Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Good Times! by Good Times! by Justin Lee Collins. Completing the CAPTCHA proves you are a human and gives you temporary access to the web property. What can I do to prevent this in the future? If you are on a personal connection, like at home, you can run an anti-virus scan on your device to make sure it is not infected with malware. If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking for misconfigured or infected devices. Another way to prevent getting this page in the future is to use Privacy Pass. You may need to download version 2.0 now from the Chrome Web Store. Cloudflare Ray ID: 66014a883be30629 • Your IP : 116.202.236.252 • Performance & security by Cloudflare. Good Times ahead; Justin Lee Collins is the new face of British chat but insists he's not the next Ross or Parky. TV'S entertainment utility man, Justin Lee Collins, is a show host and celebrity reuniter as well as a surfer, high diver, ballroom dancer and wrestler. The co-presenter of the Friday Night and Sunday Night Projects has now turned chat show host in his new show Justin Lee Collins' Good Times. The 35-year-old former stand-up comic may have A-list names like Rihanna and Ewan McGregor on the show, as well as the likes of Louis Walsh, Florence Welch and Emma Bunton, but he's not interested in trying to replace Jonathan Ross or become the new Parky. He'd rather know what their favourite Revel sweet is than have them bare their souls. In fact, he'd rather have a pint and throw some arrows. And since it's his show, that's exactly what he's doing. What's the darts thing all about? I love darts so we have a section where I, basically, have a game of darts with someone and a chat. That's it. I just want to step up to the oche and have a chinwag. Obviously, they have things to plug but that's OK. We're not in the studio for 20 minutes trying to get something out of them while they do it. I've played with Ewan McGregor, and we got Cillian Murphy, from 28 Days Later and Batman Begins, the other day, precisely because it was a pint of Guinness and a game of arrows. Ewan McGregor was a lovely guy. I've watched him for years and my little boy has just got into Star Wars. I've never met him before but the first thing he says is, 'I feel like I know you because I've watched you in loads of things.' Totally put me at ease. But Meat Loaf? He made the entire crew sit down and listen to his new album in its entirety. There were about a dozen of us in the room and before a single arrow was thrown, before a shot was filmed, we all had to sit down and listen to 76 minutes of Bat Out of Hell IV or whatever it was called. Was it your idea to film Good Times at the Rivoli Ballroom in London in front of a live audience? It was. I'm not a fan of TV studios, I wanted to get out and find a home for the stuff you don't get in a studio. A TV studio is not a venue, it's not a club, there's not a bar. We wanted to find a proper venue. We scouted around and found the Rivoli. I took one look at a picture and that was it. I wanted the venue to play a large part of it. The Rivoli is all plush and deep velvet and it's 200 years old . It's got a wonderful history. All these famous pop videos have been filmed there, like Tina Turner's Private Dancer and Elton John's I Guess That's Why They Call It The Blues and it's famous for ballroom dancing. It's playing a huge part in Good Times. It's the most intimate thing I've done since stand-up. I'm working entirely without autocue, five feet away from the audience. Do you enjoy working in front of a live audience? My skill or my ability lies in being spontaneous, which is why the Rivoli suits me more than anything I've done in television. I'm free. My wings aren't clipped. I can go anywhere I want, I can say anything. But it also means I feel like I'm in freefall sometimes. I was interviewing the supermodel Janice Dickinson and she had me sweating like no one has before. We had a conversation which could have gone anywhere. It feels like a sky dive and your parachute has failed. You got your big break in Edinburgh when you reached the 1997 final of the BBC New Comedy Awards. Why don't you do stand-up any more? I always say I was never very good at it. The truth is, I didn't have a love of it. There were times I was terrible and times I was great. But I never liked it and I was lazy. If I didn't have the audience in the first two minutes, I would throw it away. How quickly can I get offstage? When I went to the New Comedy Awards in 1997 I was in the same final as Peter Kay and Neil Fitzmaurice plus Paul Foot. I knew I wasn't going to win - and I didn't - but it was televised and somebody from MTV saw me and that's how I got my first break in television. So it played a hugely significant role in my life. You've hosted Come Dancing spin-off show and said you found Bruce Forsyth rude. Any chance of a reunion? I don't think Bruce Forsyth will be coming on the show. To be honest, I wouldn't want him to. I have no wish or desire to ever meet him again. At a time when I was young and vulnerable and incredibly nervous, when you would hope someone of his calibre would put an arm around you and say, 'Don't worry, I was there once,' it was quite the opposite. Someone asked him what he thought of me and he said, 'Who?' He had to be shown a picture of me. I think I have to let it go. Anyone else who won't be on? We played darts with Ewan McGregor at a press junket for The Ghost, which he is in with Pierce Brosnan. We're about to shoot the darts when in comes Brosnan, in what I can only describe as a waft of pants. He went up to Ewan, chatted to him, gave him the full Brosnan, and left, without so much as a 'Cheers guys'. Justin Lee Collins should have been jailed, says ex. Anna Larke was verbally and physically attacked by the presenter, who kept a dossier of her past sexual experiences, made her sleep facing him and called her a "whore" and "slag". Collins, 38, of , south-west London, was sentenced to 140 hours of unpaid work after being convicted of harassment causing fear of violence at St Albans Crown Court last week. 