An Exciting Return To Sketch Comedy: On "Mitchell and Webb Are Not Helping"
Sketch comedy has long lived in cycles—periods of innovation followed by imitation. From the golden days of Monty Python’s Flying Circus to the cultural dominance of Key & Peele, every era has its signature style and tone. Enter Mitchell and Webb Are Not Helping, the surprise resurgence from British comedy duo David Mitchell and Robert Webb. But this isn’t just a nostalgic cash-in or a greatest hits tour. It’s something sharper, stranger, and more self-aware—a reset button for sketch comedy as we know it.
The Return of Razor-Wit
For fans of That Mitchell and Webb Look, which wrapped over a decade ago, the return of the duo was always a hope more than an expectation. While both actors have been busy with solo projects—Mitchell’s sardonic panel show appearances and Webb’s acting ventures—their combined comedic chemistry has always been the magic formula.
Mitchell and Webb Are Not Helping is a spiritual successor in some ways, but it refuses to sit comfortably in its own legacy. The sketches are tighter, the satire more biting, and the meta-humor more complex. There’s a sense that they’re not just reviving sketch comedy—they’re interrogating it.
A Comedy of Crisis
The title itself, Are Not Helping, is doing a lot of work. These aren’t just sketches about silly characters or awkward social situations; they're about futility, helplessness, and the absurdity of trying to "make sense" of the world through comedy. Whether they’re portraying bumbling bureaucrats trying to solve climate collapse with PowerPoints, or a parody of true crime documentaries that forget who the victim was, there’s an existential edge to the laughs.
The show isn’t nihilistic, but it is deeply aware of the limitations of comedy in the face of modern absurdity. It's sketch comedy as a form of cultural commentary—not just laughing at the world, but questioning whether laughter is even an appropriate response.
Not Your Standard Sketch Structure
Gone are the rigid “setup, punchline, blackout” formulas. Instead, sketches spiral, loop, unravel. Some scenes blur into others. Characters occasionally break the fourth wall—not just to wink at the audience, but to ask, “Are we part of the problem?” It’s risky, and at times almost uncomfortable. But that’s what makes it work.
This isn’t comedy that begs for viral clips or catchphrases. It’s not chasing the TikTok algorithm. It’s sketch comedy as theatre, as critique, as uneasy mirror.
An Era Reborn
What makes Mitchell and Webb Are Not Helping feel like a watershed moment is how confidently it rejects the safer formulas. In an era when many sketch shows aim for quick social media traction or lean on safe satire, Mitchell and Webb are doing something braver. They’re trusting the audience to be smart, patient, and a little uncomfortable.
And that’s exactly what sketch comedy needs right now.
The Takeaway
Sketch comedy has always been a reflection of the times, and Mitchell and Webb Are Not Helping holds up a darkly funny, painfully accurate mirror. It’s not just another return—it’s a reinvention. In its refusal to offer easy answers or even clear heroes, the show pushes the genre into new, exhilarating territory.
If sketch comedy is entering a new era, Mitchell and Webb are not just part of it—they’re leading it.