Despite being a big budget show (around £400,000 per hour to make) the programme was surreal and had a deliberate low budget feel. Bright colourful pop-art studio backgrounds used to be built full size, but in later years
chromakey was used with model shots, adding to the comical 'trashy' feel. Studio material was shot in
Paris. Topics covered included
rabbit show jumping, singing dogs, 'nude cleaning services', magicians,
porn stars such as
Lolo Ferrari and
Europe's very worst (but usually popular in their host country) bands and singers. Narrative commentary was voiced by
Maria McErlane (who had also appeared in
The Fast Show, a sketch show famous for its 'channel 9' segments, a spoof of European TV channels).
Davina McCall provided English voice translations in series 1. In later years
Kate Robbins provided
voice-over translation for the strange continental "stars", which she performed in exaggerated
Yorkshire and other
British regional accents and similar quirky anglicised effects. Johnny Daukes, former singer and writer with the indie band FIN in the 1990s, provided male voices in a similar fashion throughout the series. One episode had an obituary of
Lolo Ferrari that was produced and broadcast with a straight voiceover as a mark of respect, that stood out from the usual comic tone of the programme. == Episodes ==