James Corden is back in the UK and characteristically busy. Last year, the 45-year-old left his job as Los Angeles-based chat show host of The Late Late Show on CBS. A Christmas special is planned for Gavin & Stacey, the acclaimed BBC sitcom he created with co-star Ruth Jones. There’s talk of reviving One Man, Two Guvnors, the National Theatre’s critically lauded hit ­comedy that transferred to Broadway, winning Corden a Tony award in 2012.

And later this month, Corden will appear at London’s Old Vic in a short run of Joe Penhall’s new play, The Constituent, helmed by the ­theatre’s artistic director, Matthew Warchus. Corden’s first stage role since One Man, Two Guvnors, it’s seen as ­something of a departure (a gamble) for Corden – a serious work about the escalating risks of public service in politics.

All this, but in the UK at least, a question seems to dangle eternally above Corden’s head, like a public relations sword of Damocles.

Put bluntly, why don’t you like him? Why do sizeable swathes of the British public appear to have it in for him?

    • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝OPM
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      26 months ago

      A bit harsh, Gavin and Stacy is great, although having seen Lesbian Vampire Killers, it did make me wonder if Ruth Jones was doing a lot of the heavy lifting there.

      • @mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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        46 months ago

        He’s a decent writer and straight man who keeps trying to be a goofy comedic lead.

        The core problem is that being nice is an act, for him. He’d honestly hold a better reputation if he had leaned into being a dick. But no: he’s on the same vector as Elon Musk, desperately wanting people to love him, while caring vanishingly little for anyone beneath him.