'Domestic violence course' Collins, who denied the charge, had accused Ms Larke of being compulsive liar, and said in a statement after the verdict that he would never accept he was an abuser. Ms Larke said Collins - whose crime carries a maximum sentence of five years' imprisonment - should have received a harsher punishment. "For what he did to me, the sentence does not fit the crime," she told Victoria Derbyshire. "I think he should have had at least a couple of weeks custodial, so he could sit in his cell to really think about why he's there and what he did. "He should have been made to go on a domestic violence course so he could work out why he has this problem." She said there were moments during their first affair in 2007 that she realised Collins's behaviour was odd. "His texts became a little bit strange. He said 'who in the public eye do you really fancy?' "I said Wentworth Miller, from [the TV show] Prison Break. "He said something like 'I don't respect girls who like men like Wentworth Miller.' "That was the first inkling. I call it the 'Miller's Crossing'. something was really not right." 'Hell to pay' The PR worker, of Pirton, Hertfordshire, met the married Collins when he compered an awards night. They later chatted on social networks, with Collins inviting her in June 2007 to the filming of his show, The Friday Night Project. She said after the show, he witnessed a minor misunderstanding, "looked at me as if he hated me" and called her a word she "could not repeat" on air. After two weeks without contact, Collins became "flirty" again, she said, but "more possessive". "If he sent me a text I had to reply within five minutes, if I didn't there was hell to pay - there's no way you could repeat the words. "He used to make me change my phone number. He didn't want other people to have it. "He said to me he had to be the centre of my universe, that he came before my work, my family and friends and everything - he wanted to be worshipped. "At that point I was in love with him, so I did it." The affair ended in 2008, but he contacted her again in November 2010 and the pair began a "lovely" relationship. But she said "alarm bells were ringing" in December when Collins suggested she take time off work and then look for a different job. 'Really scary' Collins also wanted to know more about her previous relationships, she said. "He said to me, 'I want to know the people you have been with, I want to know every detail, I want you to tell me about it as if I was one of the girls'." Asked why she told him the details for him to write in the notepad, she said Collins was "the love of my life". "My mum said to me 'don't do it, tell him to get lost and just come back home'. My brother said it was bad signs and I shouldn't do it." Shortly before she left Collins in July 2011, after nine months of abuse, Ms Larke recorded him calling her a "whore" and a "slag". It was played to the jury during his trial. "It was really scary and it makes me really glad that I'm not in that situation anymore. It's quite chilling, I hate it. "I was a 37 year old moving back to her parents. I said to myself 'It's going to be horrible, you'll go crazy and you need to remind yourself why you left.' Televisions similar to or like Justin Lee Collins: Good Times. British 3-part documentary on Channel 5 in the , it features Justin Lee Collins taking a cultural trip to Japan. In the first episode, Collins visited Tokyo and investigated the relations between the sexes. Wikipedia. British chat show hosted by Fern Britton which aired on Channel 4 on weekdays at 5:00pm in March and April 2011. Teatime chat show featuring real-life stories, a mix of gossip and entertainment. Wikipedia. Nightly comedy chat show which first aired on Channel 5 in the United Kingdom between 30 March 1997 and 23 June 1999. One of the first to air on the channel, doing so as part of its opening night schedule on 30 March 1997. Wikipedia. British television chat show, hosted by Matthew Wright and aired on Channel 5 on weekday mornings from 9:15 to 11:15am. The series characterised itself as "Britain's brightest daytime show", which "gives ordinary people the chance to talk and comment on everything such as news to the social, emotional and even sexual issues back at home", as well as featuring "showbiz stars and media commentators". Wikipedia. Short-lived British comedy chat show on five, which aired weekdays at 7pm. Filmed in front of a live audience in a bar in London. Wikipedia. British chat show hosted by comedian Rob Brydon. The first series started on 17 September 2010 and consists of six regular episodes, a compilation episode and a Christmas special. Wikipedia. British chat show hosted by Alan Carr on Channel 4 that began in 2009. The sixteenth and final series premiered on 3 March 2016 Wikipedia. Die größten Hörerlebnisse nur bei Audible. Erlebe Audible auf dem Smartphone, Tablet, am Computer oder deinem Amazon Echo. Auch offline. Die größten Hörerlebnisse. 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