Wallace filmed a pilot episode for his own American television sitcom in 2010, commissioned by
ABC and made by
Warner Bros. Television. In it, Wallace plays himself ("Danny"), a writer who moves to San Francisco to support his wife's new job, and finds that he doesn't quite fit in. The pilot also starred
Tony Hale (
Arrested Development) and
Laura Prepon (''
That '70s Show). It was directed by acclaimed director Andy Ackerman, who had previously directed almost 90 episodes of Seinfeld''. A second script was later commissioned for the 2011 American TV pilot season. The pilot made it to the final shortlist for the 2011 American TV pilot season; however, ABC wanted to shoot the show in front of a studio audience, which Wallace had not planned for. ABC instead commissioned another script, and
Awkward Situations for Men was not commissioned for the 2011 season. Of his work in Hollywood,
Empire magazine said, "Hollywood must be gazing in wonder at the walking high-concept machine that is Wallace." Wallace began television presenting in 2004. In 2005, Wallace presented a documentary comedy,
How to Start Your Own Country, in which he started his own
micronation – "Lovely" – in his London flat. The series charted his journey around the world exploring citizenship and what a country actually is. He has described it as "a way of hiding politics in entertainment". Beginning late August 2005 he co-presented on
BBC One's Saturday night show ''He's Having a Baby
with Davina McCall, which ran at the same time as his BBC Two series, How to Start Your Own Country''. The latter won two
BAFTAs in early 2006.
XFM and Radio X From 9 February 2008 to October 2008, Wallace presented a weekly show at 10am2pm on Saturday mornings at
XFM London (now
Radio X), taking over the old
Ricky Gervais slot. Wallace and co-presenter Richard Glover decided to leave after they were asked to pre-record their show instead of broadcast live, which would have taken away from the interactive nature of the show. On 1 August 2011, Wallace returned to XFM London to present the weekday breakfast show. The show eventually gained a cult following, and this was recognised by making the show operate as if it were a totalitarian state. Listeners would often text in calling themselves 'confirmed listeners', and the show eventually become known as 'The Important Broadcast'. Wallace eventually used terminology such as 'listenerpad' and 'listening partner', to imply and joke about state-like rules for joining in with the show. With Producer Dave the show had a number of features which caught on: • 'Good news' (where presenters and listeners shared things since the last broadcast that either made them feel good or not so bad in life) ending with the phrase: "that's not just good news, that's great news". • 'Snap My Pitch Up' – The famous guests and entertainers were presented with pitches for their participation films or shows with titles typically based around the stars' name. • 'Quizface' – A series of nonsensical quiz formats which would be portrayed as adventures or needlessly complex game shows, throughout which bemused and uninformed listeners and participants would be reminded that 'You should know the rules by now'. It was originally conceived as a one off, but Wallace and Matt Dyson eventually kept making the joke make less sense and more funny. Wallace claimed to listeners that they could find the rules on their issued 'listenerpads' or by reading the (not-real)
London Gazette. Each quiz was eventually won by completing the 'well-known phrase', 'We are XFM'. The quiz was awarded a prestigious Sony Bronze Award in the category of 'Best Quiz' • Five minute listener bans – Received by listeners who shared content that receives playful disapproval. Listeners would be told, as if sternly, as if Wallace had control, that they were not allowed to listen for five minutes. • Sparky Wednesday – Every third Wednesday as a celebration of "the best of Britain's tradesmen". • The Dog House – A parody of
The Good Life, in which the presenters and listeners would compare modern woes of what they had done wrong to their friends or partners. • The Showbiz Update – Satirical coverage of showbusiness stories from tabloid newspapers, and Wallace discussing stories often portrayed with opinion pieces in pure basic facts, and the team often humorously analysed and dissected the stories as if they were major news stories. • Angry Nerds – Using the 'Angry Birds' theme tune in the background, the team and listeners shared anger and 'observational comedy about things no-one else notices'. In December 2012, it was announced that Wallace would be leaving the Breakfast Show, and he was replaced by Jon Holmes. When XFM relaunched as Radio X, the show was taken over by
Chris Moyles Wallace returned to Radio X in January 2018 in the Sunday 11am - 1pm slot vacated by Russell Brand. He is joined by former XFM Breakfast Show contributor Stephen Ferdinando, and 'Producer Joe' Attewell. Similar idiosyncrasies to previous incarnations of the show are employed, while new features include: • Dinner Winner – 2 cast members go head to head recounting their dinners, often in a humorous fashion. The third, non-participating member, adjudicates and declares a winner using a points based system. The winner will then go head to head with that week's judge, unless the outcome is a draw, in which case the following week sees a re-match. 2020's Champion was Stephen Ferdinando. 2021's Champion is contested due to dishonesty on behalf of Stephen Ferdinando on whether he paid for a meal or not. • Small Talk Texter – the audience is invited to 'warm-up' by contributing answers to a simple small-talk based question, often based on topical events • Explain That – Contributor Stephen Ferdinando is asked to assess a paranormal incidence and offer an explanation as to how it came about, usually instead declaring the story 'nonsense' and being berated by the rest of the team for failing at the task he's been given • Tell Me Something I Don't Know – The three members of the team try to out do each other with facts they have discovered during the week that the others may not know. Being awarded points based on who knows it and who does not. • The No-Biz – Items from the "showbiz" sections of tabloids that are not particularly newsworthy. Frequently revolving around Paul Hollywood (56) and his incumbent partner.
