Queen. David Beckham and Mark Hedges (Editor-in-Chief of Country Life Magazine) photographed at RHS Chelsea Flower Show (Courtney Hockley/Country Life magazine/PA) Beckham said: 'I am honoured to have been invited to guest edit an edition of a magazine that I have always admired and read. 'I am really looking forward to working with the editorial team to produce an issue that will celebrate what the countryside and the great British landscape means to me and my family.' This comes as Beckham is to be awarded a knighthood in the King's Birthday Honours, according to reports by The Sun. The football star regularly documents his life in the countryside by posting pictures and videos on his Instagram including him harvesting vegetables, gardening and his flock of chickens. Mark Hedges, Country Life editor-in-chief, said: 'I know he has a deep love of the countryside, which has grown since he retired as a professional footballer, although he is, of course, still extremely busy as a businessman and an ambassador for a host of causes, such as Unicef and The King's Foundation, as well as being co-owner of Inter Miami CF in the US and Salford City Football Club in the UK. David Beckham turns 50 this year (Victoria Jones/PA) 'As someone who is passionate about the countryside, I'm excited to see what his special commemorative issue will bring.' The one-off edition aims to highlight how the countryside has played an important part in Beckham's life. It will feature his favourite view, his best-loved recipe and spotlight his rural champions, including the craftsmen and woman who helped shape his home in the Cotswolds. Beckham, who played for his country 115 times, is the only Englishman to score at three different World Cups and his career included the treble-winning campaign of 1998-99, when Manchester United won the Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League. He earned the third highest number of England caps of all time for the men's team, and was captain on 59 occasions. The former winger married Spice Girl Victoria, also known as Posh Spice, in 1999.

David Beckham to guest edit edition of Country Life Magazine
David Beckham to guest edit edition of Country Life Magazine

Powys County Times

time5 minutes ago

  • Powys County Times

David Beckham to guest edit edition of Country Life Magazine

David Beckham will guest edit an edition of Country Life Magazine to mark his 50th birthday year. The former England captain and businessman will join the editorial team for the October 22 edition of the magazine with the aim of celebrating what the countryside means to him and his family. He follows in the footsteps of Royal Family members who previously joined the editor-in chief Mark Hedges at the helm, including the King, the Princess Royal and the Queen. Beckham said: 'I am honoured to have been invited to guest edit an edition of a magazine that I have always admired and read. 'I am really looking forward to working with the editorial team to produce an issue that will celebrate what the countryside and the great British landscape means to me and my family.' This comes as Beckham is to be awarded a knighthood in the King's Birthday Honours, according to reports by The Sun. The football star regularly documents his life in the countryside by posting pictures and videos on his Instagram including him harvesting vegetables, gardening and his flock of chickens. Mark Hedges, Country Life editor-in-chief, said: 'I know he has a deep love of the countryside, which has grown since he retired as a professional footballer, although he is, of course, still extremely busy as a businessman and an ambassador for a host of causes, such as Unicef and The King's Foundation, as well as being co-owner of Inter Miami CF in the US and Salford City Football Club in the UK. 'As someone who is passionate about the countryside, I'm excited to see what his special commemorative issue will bring.' The one-off edition aims to highlight how the countryside has played an important part in Beckham's life. It will feature his favourite view, his best-loved recipe and spotlight his rural champions, including the craftsmen and woman who helped shape his home in the Cotswolds. Beckham, who played for his country 115 times, is the only Englishman to score at three different World Cups and his career included the treble-winning campaign of 1998-99, when Manchester United won the Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League. He earned the third highest number of England caps of all time for the men's team, and was captain on 59 occasions. The former winger married Spice Girl Victoria, also known as Posh Spice, in 1999.

Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet, Edinburgh review: 'brings mods and rockers back to life'
Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet, Edinburgh review: 'brings mods and rockers back to life'

Scotsman

time12 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet, Edinburgh review: 'brings mods and rockers back to life'

With a talented cast, arresting design and a phenomenal score, this show captures what it was like to be young at an important cultural moment, writes Kelly Apter Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, 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... Quadrophenia: A Mod Ballet, Festival Theatre, Edinburgh ★★★★ When something iconic starts life in one genre and evolves into another, it always comes with challenges. Books turned into TV programmes never quite match our imagination, and in the case of Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet, you have to leave your celluloid memories behind and embrace the show on its own terms. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet | Johan Persson Replicating the 1979 film on stage, with its huge fight on Brighton promenade, pulsating dance club scene and engine-revving motorcycles and scooters, would be impossible. That said, however, this new production certainly gives it a good go. It's very much Pete Townshend's baby: he wrote the storyline (and the original album) but has clearly handed over the reins to specialists to deliver his vision, in particular the arresting video design, which fills the entire stage with the choppy waters below Beachy Head, amongst other locations. Similarly, Townsend's wife, Rachel Fuller (along with Martin Batchelar) has turned The Who's album into a phenomenal orchestral score, which does much of the emotional heavy lifting. Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet | Johan Persson Directed by Rob Ashford, this production focuses in on lead character Jimmy's mental health issues, and we often see him surrounded by four aspects of his personality - the tough guy, the lunatic, the romantic, and the hypocrite - which gives choreographer Paul Roberts an interesting palette of moves to work with. Roberts and Ashford also take a deep dive into the lacklustre relationship between Jimmy's parents, which bears poignant fruit. Sign up to our FREE Arts & Culture newsletter at Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Despite this, the show doesn't make us feel quite as much as we should, which is a shame. What it does do, though, is capture what it was like to be young at this moment in British history: the energy, the rivalries, the disillusionment and love affair with fashion. The talented 22-strong cast never falters, bringing mods and rockers back to life through dynamic group scenes, a sensual imagined ménage à trois, and some dramatic cliff-edge moments, as Jimmy wrestles with his future.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store