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''Peep Show'' is an award-winning British Sitcom starring David Mitchell and Robert Webb . The programme is written by Jesse Armstrong and Sam Bain , with additional material by Mitchell and Webb themselves. It has been broadcast on Channel 4 since 2003 , and finished its fourth series in May 2007. It was recommissioned for a fifth series before the fourth was screened. SYNOPSIS ''Peep Show'' follows the often sexually-frustrated lives of two men in their late twenties, Mark (Mitchell) and Jeremy (Webb). Having met while at the fictional Dartmouth University together (they occasionally refer to themselves as 'The El Dude Brothers' in reference to their student days), they now share a Flat in Croydon , south London . Mark is a loan manager and the more financially successful of the two, but is extremely uncomfortable socially and pessimistic about nearly everything. Jeremy, who at the start of the first episode has recently split up with his girlfriend 'Big Suze', now rents Mark's spare room. He usually has a much more optimistic and energetic outlook on the world than Mark, yet his talent as a musician is yet to be recognised, and he is not as socially popular or sexually attractive as he would like to think. CHARACTERS See Also: Mark Corrigan
See Also: Jeremy (Peep Show character)
Super Hans
Sophie Chapman
Alan Johnson
Jeff Heaney
Toni
Big Suze
Nancy
PLOT SUMMARY See Also: List of Peep Show episodes Series one In the first series, Mark and Jeremy begin with similar aims of bedding their next door neighbour Toni, though Mark is also tragically obsessed with his workmate Sophie, who is more interested in the more macho Jeff. Over time, Jeremy's lust for Toni grows, and he contemplates the opportunity of having a "next-door fuckbuddy", including having intercourse through the wall. Both Mark and Jeremy go through awkward periods throughout the series, as is seen by Mark's confusing and sexual admiration for Johnson, while Jeremy remembers a " Bad Thing " he did while high on drugs, which turns out to be having Oral Sex with friend Super Hans. As the series develops, so do their frustrations, climaxing in the two teaming up to prank call Sophie and launch a pepper spray attack on Jeremy's friend and Toni's short term lover, Super Hans. By the end of the series, Mark nearly succeeds in having sex with Sophie but this chance is ruined by Jeremy's apparent overdose, while the latter claims that he has a terminal illness in order to receive a handjob from Toni. Series two In series two, Jeremy's luck is far greater as he meets and falls in love with Nancy and has a little more success with his music career with Super Hans. Meanwhile Mark is on a downward slope: Sophie plans to move in with Jeff, and Mark forges a short friendship with a Neo-Nazi , and falls for a similarly socially inadequate student, before losing her after an ill-judged return to his old university, where she is currently studying. However, the tables turn once more at the end of the series when Jeremy admits to Nancy - now his wife -that he has been in an affair with Toni ("by mistake"), leaving his marriage a 'husk', while Sophie dumps Jeff and very nearly begins a relationship with Mark. During this series Jeremy's friend Super Hans discovers a love of Crack Cocaine , failing to understand why, in the 21st century, "a nice relaxing smoke of crack" is socially unacceptable. Series three This series sees Big Suze re-enter Jeremy's life. Meanwhile, Mark and Sophie have finally become a couple, yet Mark is left alone once again when she is relocated to Bristol . Other developments include Jeremy seducing Mark's sister while Mark falls for Big Suze, and Jeremy and Super Hans attempting to run a pub. In the last episode, Mark plans to propose to Sophie but changes his mind upon realising that they have very little in common. Nonetheless he ends up agreeing to marry her to avoid "embarrassment" after she gets wind of his original plan and accepts a proposal which he has not actually made. Meanwhile Jeremy's efforts to get back together with Suze are hindered somewhat by Super Hans' attempts to go Cold Turkey . Series four As the series begins, Mark and Sophie are still engaged, and picking out items for their wedding list. They visit Sophie's parents in the country, along with Jeremy, who is ostensibly joining them to spend time with Sophie's younger brother, but ultimately has sex with her mother. Big Suze breaks up with Jeremy after he accepts an " Indecent