Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Series / ToastOfLondon

Go To

1[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/toast_6130.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:320:Steven Toast]]
3-> "Hi Steven, this is Clem Fandango. Can you hear me?"\
4"Yes I can hear you, Clem Fandango."
5--> --[[OnceAnEpisode Every Episode]]
6
7A BritCom written by [[Series/FatherTed Arthur Matthews]] and Creator/MattBerry and broadcast by Creator/Channel4 in which the latter plays Steven Toast, a LargeHam middle aged actor who spends more time dealing with his bizarre life and problems off stage than performing on it. Toast constantly struggles to hold down a job due to his self-centeredness and obliviousness, which lead to frequent gaffes and mishaps that upset those around him. He sustains himself by starring in a universally-reviled play and doing humiliating dubbing work, but spends most of his time arguing with his agent Jane Plough (pronounced "pluff"), chatting with his eccentric, permanently dressing gowned flatmate fellow actor Ed Howzer-Black, and facing off against his arch enemy and rival actor Ray Purchase. He also hangs out at [[SmokyGentlemensClub The Colonial Club]] and wrestles with his complicated love life, which involves dealing with his ex-wife, sleeping with Mrs. Purchase, and frequently a GirlOfTheWeek.
8
9
10A SequelSeries, ''Toast of Tinseltown'', was released in 2022, now being aired by Creator/TheBBC (via their [=BBC2=] channel).
11
12----
13!!The series provides examples of:
14* AccentUponTheWrongSyllable:
15** [[http://youtu.be/Je_pJ_-5HIM Listen]] to Toast pronounce "[[Music/BonJovi BonjovIIIII]]" or "[[Music/LadyGaga Madame GuGAAA]]".
16** "Power Bullads" are a type of song.
17** In the tie-in book, "Toast on Toast", Matt Berry manages to do this at least once every paragraph.
18* ArcWords: Many episodes have them repeated so often that they become jokes in themselves.
19* ArtificialLimbs: Blair Toast has an artificial hand. It's an inflated rubber glove, stuck on the end of his arm.
20* AsHimself:
21** John Nettles of ''Series/MidsomerMurders'' is now down on his luck and resorting to poaching, then marching into people's houses to try and sell them the animals he's killed.
22** Creator/PeterDavison in ''The Moose Trap'', ''High Winds Actor'' and ''Beauty Calls''.
23** [[Music/QueensOfTheStoneAge Josh Homme]] in ''Fool In Love''
24** Michael Ball in ''Bonus Ball''.
25** Creator/JonHamm in ''Hamm on Toast''
26** [[spoiler:Bob Mortimer]] in “Bob a Job”, whom Jane mistakes for Kevin Spacey from behind.
27** Creator/PaulRudd in ''LA Story''
28* AwfulBritishSexComedy: Toast was filming one of these at Creator/PinewoodStudios in 1969 when he accidentally walked onto the wrong set and met Creator/StanleyKubrick [[spoiler: (who was [[MoonLandingHoax faking the Apollo 11 Moon Landings]] on the orders of UsefulNotes/RichardNixon)]]. Ray Purchase himself is something of an extreme homage to the "jealous husband" archetype, and his introduction is shot like one of these -- having just come home from ''filming'' an awful sex comedy, he's outraged to find himself being cuckolded and Toast hiding in the wardrobe. And then there's Ed, who still gets royalty cheques for one that he was in that's become a cult classic, to the point where he eventually gets hired to film a sequel.
29* BiggerOnTheInside: Several locations appear as tiny buildings from the outside, but are vast within, such as the new [[Creator/TheBBC BBC Television Centre]], which on the outside is a tiny portacabin in the middle of a field, but inside contains a very large office.
30* BottomlessMagazines: In one episode, Ray Purchase fires his six-shot revolver into the ceiling ten times without reloading, and still has enough bullets to threaten Toast.
31* BrickJoke: In the pre-credits sequence for "Match Fit," Toast is recording the voiceover for the "Mind The Gap" announcement on UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground, and is asked to leave a longer and longer gap between the words "the" and "Gap". Eventually, he says "Mind the" and then walks out of the recording booth. He doesn't return to say "Gap" until after the end of the closing credits.
32* BritishBrevity: Faithfully follows this trope; a single pilot, followed by three series (so far) of six episodes each.
33* BrutalHonesty: Jane Plough has no problems calling Toast out for being [[{{Jerkass}} an arrogant asshole]].
34* BrotherhoodOfFunnyHats: When Toast learns that director Parker Pipe refuses to work with any actors who aren't "on the square", he decides to join the not-so-secret brotherhood:
35--> '''Toast''': "HELLO! I'D LIKE TO BECOME A MASON!".
