When the Whistle Blows is the
show-within-a-show sitcom created, co-written by and starring Andy Millman. It was first mentioned in episode 1.3, as a script that Millman had written and given to Darren, who neglected to read it (in a recurring joke, he frequently forgot the show's name, often calling it
When the Wind Blows and even confusing it with
The Wind in the Willows). In the first-season finale, the script is turned into a sitcom on
BBC One, after Millman gives the script to Patrick Stewart. Excerpts from the sitcom are featured in the second season, and many of the
Extras second-season plotlines revolve around Millman's experiences on and around the show.
When the Whistle Blows is set in a
Wigan factory canteen. The humour is broad and lowbrow in the manner of many catchphrase-based sitcoms. The show's main catchphrase, "Are you 'avin' a laugh?", is spoken by Millman. The show is unpopular with critics but popular with the public. It receives a
BAFTA nomination, although Millman suspects it is simply to make up the numbers, and in the end it loses to an unspecified programme by
Stephen Fry. Millman is deeply unhappy with the show, feeling that too many people have interfered with his original ideas in the hunt for ratings. It appears that Millman originally set out to do a comedy similar to
The Office, with true-to-life characters in a realistic work environment, without a studio audience or canned laughter. After being forced to collaborate and compromise many of his ideas with BBC producers, the show is transformed into lowest-common-denominator fare, with each character having his/her own catchphrase, repeated
ad nauseam to the delight of its 6 million viewers. The show is further debased by the unexplained guest appearance of Coldplay's Chris Martin in episode 2.4, which bears no relation to the plot and which Millman openly opposes, going so far as to utter the on-camera line, "Chris Martin, what are you doing in a factory in Wigan? It's mental!" The presence of studio audiences,
canned laughter, and the reliance on funny wigs, costumes and
catchphrases for humour is a comment on British comedy hits such as
Little Britain and
The League of Gentlemen. Many people that Millman sees at the recording of the pilot wear T-shirts displaying comedy catchphrases such as "
Wassup", "
It's Chico Time", "
I'm a lady!", "
Am I bovvered?" and "
Garlic bread?" (These shirts are not shown in the version screened in the US). Some of the show's reviews refer to it as a "time warp comedy", and Millman's character talks about 1970s catchphrases such as Mr Humphreys' "I'm Free" (from
Are You Being Served?) and
Frank Spencer's "Ooh Betty" (from ''
Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em), suggesting that it is also partly sending up 1970s British comedy. In episode 2.5, Germaine Greer suggests that When the Whistle Blows
is "sub Carry On''". In recent years, the spoof has been compared to real-life sitcom ''
Mrs Brown's Boys'', in respect to its animated opening and that it was critically panned yet a ratings winner. ==Music==