The show was created by
Stephen Lambert, Tania Alexander, and Tim Harcourt. Lambert is a media executive who had previously launched the
Channel 4 television shows
Wife Swap,
Faking It,
Undercover Boss, and
The Secret Millionaire. Alexander was Director of Factual Entertainment at Lambert's independent production company
Studio Lambert, who said the idea was for
Gogglebox to be a mix of the ITV comedy show ''
Harry Hill's TV Burp'', which looked back at the previous week's television, and the BBC sitcom
The Royle Family, which centres on a television-fixated family, but with real, ordinary people. Harcourt, a Creative Director for Studio Lambert, had the original idea for
Gogglebox while watching the
2011 London riots, and along with Alexander, devised the format for the show. They wondered what people talked about while watching the news, and came up with the idea of cutting between people watching the same TV shows. Farah Golant, the boss of
All3Media, said: "But the show isn't really about TV. The show is about people's lives, their relationships, their living rooms and the way children and parents talk about TV [...] That's quite priceless. It captures a cultural response to something that's happening in the world." The show's team set about casting, and it was during this period they signed on Leon and June Bernicoff. Alexander described the original reel as "a little rough around the edges, gosh it was actually really rough", and thought the script was "God awful" which was read by a narrator whose tone of voice was incompatible. Despite this, Glover felt strongly towards the concept and gave the green-light for a mini-series. The first series consisted of four episodes, the first of which aired on 7 March 2013. The show was a success, and a second series of 13 episodes began in September 2013. In November 2020, Alexander left
Gogglebox after seven years to pursue a fresh challenge. She was replaced by Studio Lambert's deputy creative director, Mike Cotton, alongside
Gogglebox executive producer Leon Campbell. ==Production==