36* BunnyEarsLawyer: Jane Plough is very good agent and generally a serious, no-nonsense person. Except for the times when her LSD addiction, love of male strippers, and occasional bouts of paranoia kick in.
37* BuriedAlive: In one episode, Toast gets put in a coffin and buried underground as part of a movie he's shooting. Unfortunately the director goes insane and the crew scatters before he can be exhumed, leading to him spending all day trapped in the coffin slowly running out of air as he tries to call someone to rescue him on his new cell phone, to no avail.
38* TheCastShowOff: Creator/MattBerry is an accomplished songwriter, musician and singer, which probably explains why there's a slightly surreal song interlude in most episodes.
39** The show also features a DoItYourselfThemeTune - Matt Berry's own ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCijk4qmu7I Take My Hand]]''.
40* CelebrityResemblance: Kikini Bamalam, daughter of the Nigerian ambassador, was the victim of an insane plastic surgeon (implied to have been Ray Purchase) who turned her into a dead ringer for Creator/BruceForsyth. Except her left hand.
41* CharacterCatchphrase: Clem's "Hi Steven, this is Clem Fandango. Can you hear me?" every time he [[RunningGag wants to remind Toast who's boss]]. It gets PlayedWith a couple of times as well:
42--> '''Clem Fandango''': Hi, Steven, this is Clem Fandango, can you hear me?
43--> '''Toast''': Yes, I can hear you, Clem Fandango.
44
45--> '''Michael Ball''': It's not [[StealthPun rocket science]].
46
47--> '''Toast''': [[NoIndoorVoice WELL HE CAN FUCK ''THAT'' SKY-HIGH!]]
48* CharacterDevelopment: In the first series, Toast states his refusal to play a bald man. Either he has become more desperate or been offered a particularly excellent role, in series two he shaves his head completely - only to find the role has been snapped up by Creator/BruceWillis.
49* ChekhovsArmoury: Jane gives Toast a satellite phone, with a built in oxygen mask and an emergency fire extinguisher. [[spoiler: All of which come in useful when he's buried alive on the set of a movie.]]
50* ChekhovsNews: Toast talks to Ed about fracking. [[spoiler: He's saved from certain death by it later when buried alive.]]
51* ChekhovsSkill: Toast's very strange drummer girlfriend has the required skills to save him when [[spoiler: he keels over with a (near) heart attack.]]
52* ComicBookTime: Toast has been working as an actor since at least the late 1960's, yet is young enough for his own dad to look exactly like him in the 70's, and in 2014 is still only described as "middle-aged". This actually fits pretty well into [[RetroUniverse the show's setting]], which can go anywhere from the modern day to the Heath ministry to Victorian times for the sake of a joke, and where Francis Bacon may or may not be dead.
53* CovertPervert:
54** Ed is a very dignified, professional, and posh fellow but he has a number of weird fetishes that he enjoys in a sly and discreet manner, like old ladies posing in the nude or a woman who looks ''and sounds'' like Creator/BruceForsyth.
55** Jane is highly dignified and no-nonsense on the job, but on her off-hours is nearly always accompanied by several fit male strippers.
56* EmasculatedCuckold:
57** Toast's main way of one-upping Ray Purchase, and perhaps the origin of their rivalry, is by sleeping with Mrs. Purchase (who generally refuses to sleep with her husband).
58** Similarly, Clem Fandango constantly humiliates Toast at every opportunity, beginning with the fact that he slept with Toast's wife ''during their wedding''.
59* DarkIsNotEvil: Downplayed; Steven usually dresses all in black and, while he's a bit of a jerk, compared to some of the others floating around his orbit he's a pretty reasonable guy.
60* DastardlyWhiplash: Ray Purchase has the moustache and cartoonishly evil personality, although unusually he dresses [[VillainInAWhiteSuit in an all-white suit.]] In the first episode he is only mentioned, but Toast suspects him of conducting a needlessly elaborate scheme just to annoy him.
61-->'''Ed''': So, you think he set himself up as a rogue cosmetic surgeon, to operate on a friend of a friend of yours, disfigure her and turn her into a Creator/BruceForsyth lookalike... just to piss you off?
62-->'''Toast''': Yep. Thing is, I'm not even that pissed off.
63** When me meet Ray in the next episode, he's such a bastard that it suggests Toast was right, as Ray probably ''would'' go to such unnecessary lengths. He also attempts to kill Toast twice, first by goading an insane director into murdering him, and later by simply trying to shoot him onstage. He's also [[PoliticallyIncorrectVillain notoriously homophobic.]]