Video games Wallace lent his face and voice to the 2009 video game sequel ''
Assassin's Creed II where he played Shaun Hastings – an historian and modern day member of the Assassin Order. He was sought after for the part by developer Ubisoft when he went to the BAFTA video game awards with a friend. He reprised his role in Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood, Assassin's Creed: Revelations, Assassin's Creed III, Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag, Assassin's Creed Unity, Assassin's Creed Syndicate, Assassin's Creed Valhalla, Assassin's Creed Nexus VR, and the audio drama Assassin's Creed: Gold''. Each game has sold more than 8 million units apiece. He also narrated the 2012 indie game,
Thomas Was Alone. Wallace's role as narrator won the "Performance" category at the
9th British Academy Video Games Awards, while the game itself was nominated in the "Story" category. In 2015, he voiced Alan in the indie game
Volume, his second collaboration with
Thomas Was Alone creator
Mike Bithell.
Other work Wallace has written for and presented television shows such as ''Danny Wallace's Hoax Files
(Sky One), Conspiracies
(Sky One), School's Out'' (BBC1), and in 2006 he took over from
Phillip Schofield as co-presenter of BBC1's
Test the Nation. He appeared in
Channel 4's
The IT Crowd (Series 1 Episode 2) in a role his friend, writer and director
Graham Linehan, originally planned to play himself. Wallace was asked to do it when Linehan realised simultaneously appearing in and directing the episode would be tricky. Wallace was the first person in 43 years to be asked to front an episode of flagship BBC science series
Horizon. The episode aired on 10 October 2006. In it, Wallace attempted to prove the hypothesis that chimps could be considered 'people' too. On 16 December 2008, he presented his second episode of Horizon on
BBC Two. ''
Where's My Robot?''. In it, Wallace travelled the world to meet
roboticists and ask them, simply: "Where's my robot?". The documentary is based on the belief in the 1980s that by the next century personal robots would be available and be an accepted part of society. Wallace investigates why it did not become a reality and whether it will in the future. Wallace presented a series of reality show
Castaway on BBC One. The series was live from
Great Barrier Island in New Zealand for three months, beginning 9 March 2007, and featured a spin-off
BBC Three series and
BBCi webisodes. On 4 January 2008, Wallace appeared on a celebrity spin-off episode of the
BBC's
Mastermind. His specialist subject was the
Ghostbusters films; he did not get a single question wrong on the subject, but came third with 27 points. He appeared on
Friday Night with Jonathan Ross on 20 June 2008 to discuss his books, film and television projects. On 31 January 2009, he stood in for
Adam and Joe on
BBC 6 Music. He followed this up by another stint on 6Music, standing in for
Shaun Keaveny's breakfast show for two weeks in May 2009. He stood in for Adam and Joe again for seven weeks over the summer of 2009 with XFM DJ
Pete Donaldson and was again asked to take over from Adam & Joe during their recent hiatus. He was a regular presenter on the
National Lottery live draw on BBC 1, as well as the
National Television Awards Backstage Live. In October 2012, American television network
ABC added a comedy project to be co-produced by Wallace entitled
Man & Boy. Since 2016, Wallace has provided commentary for
Channel 5's coverage of
The World's Strongest Man Contest. In 2021, Wallace created a website called "Assembly" (assemblehere.co.uk). "It's a place for men who say nice things behind people's backs, who can cook a decent omelette but want to cook a better one, who'd prefer to be funny, but can stretch to serious." ==Filmography==