Sky Atlantic delivers the best Alan Partridge of the 21st Century
Accessibility Links
- Skip to Main Content
- Skip to Main Navigation
- Skip to Footer


[{"@context":"http://schema.org","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https://www.radiotimes.com","name":"Home"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https://www.radiotimes.com/news/","name":"News"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":3,"item":{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https://www.radiotimes.com/news/2012-06-21/sky-atlantic-delivers-the-best-alan-partridge-of-the-21st-century/","name":"Sky Atlantic delivers the best Alan Partridge of the 21st Century"}}]},{"@context":"http://schema.org","@type":"Article","mainEntityOfPage":{"@type":"Webpage","@id":"https://www.radiotimes.com/news/2012-06-21/sky-atlantic-delivers-the-best-alan-partridge-of-the-21st-century/"},"description":"Welcome to the Places of my Life is well observed, carefully constructed - and very, very funny, says Tim Glanfield","url":"https://www.radiotimes.com/news/2012-06-21/sky-atlantic-delivers-the-best-alan-partridge-of-the-21st-century/","articleBody":"
Just as Alan is a homo-sceptic (he believes u201cGod created Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steveu201d), I must confess a certain level of trepidation every time a new Partridge project is commissioned.
nAlanu2019s come a long way since On the Hour, The Day Today and KMKYWAP u2013 becoming the ultimate broadcasting tragicomic hero as his career has slid further and faster off the rails. When Iu2019m Alan Partridge brought the Chattanooga Choo-Choou2019s vulnerabilities (and the Linton Travel Tavernu2019s equidistance between London and Norwich) to the fore, for many Partridge purists (Partridgists, if you will) the first series of the BBC show became the pinnacle of Partridge-dom. This particular Partridge has appeared to have nested at the top of the pear tree.
nBut despite lengthy gaps in his broadcasting career (many of which have been explained in his recent tell-all autobiography, I, Partridge), Alan has continued to crop up on our screens throughout the years u2013 with a second series of IAP, on stage, fronting the one-off documentary Anglian Lives and of course his foray into digital radio on the web-tastic Mid Morning Matters.
nEach time, Partridgists (stick with me on this one) have drawn a deep breath; surely he will run out of steam this time? But every time, Alanu2019s shadowy puppeteer (who calls himself Coogan) delivers another quality programme. Perhaps none quite worthy of IAP series one, but certainly nothing that would make a male fan in the u201cRump of Englandu201d Norfolku2019s maddest man.
nAnd so to 2012 u2013 where is Alan now?u00a0 Ever the televisionary, Partridge told Tony Hayers in 1997 u201cif you donu2019t do it, Sky willu201du2026 Well, it happened, and although the programme in question is sadly not Inner-City Sumo, Alanu2019s first foray into satellite television is something to get equally excited about.
nA Pear Tree Factual Production complete with u00a9Pear Tree Infographics, Welcome to the Places of My Life is Alan back where he belongs: in the driving seat (literally in the case of his Range Rover test drives) with a big budget – and on the telly.
nWell observed and carefully constructed, the stand-alone piece sees Alan touring his hometown, meeting the general public – who he once famously went on record as hating u2013 and reflecting on his life in Norwich and its rich, deep history.
nReminiscent of the KMKYWAP Christmas special in which he enjoys a private after hours shopping experience at Tandy (good action) and delivers presents to sick children at a local hospital, this is an intimate and deeply engrossing portrait of a complex Partridge. But most importantly, itu2019s very, very funny.
nFrom the sub-Simon Schama insights into Norwichu2019s pivotal historical moments (like the night post-7pm parking charges were almost approved by the council) to Alanu2019s thoughts on lollipop ladies (how dare people who are barely more than retired dinner ladies stop traffic u2013 that is the domain of the army in times of national emergency, and traffic lights), this is Alan bouncing back with a vengeance.
nLaced with classic anal-attention-to-detail Partridgisms (a swimming poolu2019s controversial scooped roof/an argument over the presence of a differential lock in a Range Rover), and peppered with one-liners, awkward moments of Partri-prejudice, seething, festering anger and general mistrust of everyone around him u2013 you will not regret this hour with Alan.
