Extras: The Beautifully Awkward Fossil of Comedy’s Dangerous Age*
Watching Extras today is like walking into a pub that hasn’t changed the carpet since 1978 — it smells faintly of regret and cigarettes, and you know something gloriously offensive probably happened there once. Ricky Gervais, in all his smug brilliance, created a show that poked every inflated ego in television’s fragile ecosystem. Celebrities didn’t cameo to look good — they came to be dismantled. Kate Winslet, Patrick Stewart, Les Dennis — all handing in performances so self‑deprecating you wonder if they needed therapy afterward. The plot? Gervais plays Andy Millman, a man whose acting career makes Malta Public Transport look efficient. He spends each episode being metaphorically kicked in the shins by life, showbiz, and his own crippling sense of pride. He’s like the human version of a beige Chinese SUV — desperate to be interesting but doomed to embarrassment at every junction. And yet, amid all the social car crashes, Extras had a kind of savage...