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Lee and Herring remain friends in real life, and occasionally reunite for one-off events. Collaborations include an interview together for The Guardian and a 2005 review of each other's work for the arts supplement of The Sunday Times .
Despite RichardÂ’s claims not to be interested in fame, he will do almost anything to get noticed, and is now friends with Jonathan Aitken as a result of appearing on a poor- quality reality-television rowing show with him.
This, Stewart Lee’s opening line addressing the riotous applause that he and Richard Herring earned thanks to being off of the telly on that BBC2 ‘Fist of Fun’ thing, demonstrates the relationship the duo had between their on-stage personas and their real-life human being selves.
Feb 14, 2018 · “It’ll have to live on through YouTube and in people’s minds,” says Herring (and he’s right, its survived in crackly, taped-off-TV videos posted on YouTube). “It’s a little secret thing, and that’s what’s good about it.
Apr 25, 2019 · Each week Lee and Herring would crown someone “King of the Show”, a largely ceremonial office with no real power. Usually it was a random member of the studio audience, but in an episode which saw Rich taking a shady product placement deal from Ian Cress of the Cress Marketing Board, a competition was announced.
Lee and Herring remain friends in real life, and occasionally reunite for one-off events. Collaborations include an interview together for The Guardian and a 2005 review of each other's work for the arts supplement of The Sunday Times .
Mr Keith Harris (Herring) is an old fashioned teacher described as a 'good man' by the head master who is abused by his students and enjoys nothing more than marking. Mr Ian Kennedy (Lee) is a rogue teacher who constantly attempts to rock the establishment. He is described as 'a fuckwit' by the head teacher.