nSadly this is just a one-off programme because it is clearly the best Partridge of the 21stu00a0century. A bold statement you may think u2013 well, imagine Alan driving along, and then in a moment of quiet reflection saying this:
nu201cI was thinking about those TV commercials that were on about, I dunno, 40 years ago. It was one of those ones for Pepsi and Cokeu2026 you know, can you tell the difference between Pepsi and Coke. This morning I thought, who gives a shit u2013 what a colossal waste of everyoneu2019s time.u201d
nKiss my face! Youu2019re all in for a treatu2026
nWith another AP special on Sky Atlantic seven days after this is screened, and the movie finally starting to get some tractionu2026 it looks like Partridgists (I told you it would catch on) have as much to get excited about in the near future as a man on a doorstep whou2019s about to receive a cup of beans.
nAll that Partridge and I didn’t once say “Aha!” Oh…
nSneak a preview of Alan Partridge: Welcome to the Places of My Lifeu00a0
nAlan Partridge: Welcome to the Places of My Life is on Sky Atlantic at 9pm on Monday
n","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://images.immediate.co.uk/volatile/sites/3/2017/11/imagenotavailable1-39de324.png?quality=90&resize=768,574","width":768,"height":574},"headline":"Sky Atlantic delivers the best Alan Partridge of the 21st Century","author":[{"@type":"Person","name":"Tim Glanfield"}],"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Radio Times","url":"https://www.radiotimes.com","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://images.immediate.co.uk/volatile/sites/3/2017/08/cropped-radiotimes-header-logo-e999c67.png?quality=90&resize=265,56","width":182,"height":60}},"datePublished":"2012-06-21T13:00:00+00:00","dateModified":"2017-09-28T17:19:01+00:00"}]Sky Atlantic delivers the best Alan Partridge of the 21st Century
Welcome to the Places of my Life is well observed, carefully constructed - and very, very funny, says Tim Glanfield

Thursday, 21st June 2012 at 1:00 pm
Just as Alan is a homo-sceptic (he believes “God created Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve”), I must confess a certain level of trepidation every time a new Partridge project is commissioned.
Alan’s come a long way since On the Hour, The Day Today and KMKYWAP – becoming the ultimate broadcasting tragicomic hero as his career has slid further and faster off the rails. When I’m Alan Partridge brought the Chattanooga Choo-Choo’s vulnerabilities (and the Linton Travel Tavern’s equidistance between London and Norwich) to the fore, for many Partridge purists (Partridgists, if you will) the first series of the BBC show became the pinnacle of Partridge-dom. This particular Partridge has appeared to have nested at the top of the pear tree.
But despite lengthy gaps in his broadcasting career (many of which have been explained in his recent tell-all autobiography, I, Partridge), Alan has continued to crop up on our screens throughout the years – with a second series of IAP, on stage, fronting the one-off documentary Anglian Lives and of course his foray into digital radio on the web-tastic Mid Morning Matters.
Each time, Partridgists (stick with me on this one) have drawn a deep breath; surely he will run out of steam this time? But every time, Alan’s shadowy puppeteer (who calls himself Coogan) delivers another quality programme. Perhaps none quite worthy of IAP series one, but certainly nothing that would make a male fan in the “Rump of England” Norfolk’s maddest man.
And so to 2012 – where is Alan now? Ever the televisionary, Partridge told Tony Hayers in 1997 “if you don’t do it, Sky will”… Well, it happened, and although the programme in question is sadly not Inner-City Sumo, Alan’s first foray into satellite television is something to get equally excited about.
A Pear Tree Factual Production complete with ©Pear Tree Infographics, Welcome to the Places of My Life is Alan back where he belongs: in the driving seat (literally in the case of his Range Rover test drives) with a big budget – and on the telly.
Well observed and carefully constructed, the stand-alone piece sees Alan touring his hometown, meeting the general public – who he once famously went on record as hating – and reflecting on his life in Norwich and its rich, deep history.