64* DissonantSerenity: While [[ItMakesSenseInContext wandering around the docked nuclear submarine]] HMS ''Penetrator'', Toast is pulled aside by its deputy commander, Toby Hopkinson-Finch, who informs him, in a very calm and reasonable-sounding manner, that he's been contacted by aliens who have instructed him to launch a nuclear attack on the USA.
65* DoubleStandard: Toast has no problem sleeping with Mrs. Purchase despite her being married, but won't do the same with the (also) married Lorna, possibly because he is genuinely in love with her.
66* EarlyBirdCameo: A non character example; in "High Winds Actor" Toast sits in front of a poster for the play "Man of Sex." He later appears in the play in the following series.
67* EverybodyLaughsEnding: ''Addictive Personality'' ends with Toast and Ed laughing for just a little bit too long after Toast spouts yet another of Brucie's catchphrases.
68--> '''Toast''': Didn't she do well?
69* EveryoneHasStandards: Toast is rude and offensive towards most people, but he is horrified by Norris Flipjack barbecuing (actually roasting on a spit) a fox. He's also somewhat offended by Ray Purchase's rampant homophobia.
70* {{Expy}}:
71** Axel Jacklin in "High Winds Actor" is pretty clearly supposed to be Creator/JamesMason. In his career he's been pretty much typecast as sea captains, much like Mason played Captain Nemo. His voice is even an impersonation of Mason. Particularly humorous in that the episode revolves around actors being members of [[BrotherhoodOfFunnyHats the Masons]].
72** Peggy Plywood in "Over the Moon" is supposed to be director [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Littlewood Joan Littlewood]], right down to the cap and donkey jacket. Once again justified, as Littlewood died in 2002.
73* FanDisservice: Any sex scene. Toast always keeps his vest on during the act, and the scenes usually focus on the ridiculous facial expressions that he pulls. In slow motion. Or on Mrs. Purchase's very bored face. A special mention should go to the shot of [[TeenyWeenie Toast's genitals]] in the last episode of season two.
74* FanserviceExtra: The nude actress in "Bonus Ball."
75* FictionalCounterpart:
76** Toast's regular haunt The Colonial Club is based upon [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Colony_Room The Colony Room]], a famous drinking den for theatrical and artistic types such as Creator/PeterOToole, Creator/TomBaker and Francis Bacon.
77** In "Beauty Calls", an extra dressed as Baker's incarnation of [[Series/DoctorWho the Doctor]] can be seen in the background, drinking gin and smoking a fag.
78** In "Match Fit," Toast takes part in a Prostitutes and Celebrities Blow Football Tournament for the charity organisation "The River Rats", based on [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Order_of_Water_Rats The Grand Order of Water Rats]].
79** In "The Moose Trap," the titular play takes the place of ''Theatre/TheMousetrap''.
80* FullNameBasis: As a RunningGag, Clem Fandango always introduces himself by first and last name, and Steven always addresses him the same way.
81* GargleBlaster: Creator/PeterDavison has his own home-brewing apparatus, with which he makes his own drink called [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast the Black Death]]. Toast takes a swig, and his skin instantly goes grey, buboes grow on his face and he begins [[TearsOfBlood bleeding from the eyes]] (much like [[TheBlackDeath the plague after which it is named]]). Davison then tells him that he's really supposed to sip it. [[spoiler: At the end of the episode, Davison and his girlfriend are revealed to have drunk themselves almost to death on it.]]
82* GoodLookingPrivates / HospitalHottie : Toast has something of a fetish for women in uniform.
83* HamToHamCombat: Between Toast and pretty much anyone, but especially with his rival, Ray Purchase.
84* {{Hipster}}: Clem Fandango and Danny Bear are pretty obnoxious examples, always clad in increasingly ridiculous hipster fashions (described as "clowns' outfits" by Toast). Danny Bear wears a moustache together with garishly-colored streetwear, while Clem Fandango sports a "man bun" in some episodes. Both also have a disdainful, insincere attitude towards everything.
85* HollywoodMidlifeCrisis: After seeming to be quite sane during his first two appearances, in ''Beauty Calls'', Creator/PeterDavison seems to be going through one of these. He's got himself a much younger girlfriend (who is very foul-mouthed), causing his wife to have thrown him out of their home. He starts living with Toast and Ed, and is now wearing vaguely ridiculous-looking clothing, getting drunk with his girlfriend, and throwing childish tantrums whenever he's asked to do chores round the flat.
86* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Played with. Mrs. Purchase acts like one of these, but technically she isn't a prostitute as she doesn't charge anyone for sex apart from her husband. Then there's Wendy Nook, an actual prostitute who is initially unwilling to participate in the Prostitutes & Celebrities Blow Football Tournament, until she finds out that it's in aid of homeless ponies. She is incredibly moved that some ponies are homeless and agrees to take part.
87* IdenticalGrandson: In a flashback to Toast and Ed's father's judging a beauty contest some time in the 1970s in ''Beauty Calls'', they are also played by Matt Berry and Robert Bathurst.
88* IgnoreTheDisability:
89** When Toast is introduced to Kikini Bamalam (see CelebrityResemblance) he is instructed to avoid ''any'' mention of Bruce Forsyth for fear of upsetting her. Sadly, he can't help himself and ends up spouting a load of Brucie's catchphrases on an involuntary loop.
90--> '''Toast''': Nice to see you, to see you... nice. Forgive that. Ed did tell me that to mention any of your catchphrases was strictly, [[Series/StrictlyComeDancing strictly]], strictly, strictly, strictly, strictly, strictly, [[OverlyLongGag strictly, strictly, strictly, strictly, strictly, striiiiiictlyyyyyyy]]... [[BlatantLies You don't look actually anything like him]].
91** In "Desperate Measures", Jane sends Toast to meet Bob Fennison, a musical director with "a very minor facial blemish" that's so minor she can't even remember what it is. [[spoiler:Bob is a cyclops.]] The trope ultimately ends up being parodied and deconstructed; while Toast manages to keep it together, Bob -- not comfortable in public situations -- storms off because he feels the producer (and his lover), Duncan Clench, is domineering the conversation and taking a fancy to Toast, and [[spoiler:later drowns Duncan and himself in a jealous murder-suicide, none of which has ''anything'' to do with his one eye]].
92* IHaveNoSon: Toast's father does not approve of him being an actor, so instead tells people that he is dead. By the end, [[BelievingTheirOwnLies he's told people this so often that he even believes it himself]].
93* IllBeInMyBunk: While discussing the plot of the play version of Calendar Girls, Toast expresses disbelief that anyone would want to buy a calendar with a load of older ladies posing in the nude. Ed mentions that he owns such a calendar, and gets himself so worked up describing how the ladies' modesty is covered by cakes, teapots, etc., that he says he's just going to go and have a look at his calendar. [[BlatantLies "To check some dates...]]".
94* ImpossibleShadowPuppets: "Fool In Love" had Abraham Lincoln, Creator/BruceForsyth, London Bridge and a row of can-can dancers.
95* InsistentTerminology: It's always "Bruce F'sythe".
96* ItsAllAboutMe: Steven Toast is the sort of man who thinks that an enemy would engage in a long and convoluted scheme to disguise himself as a plastic surgeon and mutilate an African diplomat's daughter into looking like Bruce Forsyth solely as part of some ill-defined plan intended just to annoy him. Of course, [[ArchEnemy Ray Purchase]] is such a [[EvilIsPetty petty, vindictive douchebag]] it wouldn't be entirely out of character for him. But nevertheless, it's also a sign of a fairly healthy ego on Toast's part to immediately jump to such a conclusion upon first hearing the story.
97--> '''Toast''': When I got into this profession, I had no intention of entertaining anybody.
98* LargeHam: Toast himself. Which is not surprising, given that he's played by Creator/MattBerry.
99* LastNameBasis:
100** Toast is nearly always addressed as simply Toast, even by his brother. In fact, the only people that call him Steven are Danny Bear and Clem Fandango, which clearly gets his back up.
101** Mrs. Purchase's first name is never revealed.
102* {{Leitmotif}}: Ray Purchase has one, which consists of his name being whispered slowly over some rather menacing drums.
103* LightIsNotGood: Ray Purchase is frequently found dressed in all white, and is a ''massive'' dick.
104* LousyLoversAreLosers: Toast is pretty terrible at sex, and his sex scenes are also shot with {{Fandisservice}} in mind, often focusing on slow-motion close-ups of his ridiculous facial expressions or on Mrs. Purchase's very bored face. In "Beauty Calls", Toast describes his latest sexcapade to Ed as "Straight down to it, [[SpeedSex over in seconds]]" and "A quick park. No foreplay. Just the way the ladies like it."
105* LoserProtagonist: Toast, being an untalented, unsuccessful failure of an actor and a dimwitted {{Jerkass}} to boot.
106* LovedByAll: Creator/JonHamm, to the point that [[spoiler:Toast's father [[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext leaves his entire estate, fortune, and freehold properties to him right before he dies, having only just met him]].]]
