Critical reception TV Burp received positive feedback from critics. Mark Lawson from
The Guardian said in 2008 it was "the freshest and most original show in mainstream television" and across 2008 and 2009 it was listed as one of the best shows on TV in
The Telegraph and
The Times.
Simon Hoggart, writing in
The Spectator, commended the show for "[assailing] everything on television that is stupid, shoddy, lazy, contemptuous of the audience and generally rubbish". Andrew Mickel from
Den of Geek praised the fast pace of the gags but felt the show relied too heavily on ITV soap operas. In a review for a
TV Burp box set released in 2010, Tim Lusher said its skits were "timeless" and called the show "exuberantly daft, and mischievous but affectionate". Writing at the time of the show's final series in 2012,
Bruce Dessau said that the show's quality had varied over its run, but at its best it had managed to create an "across-the-board appeal" reminiscent of
The Simpsons. Ultimately, he felt the show would "be sorely missed" and that "ITV will never be the same again". Mark Smith from
The Herald was also disappointed for the show to end, citing Hill's ability to make viewers see things from a new perspective and his celebration of the silliness of television. David Bowden for
Spiked concurred that
TV Burp had a attained an appeal for "all the family", but felt its true achievement was as "one of the great biting critics of twenty-first-century popular entertainment". In a retrospective for the
i newspaper, Alex Nelson praised
TV Burp's "electric pace" and the originality of its approach to clip shows. He also felt the show avoided a judgmental tone by targeting low- and high-brow entertainment equally. Another retrospective for
The Guardian by Rich Pelley called the show a "TV masterclass" but argued that the quality declined in later seasons due to the increased number of episodes and hence increased workload on Hill and the show's other writers.
Public response and popularity Although viewing figures were initially low, the popularity of the show increased over time. The debut episode was watched by almost 3 million people. By 2008, it was averaging over 6 million viewers per episode and at its peak it was watched by more than 8 million people. Throughout its run,
TV Burp faced controversies over some of its jokes. In 2007,
Ofcom ruled that
TV Burp had breached guidelines by including clips from a
Bear Grylls programme that were inappropriately scheduled for its early evening show time and family audiences, including clips that featured Grylls eating a frog and cooking a turtle. Another clip, which had been broadcast in 2008 and cleared by Ofcom at the time, was banned after being repeated by digital channel
Dave in 2016. The clip featured a comedic review of a
Channel 4 documentary about
Thomas Beatie, a
transgender man, and was ruled "highly offensive to the transgender community" by Ofcom. == Influence ==