Reminiscent of the KMKYWAP Christmas special in which he enjoys a private after hours shopping experience at Tandy (good action) and delivers presents to sick children at a local hospital, this is an intimate and deeply engrossing portrait of a complex Partridge. But most importantly, it’s very, very funny.
From the sub-Simon Schama insights into Norwich’s pivotal historical moments (like the night post-7pm parking charges were almost approved by the council) to Alan’s thoughts on lollipop ladies (how dare people who are barely more than retired dinner ladies stop traffic – that is the domain of the army in times of national emergency, and traffic lights), this is Alan bouncing back with a vengeance.
Laced with classic anal-attention-to-detail Partridgisms (a swimming pool’s controversial scooped roof/an argument over the presence of a differential lock in a Range Rover), and peppered with one-liners, awkward moments of Partri-prejudice, seething, festering anger and general mistrust of everyone around him – you will not regret this hour with Alan.
Sadly this is just a one-off programme because it is clearly the best Partridge of the 21st century. A bold statement you may think – well, imagine Alan driving along, and then in a moment of quiet reflection saying this:
“I was thinking about those TV commercials that were on about, I dunno, 40 years ago. It was one of those ones for Pepsi and Coke… you know, can you tell the difference between Pepsi and Coke. This morning I thought, who gives a shit – what a colossal waste of everyone’s time.”
Kiss my face! You’re all in for a treat…
With another AP special on Sky Atlantic seven days after this is screened, and the movie finally starting to get some traction… it looks like Partridgists (I told you it would catch on) have as much to get excited about in the near future as a man on a doorstep who’s about to receive a cup of beans.
All that Partridge and I didn’t once say “Aha!” Oh…
Sneak a preview of Alan Partridge: Welcome to the Places of My Life
Alan Partridge: Welcome to the Places of My Life is on Sky Atlantic at 9pm on Monday
dataLayer = [{
event: "Page Data",
sections: "news",
authors: "Tim Glanfield",
time: (new Date()).getTime(),
channel: "news",
cat: "news",
subcat: "article",
pageid: "281004",
taxonomies: { "genre":["comedy"],"programme":["alan-partridge-welcome-to-the-places-of-my-life"], }
}];
(function(w,d,s,l,i){w[l]=w[l]||;w[l].push({'gtm.start':
new Date().getTime(),event:'gtm.js'});var f=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],
j=d.createElement(s),dl=l!='dataLayer'?'&l='+l:'';j.async=true;j.src=
'//www.googletagmanager.com/gtm.js?id='+i+dl;f.parentNode.insertBefore(j,f);
})(window,document,'script','dataLayer','GTM-WS6DT9');!function(e,n,t,r,o,i){if(!n){n=n||{},window.permutive=n,n.q=,n.config=i||{},n.config.projectId=r,n.config.apiKey=o,n.config.environment=n.config.environment||"production";for(var c=["addon","identify","track","trigger","query","segment","segments","ready","on","once","user"],a=0;a<c.length;a++){var s=c[a];n[s]=function(e){return function(){var t=Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments,0);n.q.push({functionName:e,arguments:t})}}(s)}var p=window.Worker?"async":"blocking",g=e.createElement("script");g.type="text/javascript",g.async=!0;var m=("https:"==e.location.protocol?"https://":"http://")+"cdn.permutive.com";g.src=m+"/"+r+"-"+p+".js";var u=e.getElementsByTagName(t)[0];u.parentNode.insertBefore(g,u)}}(document,window.permutive,"script","99db7a95-b06a-4ea9-857c-f73ba0a25c19","db07e0f0-8bb8-46c8-b714-291f2768d746",{});
grunticon(["https://www.radiotimes.com/wcp/themes/im-fabric/dist/icons/icons-18d78859ec.data.svg.css", "https://www.radiotimes.com/wcp/themes/im-fabric/dist/icons/icons-9434c3e446.data.png.css", "https://www.radiotimes.com/wcp/themes/im-fabric/dist/icons/icons-ae57d11fd9.fallback.css"], grunticon.svgLoadedCallback );