107* {{Luvvies}}: Toast is a very dark instance of this -- an embittered, sex-hungry, alcoholic old toff who sponges off others, records voice-overs just to stay alive between doomed stage gigs, and has failed to gain any lasting fame or public notice despite acting in plays, movies and television for over half a century. Ed and Jane, however, are lighter, more conventional examples.
108* MamasBabyPapasMaybe: Discussed, in theoretical terms, when Ray Purchase is forced to watch Toast having unprotected sex with his wife.
109* ManicPixieDreamGirl: Played for laughs with Toast's slightly strange girlfriend who plays percussion, ''all of the time''. Naturally this gets a little annoying after a while.
110* MinorFlawMajorBreakup: This tends to happen with Toast's GirlOfTheWeek, who are often totally perfect ... except for one issue, which starts off as extremely minor before reaching levels of absurdity by the end of the episode:
111** On episode has Toast dating a delightful woman who he has great chemistry with, but she turns out to be a major hoarder. When he goes to her flat for a date, he has to climb over a mountain of furniture and rubbish.
112** Another episode has Toast dating a wonderful woman who happens to be a radical feminist. This seems like an InformedAttribute as she's quite the opposite of a SoapBoxSadie, but their relationship ends after she catches him judging a beauty contest that she's protesting.
113** In another episode, Toast dates a woman who's great except for the fact that she can't stop drumming.
114* MisterStrangenoun: A RunningGag which continues in ''Tinsletown''. There's a good chance that ''any'' character will be named Mr or Ms Bizarre Noun -- from the main cast alone we have Stephen ''Toast'', Jane ''Plough'' and Ray ''Purchase''
115* MoonLandingHoax: [[spoiler:Turns out the moon landing was staged. And directed by Creator/StanleyKubrick.]]
116* MushroomSamba: [[spoiler: in ''High Winds Actor'', Jane starts hallucinating bats everywhere. Turns out she's [[OffTheWagon back on the acid]].]]
117* MrFanservice: The three random [[ShirtlessScene ripped dudes]] playing frisbee in "Afternoon Tea".
118* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: The Arab billionaire who hires Toast to appear in his movie ''Prince Philip: Scoundrel Dog'' is in no way supposed to be Mohamed Fayed.
119* NotThatKindOfDoctor: While Toast's girlfriend on "Man of Sex", being a "Doctor of Drumming", clearly isn't ''that'' kind of doctor and probably shouldn't have responded to the question "Is there a doctor in the house?", she is able to restart his heart by [[WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer drumming]].
120* ObfuscatingDisability: [[spoiler: Aunt Deepa turns out not to be blind and deaf at all, and really could see all of Toast's sex sessions.]] She used to be, but was [[ThrowingOffTheDisability cured miraculously]] and concealed this so she could keep getting disability benefits.
121* OddFriendship: Despite both vying for Toast's affections (and Jemima being a CrazyJealousGirl) Jemima and Susan Random seem to have struck one up by the end of the first episode over their shared love of beaks.
122* OffTheWagon: Toast picks up legendary stage actor Ormond Sacker from rehab and takes him straight to the pub. ''Seven times''.
123* OlderThanTheyLook: The show takes a lot of liberties with how old the characters supposedly are to mine humour from them being out of touch:
124** Toast looks to be in his early forties (Creator/MattBerry himself was 40 in 2014), and yet flashbacks of Toast's previous acting jobs include an AwfulBritishSexComedy in 1969, an appearance in a children's programme in 1974 (thanks to a FreezeFrameBonus of the VT clock during the clip), and an episode of Series/DoctorWho which, judging by Creator/TomBaker's costume would have been made in 1974 or 1975. Who knows how old he actually is?!
125** Also Jane Plough, who in "High Winds Actor" celebrates 40 years as an agent, even though Doon Mackichan who plays her is only 51. Did Jane become an agent at the age of eleven? Her fashion sense is also straight out of the 60's. In "Global Warming", she claims to have been Toast's agent for 50 years, only for Toast to correct her and say it's only 25.
126* OneSteveLimit: Lampshaded. Clem Fandango briefly goes by the name "Clem H. Fandango" to avoid confusion with ''another'' person called Clem Fandango. Toast is unimpressed.
127** Steven mentions another actor named "Steven Toast" who was forced to change his name to Chris Bread.
128* OralFixation: Mrs Purchase almost always has a cigarette in her mouth, even during sex with Toast.
129* OverlyLongGag: Steven Toast, defending his rather ill-judged decision to reveal the ending of a murder mystery he was starring in on live radio:
130-->'''Toast:''' It's like that ''Titanic'' film. Everybody knew what was going to happen in the end, but it was still a ''tremendous'' hit.\
131'''Every Single Person Toast Talks To, One After Another:''' This is ''very'' different, Toast.\
132'''Toast:'''' Honestly [Person Toast Is Currently Talking To], I don't think anybody's going to agree with you about this.
