Dave Gorman's Modern Life is Goodish
AD

All Prime Video Movies & TV Shows

Watch on any device. Free for 30 days.

Dave Gorman's Modern Life is Goodish
7.7

Dave Gorman points out things he finds strange about modern life.

Seasons & Episodes

Can a knock-off can ever be as good as the real thing? Dave Gorman returns with some wry observations on DVDs, baking - and Bucks Fizz.

Dave plays tricks with singing toys, interrogates kids' TV characters, and messes with Monopoly.

Looking at nature's warning signs, Dave enlists celebrities, insect repellent and Doctor Google.

Dave asks what the term 'generation' really means. And why does his mum use emojis?

Dave tests the merits of man vs machine in all its lifelike glory. A lucrative situation presents itself.

Dave asks just how gullible people are as he looks at movie marketing and whether celebrities really can sell anything.

Dave ponders society's image obsession and investigates how far people will go for fame.

Dave reveals how TV is made and examines the nature of happiness - with the help of Kate Middleton's clothes and Thomas the Tank Engine.

Dave irks an old pal and explains why he isn't 'a geek'.

Mirthful musings on modern life. Dave explores the perils of stock photography modelling and experiments with a celebrity.

Dave Gorman's wry take on modern life, featuring a method to get rid of an unwanted gift and the reboot of a classic game show.

Dave Gorman's laptop screen is back on the small screen, as he waxes lyrical on flirty hotel soap, kinky cages and overly familiar foods.

The comedian devises an experiment to discover whether people's behaviour is the same in the real world as it is online, using a room full of photographs of Alan Sugar.

Dave invents a way of minimising the time it takes to listen to your favourite songs.

Dave conducts a live experiment with over a thousand eggs!

Dave laments the death of the queue and considers ATM etiquette.

The laptop-loving king of irreverence is tackling life's burning issues, from the shyness of elks to the evolution of the Honey Monster.

Oddball observations on life with the laptop-literate Dave Gorman, who takes a sledgehammer to an irksome printer. And Christine Hamilton gets a gift!

Dave considers offensive insults and tries to find a man on Tinder.

Computer ads, board games and puzzle books come under Dave's gaze, along with his jigsaw habit.

Dave suggests revamping the calendar and considers the upshot of buying Twitter followers.

With the help of Ant and Dec's fans, Dave ponders our fixation with customer feedback and market research.

In the first episode, Dave gets involved in shredding some naughty magazines, helps a gerbil to fulfill its destiny, and is surprised by what develops when he finds an old-fashioned camera and hands the film in.

"Fun Facts". What's fun about them? Just what is Richard Branson capable of, according to the British public? And, if Dave's right, why must David Dickinson be stopped?

In the third episode of the series examining the quirks, contradictions, frustrations and absurdities of modern life, Dave considers celebrity endorsements, and exclusively reveals the Queen's thoughts on insoles.

After turning his attention to micro-chipped cats, over-familiarity in coffee shops, self-driving cars, and the pointlessness of QR codes, Dave tries his hand at cyber-squatting.

Dave reveals why 184 people contacted him in one hour to tell him what he already knew, weighs up the true value of online petitions and explains how he took on cage-fighter Alex Reid and won. (Not at cage-fighting, obviously.)

In this episode, Dave considers the appeal of dogging, explains why he was asked to move his van from a restaurant car-park, and highlights some of Lord Sugar's more surprising recent tweets.

'Greatest Hits' albums, world records and superlative abuse are put under the spotlight as the studio audience is treated to a truly deluxe experience. Warning: features naked yoyo-ing.

Dave Gorman's quirky and highly personal investigation draws to a close with light-bulbs, gravy-boats, dot-to-dot books and Lego all being assessed for their contribution to modern life's overall goodishness.

The bearded wonder casts a wry eye over the messages we receive every day.

The titular comic examines celebrity culture and star lookalikes.

Money is the root of all comedy as Dave considers our love of cash.

The laptop-loving comic casts a wry eye over the role of family in modern life.

Dave looks at the footprint we leave behind when surfing the web.

Mr Gorman brings the curtain down on his cheeky comedy series about the world we live in, examining the role of faith in modern life.

The stand-out bits from Dave Gorman's sublime comedy series in which he shares wry observations on modern life's little quirks. Stay tuned for some previously unseen clips.

It was tough, but we've managed to cram the wittiest bits from the second series of Dave Gorman's contemplative show into an hour! Dave muses on QR codes and 'fun facts'.

The very goodish bits from the latest series of Dave Gorman's laptop-powered look at modern life and all its quirks, with some hitherto unseen clips thrown into the bargain.

AD

Watch All Prime Video Movies & TV Shows

Stream on any device. Free for 30 days.

Details Of TV
Location
Language English
Release 2013-09-17
Producer Liberty Bell