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Rude, crude and frequently violent... but we couldn't get enough Bottom!

Scottish Daily Express

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November 14, 2025

Critics sneered at Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmondson’s flat-share losers but audiences loved the anarchic sitcom’s endless double-entendres and cartoon fights. No wonder its comic genius is considered on a par with Only Fools, Steptoe and Son and Fawlty Towers

- By Angela Pearson and Paul Tanter

Rude, crude and frequently violent... but we couldn't get enough Bottom!

RIK Mayall and Adrian Edmondson's Bottom exploded onto British television in the early Nineties. The anarchic sitcom was violent, rude, disgusting and so uproariously funny that it became an instant hit with viewers at home (but less so with certain snobbish critics).

It was littered with double-entendres and fight scenes that left you howling with laughter or wincing - either way, your eyes watered.

When the antics of Richard Richard and Edward Elizabeth Hitler debuted on BBC Two in 1991, alternative comedy legends Mayall and Edmondson were already sitcom heroes, having revolutionised TV comedy starring in cultural phenomenon The Young Ones, which Mayall co-wrote with Ben Elton and Lise Mayer.

Whereas that show personified the idiocy and vitality of youth, Bottom saw Rik and Ades TV personas evolve into stagnating adulthood, trapped in hilarious arrested development.

Written and performed by Mayall and Edmondson, Bottom was a perfect mixture of rude wordplay and outrageously pathetic plots combined with lashings of their trademark cartoon violence.

This had been perfected with their aptly named Dangerous Brothers live double act, where Rik routinely beat Ade, even setting him on fire, in front of crowds dazzled by their unique in-your-face comedic style that seemed impossible to contain ~ and thrilled audiences with the feeling that anything could happen.

Originally titled Your Bottom, with the silly intent that viewers discussing the show next morning would say, “I saw your bottom on TV last night”, a compromise with BBC Two controller Alan Yentob resulted in it becoming simply Bottom, signposting not only the fart gags and toilet humour with which it became synonymous, but also a clever pun reflecting the status of their characters in the gutter of life.

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