Scottish culture magazine
The List listed Limmy at No. 14 on their "Hot 100" list in 2006, which celebrated the people who made the biggest impact on cultural life in Scotland over that year. In March 2007, Limmy took to the stage for two sold-out appearances at the
Glasgow International Comedy Festival. In 2007, he played a character called Zack Eastwood in
Consolevania and
VideoGaiden. In June 2009, the
BBC commissioned a six-episode series of ''
Limmy's Show, a sketch show which premiered on BBC Scotland in January 2010. The BBC commissioned a second series of Limmy's Show
, which premiered on BBC Scotland in February 2011. Limmy wrote a pilot for a sitcom based on Falconhoof, a recurring Limmy's Show
character, but the show was turned down by BBC Scotland. He made a cameo appearance in The IT Crowd'', playing a window cleaner with an unintelligible
Glaswegian accent in the episode "The Final Countdown", which aired in July 2010. In 2014, Limmy had a regular segment in the second series of the
Charlie Brooker news satire show
Weekly Wipe. He is also known for his live webcam chats, in which he interacts with fans and makes music. In 2015, Limmy wrote his first book titled
Daft Wee Stories, published by
Random House. To promote the book, Limmy embarked on a UK book reading tour. Three of the stories were also published in
The Scotsman newspaper. In January 2016, Limmy performed four nights at the
Clyde Auditorium and one night at the
Hammersmith Apollo, adapting material from this TV shows to become
Limmy Live! On 1 May 2017, he released his second book of short stories, ''That's Your Lot'', embarking on a similar UK book reading tour to his first. Limmy appeared on ''
Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast in 2015, 2017, and 2020. He also appeared on The Blindboy Podcast'' in 2020. Limmy has been noted for the parody tributes he often
tweets on the announcement of a celebrity's death; he invariably posts that he "had the pleasure of meeting [them] at a charity do once. [They were] surprisingly down to earth, and VERY funny". Following the death of nightclub owner
Peter Stringfellow, his tweet was mistakenly reported as a genuine tribute by
Sky News. In 2017, the BBC commissioned what was then a one-off special of ''Limmy's Homemade Show
, which was broadcast in April 2018. A follow-up series was commissioned by the BBC and began airing in April 2020. After the airing of his one-off commentary Limmy's Other Stuff'' in October 2020, Limmy announced his retirement from television, citing his mental health, as doing TV work made him "fucking suicidal". Since 2018, Limmy has been
livestreaming almost daily on the website
Twitch, where he plays video games, chats to fans and tells
improvised comedy stories. ==Personal life==