133* PerformanceAnxiety: In ''Over the Moon'', Toast is extremely anxious about having to perform {{Theatre/Macbeth}} live on television, so much so that he cannot let go of a pillar in his dressing room. [[spoiler: He ends up performing the entire play whilst holding onto the pillar. And getting rave reviews for it.]]
134* PetTheDog: Toast directs one of Ed's mates in the direction of [[SitcomArchNemesis Danny Bear]] to help speed up the waiting list for his sex change operation. Admittedly the specialist turns out to be a quack, but it's the thought that counts.
135* PizzaBoySpecialDelivery: In "Global Warming" Ed stars in a porno as a cable repairman who comes to repair a saucy lady's "equipment".
136* PoliticalOvercorrectness: In "Global Warming," Toast is fined by the literal PC Police for harassing disabled people, nursing mothers, and an Asian tourist. Parodied, as Toast is portrayed rather negatively for this.
137* PoliticallyIncorrectHero: While never exactly exceptionally modern, Toast becomes one of these in ''Global Warming'' (insisting people in wheelchairs be moved because they were distracting him, abusing an Asian tourist for not speaking English clearly, complaining about a woman breastfeeding in public and being seen going into a porno theatre) forcing him to deal with the PC Police.
138* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: Among the many things that make Ray Purchase both a villain and an absolute tosser is the fact that he's openly homophobic.
139* PopCulturalOsmosisFailure: Toast doesn't know much about modern pop culture, and other people's references tend to fly over his head. He has no idea who Music/BonJovi, Music/LadyGaga or {{Music/Coldplay}} are, nor Creator/JKRowling and Franchise/HarryPotter. And of course, Creator/BenedictCumberbatch. [[labelnote:*]][[RunningGag Who?]][[/labelnote]] He doesn't know what bowling is either.
140** Not surprising, as Toast claims never to watch television. Although he ''does'' have a thing for female TV weather reporters.
141--> '''Toast''': But I have heard that Series/BreakingBad is very good.
142** Although, rather surprisingly, even Toast has heard of Franchise/StarWars.
143* [[PajamaCladHero Pyjama Clad Hero]]: Toast's flat-mate Ed Howzer-Black is almost exclusively attired in stylish pyjamas and a silk dressing gown, although this is somewhat justified since he's usually in the flat nearly all the time, although he even wears them when he is driving or visiting Toast at his theatre dressing room. He does dress in a nice linen suit with a panama hat at one point, which momentarily confuses Toast.
144--> '''Toast''': Why are you dressed as the Man from [[AccentOnTheWrongSyllable Del monTAAAY]]?
145** Mrs. Purchase is also always wearing her negligée and dressing gown, even outside. Except in the East End, where she is dressed as a Victorian prostitute.
146* PunnyName:
147** In "Vanity Project," Alan Ford plays a cabbie named (only [[AllThereInTheManual in the credits]]) Mick Carriage. Put another way? Paddy Wagon. Also qualifies as a StealthPun and a MeaningfulName.
148** Pretty much everyone in the show has a surname that's a slightly silly real word (Steven Toast, Ray Purchase, Jane Plough, Clem Fandango, etc etc.).
149* PunnyTitle: Frank Forfolk, famous round the world yachtsman, has an autobiography titled ''Forfolk's Sake''.
150* ReallyGetsAround: Mrs. Purchase. She even advertises in phone booths. And on a billboard (which simply has a picture of her and the words "Mrs. Purchase: Call for sex"). But she's not actually a prostitute, because she doesn't accept money from anyone for sex. Except for Ray.
151* RealPersonFic: Toast's novel is essentially erotic fanfiction featuring the [[invoked]] CrackPairing of UsefulNotes/HenryVIII and a real life contemporary journalist.
152* RescueRomance: Toast spends most of an episode chasing after a comely female Royal Navy officer, who won't put up with his nonsense. After he accidentally ends up stopping a crazed sailor from launching nuclear bombs from a submarine and helping rescue her from a kidnapper, though, she does express an interest in him.
153* RuleOfFunny: Whether Toast is actually a competent actor or merely GiftedlyBad seems to depend entirely on which would be more amusing at the time, though it's more often the latter.
154* RunningGag:
155** Toast replying "Who?" whenever anyone mentions Creator/BenedictCumberbatch.
