4 January 2016 (2016-01-04) – 27 February 2019 (2019-02-27)
Insert Name Here is a Britishcomedypanel game show presented by Sue Perkins. The programme made its debut on BBC Two on 4 January 2016. In each episode two teams of three compete to answer questions about famous people, past and present, who have just one thing in common: they share the same name.[1] The team captains are Josh Widdicombe and Richard Osman.[2] The show was cancelled in February 2020[3] due to low viewership.
Background
Insert Name Here had four pilots: one called "Britain's Favourite", recorded on the theme of Steves and due to be broadcast in February 2011, but pulled out of the broadcast schedule at short notice; one in July 2012 discussing Davids and called "And You Are..." (both of these were fronted by Miranda Hart);[4] one in March 2013 as "Name Droppers"; and one in April 2015 with its current title (both fronted by Sue Perkins).[5]
A name is picked before the show, and the aim of the game is to find out the best possessor of that name. This may be somebody either using that name or having been born with that name or its variants – for example, Frank discussions would also address Francises, Frankies and Fannys – and the name is divulged at the start of the show.[10]
Round 1
Four owners of that name are listed as characteristics (for example, Secret Frank). Four facts are revealed about said owner, and then free discussion takes place. After a few minutes, Sue asks a question about the owner and whoever's guess is closest gets that owner. Three of the owners are discussed in this way.[10]
Round 2
The second round involves three owners being laid out and then a related question asked. Whoever gets that question right gets that owner, while whoever doesn't gets a bonus – a comparatively useless owner. Three sets of three are discussed in this way.[10]
Round 3
This round is on the buzzer, and a half-finished question is asked. Teams are asked to finish the question. Three of these are asked. Afterwards, the winners are the team with the most owners; the winning team captain gets the privilege of declaring who they think is the best owner. In addition, booby prizes are awarded to both teams.[10]
Tim Dowling of The Guardian noted the show's "breezy contempt for its own formalities", saying that the show echoed 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown in that respect, though stated that "the latter has the distinct advantage of a well-understood and much-loved set of actual rules. Here, there was nothing established to undermine, unless it was the very notion of the panel show". He summarised by calling the show "an amiable enough half hour" and noted that "no one will ever accuse Insert Name Here of taking itself too seriously".[11]
The Times' Alex Hardy was more positive, saying that while Sandi Toksvig hugged each of her guests before hosting episodes of The News Quiz, "in the best possible way, this feels like a show where everyone has been hugged.[8] It’s partly that the concept is so loose that the conversation can spin off anywhere. … It's partly that the chemistry really worked, with everyone contributing intelligently and amusingly. It is funny and it is (fairly) clever, which is pretty close to the panel-show holy grail."[8]
International broadcasters
Internationally, the series premiered in Australia on BBC UKTV on 8 November 2016.[12]
^ abcHardy, Alex (5 January 2016). "TV review: When Ant & Dec Met the Prince". The Times. London. Retrieved 5 January 2016. Sandi Toksvig, on her recent Desert Island Discs, revealed that before each recording of The News Quiz, she gives each panellist a hug — all part of making the show more friendly. She was due to become the first female host of a mainstream comedy TV panel show, when she takes over the reins of QI later this year, but Sue Perkins last night pipped her to it on Insert Name Here. In the best possible way, this feels like a show where everyone has been hugged. It's partly that the concept is so loose that the conversation can spin off anywhere (it's about a different moniker every week, so last night's "Frank" episode covered everything from Drake to Lampard). It's partly that the chemistry really worked, with everyone contributing intelligently and amusingly. It is funny and it is (fairly) clever, which is pretty close to the panel-show holy grail.