Britain Complete Pack - Cunk On...
You know when you try to explain the Industrial Revolution to a pigeon, and the pigeon just stares at you like you’ve asked it to name three Beatles? That’s roughly the intellectual energy of Philomena Cunk, and it’s magnificent.
Diane Morgan’s deadpan is so flawless it should be classified as a weapon. Her interviews with real historians, archaeologists, and economists are pure gold—watching a Cambridge professor explain the Reformation while Philomena nods and asks if Jesus was “a bit of a drama student” is the hardest I’ve laughed since someone told me Boris Johnson was once a serious journalist. Cunk on... Britain Complete Pack
The writing is deceptively sharp. Beneath the “I’ve never heard of the Enlightenment, was it a boy band?” exterior, there’s genuine satire about how we remember (or forget) history. Plus, the theme tune will live in your head rent-free for months. Possibly years. I’m humming it now. Help. You know when you try to explain the
The Cunk on... Britain Complete Pack is the historical equivalent of giving a toddler the nuclear codes. You shouldn’t love it. You definitely shouldn’t learn from it. But you will watch every single minute, and by the end, you’ll be asking yourself: “Wait… was the Industrial Revolution before or after the internet?” Plus, the theme tune will live in your
The Cunk on... Britain Complete Pack is a five-hour journey through British history, from the Bronze Age to Brexit, told by a woman who thinks the Magna Carta was a shopping list and that Stonehenge might have been a prehistoric flat-pack furniture mistake. It’s like Horrible Histories got drunk, watched Newsnight once, and decided to ask “But why though?” until actual professors began questioning their life choices.
Fans of This Country , The Office (UK), and anyone who has ever sat through a tedious documentary and thought, “I wish someone would ask the presenter what year ‘the 90s’ was in.” Not for patriots. Definitely not for experts. Absolutely essential for anyone who thinks British history is already a bit of a joke.
Philomena would be proud. Probably. She’s not sure what proud means.