Proposal " from Johnson (which drives her into Johnson's arms) and Mark claims to be dying from a Brain Tumour after failing to adequately prepare for a particularly stressful work presentation. In an attempt to get away from Sophie, Mark joins a gym, and discovers that Nancy is working there. Jeremy then gets a job there so he can meet with her and try to win her back. Sophie leaves on a foreign business trip, leaving a jealous Mark to consider a fling with a woman from his school reunion. Jeremy finds some highly-paid handyman work for one of his musical heroes, Russell (aka The Orgazoid), but discovers that his employer expects Jeremy to give him " A Hand ". Mark and Jeremy spend a weekend on a canal boat for Mark's stag do, where Mark meets a businessman with contacts in India . He attempts to secure a job there as a means of escaping his impending wedding but the plan falls apart when it emerges that Jez accidentally killed the businessman's daughters' beloved dog. In the final episode, Mark prepares to marry Sophie, while struggling with his worries about the wedding. Jeremy is having difficulty juggling a hungover Super Hans, the wedding, Nancy and his desperate need to urinate. After several attempts to get out of marriage, including jumping out in front of a car, Mark ends up marrying Sophie, who is in tears at the altar and runs out on him after the ceremony, claiming that she will seek a Divorce or Annulment because Mark is "horrible". Series five Series 5 was commissioned in March 2007, prior to the broadcast of Series 4, largely due to the impressive DVD sales of the first three series.1 PRODUCTION The show is unusual in that the events of the two main characters' lives are seen almost exclusively from their own Points Of View (and those of other characters they interact with) to the extent that a working title for the programme was 'POV'. Scenes in the show are often filmed using cameras strapped to the actors' heads,2 to give the viewer a point of view identical to that of the protagonists, and the two main characters' internal monologues (or interior thoughts) are presented to the audience as Voiceover s. On occasion, this viewing style is dropped in favour of a more traditional Third Person view, usually for Establishing Shot s and Flashback s. It is worthwhile to note that even in such events the third person view is shot from the point of view of an actual third person (a passer by, bystander, or a marginal character) making it to a point still faithful to the initial first person point of view formula. The theme tune for the first series was an original composition by Daniel Pemberton. Since the second series the theme music has been the song "Flagpole Sitta" by the American band Harvey Danger (However, elements of the original theme tune are still used for scene changes and commercial breaks). RECEPTION At the beginning of 2006 there were rumours that the show would not be commissioned for a fourth series due to lacklustre ratings of just over a million viewers.34 However, due to the large DVD revenues of the previous series, a fourth series was commissioned.5 At the end of 2006, following the third series, Peep Show was honoured with the British Comedy Award for best TV comedy. The premiere of the fourth series showed no improvement on the ratings of the previous, continuing to attract its core audience of 1.2 million (7.7% of viewers).6 Channel 4's decision to commission the show for a fifth series is said to be for a variety of reasons, including the high DVD sales of the previous series (400,000 to date),7 the continued high quality of the show itself, and the rising profile of Mitchell and Webb due to the success of their BBC sketch show '' That Mitchell And Webb Look '', their advertisements for Apple ,8 and their feature film '' Magicians ''. Despite the low viewing figures, the fifth series of the show was commissioned prior to the broadcast of Series 4, largely due to the impressive DVD sales of the first three series. Mitchell and Webb admitted that ''Peep Show'' "could go on forever".9 American versions In 2005 , the Fox network commissioned a pilot for an American version of ''Peep Show''. However, the pilot was unsuccessful.10 Spike TV later commissioned their own version, to be written and directed by Robert Weide , who is the Executive Producer of '' Curb Your Enthusiasm ''. Jeremy will be played by Josh Meyers , and Mark will be played by Johnny Galecki . REFERENCES EXTERNAL LINKS
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