156** Whenever the vocal director wants to chime in during a recording, he will say, "Hello Steven, this is Clem Fandango. Can you hear me?" to which Toast will always snap, "Yes, I can hear you, [[FullNameBasis Clem Fandango]]!"
157** In ''Toast of Tinsletown'', whenever Toast informs anyone that he has a part in the New ''Franchise/StarWars'' [[AccentUponTheWrongSyllable MoVIE]], they will respond with "Yeah, right!" [[spoiler: which serves as {{Foreshadowing}} that Toast's 'role' is voicing a single line for a minor villain.]]
158* SayingSoundEffectsOutloud: Many of Toast's voice-overs will include what would seem to be sound effects but which Toast will have to say as words. In one case, Toast is given a script that just says "neigh" and it's unclear whether he's supposed to say the word "neigh" or make the sound of a horse. He initially assumes the former but is later told the latter, being told they can't get a horse in to the studio to do it due to OH&S concerns.[[note]]It turns out the script didn't print properly and it was supposed to say "neighbours" and then go on to say a full sentence[[/note]]. In another case, Ray Purchase is in the booth with Toast reading from a script and Toast has been given a script of sound effects being expected to say "bang" when there's a gunshot and "smash" when some glass is smashed. Toast realises just how ridiculous this is and comes to the conclusion that it's being done intentionally to annoy him.
159* SetBehindTheScenes: Given that Toast is an actor, a good portion of the show involves him working on various acting jobs, notably the notorious play and voice projects directed by Clem Fandango.
160* ShowWithinAShow: Loads. The most obvious is the unnamed terrible play Toast is in at the start of the series, but there's also the ''[[Theatre/TheMousetrap Mousetrap]]'' expy, ''Man of Sex'' and the porno movie Ed was in.
161* SitcomArchNemesis:
162** Ray ''bloody'' Purchase... although he is more genuinely dangerous than most examples, having tried to murder Toast several times.
163** To a lesser extent, Clem Fandango as well. He seems to enjoy trolling Toast, and Toast can't stand him, though Toast doesn't try to humiliate Clem Fandango as much as he does Ray Purchase. Clem also slept with Toast's wife ''during Toast's wedding''.
164* SleepsWithEveryoneButYou: Mrs. Purchase will sleep with pretty much anyone for free (she even has billboards advertising her services) ''except for her husband'' Ray Purchase, who has to pay her to get any sex.
165* SmallNameBigEgo: Toast in a nutshell. He acts all arrogant, but is objectively a failing actor who only ever seems to get roles in second-rate plays, films and advertismements, or doing lacklustre voiceover work.
166* SmokingHotSex: Mrs. Purchase smokes after sex. And before sex. And during sex, actually.
167* SoundEffectBleep: A RunningGag in the first episode is the name of Toast's play getting drowned out by a background noise whenever anyone says it, often in an unrealistically loud or improbably timed fashion.
168* SpecialEditionTitle: For the Franchise/JamesBond spoof ''Bonus Ball'', we get a spoof set of Bond style credits. With a special song performed by Michael Ball.
169* SpeedSex: In ''Beauty Calls'' when talking to Ed about the sex he (Toast) had just had in the last scene, Toast described it as, "Straight down to it, over in seconds" and "A quick park. No foreplay. Just the way the ladies like it."
170* {{Spoiler}}: While being interviewed on the radio, Toast lets slip the identity of the killer in long-running play "The Moose Trap". Once everyone knows that [[spoiler: the chauffeur did it]], people stop coming to the play.
171* SquashedFlat: A rare live-action example occurred in "Man of Sex".
172* StalkerWithACrush: Toast gets followed around by a woman who wants him to call her. He's a bit scared of her, given that she stabbed her last boyfriend.
173* StylisticSuck:
174** Throughout the first series, Toast is appearing in what is described as "the worst play in the world". We finally see part of it in episode six. It's pretty awful. [[spoiler:So awful that it's actually ''improved'' when Michael Ball gets shot and killed during the performance.]]
175** Toast also tries his hand at writing a Literature/FiftyShadesOfGrey style erotic novel. Bits that are read out are truly terrible. And made even funnier by Toast's hammy delivery. Unlike the play, everyone in-universe seems to think it's genuinely brilliant.
176* SuperCellReception: Toast's cell phone works great while he's buried alive underground, which is lampshaded by other characters but justified by the giant, deluxe model.
177* TheyCallMeMisterTibbs: Ray Purchase's wife is always called Mrs. Purchase. Even on the prostitute's cards she leaves in phone boxes.
178* ThrowItIn: In Universe: Toast's Sat-Nav voiceover has all of his swearing and sighing left on the finished product.
