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A Stuga On the Cusp of the Orust Riviera, tucked away next to a hobbit hole in the woods.

Dead Famous - Ben Elton Paperback: 384 pagesPublisher: Black Swan; New Ed edition (1 Jul 2002)Language EnglishISBN-10: 0552999458ISBN-13: 978-0552999458Amazon.co.uk ReviewBen Elton's Dead Famous brings together his talents in comedy and crime writing to produce a hilarious and devastating novel on the gruesome world of reality TV. Peeping Tom productions invent the perfect TV programme: House Arrest. Its slogan is: "One house. Ten contestants. Thirty cameras. Forty microphones. One survivor." This is all a clever parody of the massive TV hit Big Brother, with its vain, ambitious contestants with their: tattoos and their nipple rings, their mutual interest in star signs, their endless hugging and touching, and above all their complete lack of genuine intellectual curiosity about one single thing on this planet that was not directly connected with themselves.However, Elton adds a clever twist to this very funny send-up. On Day 27 of the programme, one of the housemates is killed live on TV. Everyone in the country has a theory about the killer, "indeed the only person who seemed to have absolutely no idea whatsoever of the killer's identity was Inspector Stanley Spencer Coleridge, the police officer in charge of the investigation". Coleridge is an old fogey from the 1950s, who has to learn quickly about lesbians, piercings, blow jobs and the seductions of TV fame before he can crack the case. Elton's wicked parody of the housemates is brilliant, the murder fiendish in its ingenuity, and the ending wonderfully over the top. Dead Famous is great fun, and even has some social comment thrown in for good measure.My opinion: this was like the stamford prison experiment all over again. Luckily, I have the relief of not having to watch any TV at all, so this was my first brush with the Reality TV that everyone cannot help but talk about - incessantly, ad infinitum, forever, ad nauseum, puke.Well!I find it hard to think that this is what gets people in such a stir.... but in a stir they get. Ben Elton's view is so very clever, bringing in the scottish play to help decipher just who was the culprit. Of course, those who have read about dysfunctional people already know that excessive and/or compulsive expletive usage is a sure sign of great mental disturbance will have had this solution in the bag straight away, no bovver!I creased with the telly tubby line! So brilliantly teh funneh.