179** As does the submarine voiceover that he provides, which includes a cough midway through one take.
180* TimeshiftedActor: Toast's father, Col. Gonville Toast, is played by Matt Berry in flashback in ''Beauty Calls'' and by Creator/BrianBlessed in ''Hamm on Toast''.
181* UnsympatheticComedyProtagonist: Toast isn't a particularly pleasant man. He's generally angry, rude, selfish, impatient, bitter, and doesn't really respect anyone. Although this is mitigated by the [[ButtMonkey sheer amount of crap he puts up with]] and the fact that there are [[BlackAndGrayMorality far worse people around him]], like Ray Purchase.
182* UnusualEuphemism: Toast recalls smoking "Children in Need" back in TheSixties.
183* VictorianLondon: In ''High Winds Actor'', Toast has to venture into the East End. Despite being set in 2014, it's exactly as it was in the days of UsefulNotes/JackTheRipper, complete with swirling fog and cockney prostitutes. Naturally, one of them is Mrs. Purchase, and as usual she's smoking -- although, appropriately, it's a clay pipe rather than her ever-present cigarettes.
184* WorldOfHam: Other than Toast himself, the show is full of [[LargeHam large]] or [[ColdHam cold hams.]]
185
186!!''Toast of Tinseltown'' provides examples of:
187
188
189* AnArmAndALeg: In Episode 5, Toast gets his arm bitten off by an escaped tiger. Don't worry though, [[ArtisticLicenceMedicine he has the type]] [[HandWave that can be easily reattached]].
190* BackForTheFinale: All of the regulars from the parent series (save for Mrs. Purchase) appear for short cameos in the last episode, despite having only appeared in the first episode or making fleeting appearances in between.
191* BolivianArmyEnding: [[spoiler:The series ends on Toast about to be shot in the head by two thugs to cover up their botched kidnapping attempts on Ray Purchase -- giving Mathews and Berry a potential out if the character is ever brought back, but [[TheHeroDies otherwise closing the book on Steven Toast once and for all]].]]
192* CastingCouch: Parodied. Toast's first major audition in Tinseltown requires him to wear tennis shorts and be gawked at by someone behind a two-way mirror. [[spoiler:It turns out Daniel Day-Lewis has a knee fetish.]]
193* TheCameo: Creator/PaulRudd was invited to the Music/DavidBowie themed party in the second episode, but since [[BrickJoke the Ziggy Stardust costume is taken]], he isn't allowed in.
194* EmotionSuppression: Des Wigwam's therapy course offers a complete cure for bad temper at the expense of feeling any other emotions, positive or negative. Toast seems to take it pretty well, but Ray Purchase is [[SuppressedRage clearly suffering]] without an outlet for his anger.
195* FourEyesZeroSoul: {{Downplayed}}. Russ Nightlife, Toast's landlord, wears glasses and isn't a villain, but a deranged {{Jerkass}} who [[KickTheDog tips a jug of his own urine onto his homeless father]]. [[spoiler: Probably played straighter once it's revealed that he's D.B. Cooper.]]
196* PrecisionFStrike: Jane calls Toast, in no uncertain terms, exactly [[CountryMatters what he is]], which gets bleeped but [[AtomicFBomb echoes with an explosive-sounding shockwave]] and leaves him appalled. Later, she (equally accurately) refers to him as an "angry and unreasonable piece of shit", echoing the sentiments of ''The Stage''.
197-->'''Toast:''' S'a bit strong, isn't it, Jane? Your language really has become increasingly fruity.
198* SchizoTech: {{Downplayed}} as the series ''is'' set in the modern day, but many details such as [[StatusCellPhone Toast's mobile phone]] and the cars seem to come straight out of TheEighties.
199* StockUnsolvedMysteries: In the final episode, it's revealed that [[spoiler: Russ Nightlife, the deranged man Toast is renting a room from in Tinseltown, is D.B. Cooper.]] Naturally.
200* StatusCellPhone: Toast still possesses one of these, which is frequently PlayedForLaughs - it appears to be stored in {{Hammerspace}}, and can somehow receive text messages and display a GPS.
201* SurrealHumour: While a lot of strange things happened in the original series, ''Tinseltown'' frequently ups the ante to "batshit insane" -- special mention has to go to the penultimate episode where Toast gets abandoned in Death Valley during the filming of a Western, and is rescued by a crazy drifter who forces him to recover a rattlesnake from his friend Rusty Halloween. And it just gets ''more bonkers'' from there.
202* TitleDrop: By Ray Purchase during Toast's day filming the New ''Franchise/StarWars'' [[AccentUponTheWrongSyllable MoVIE]], who [[LampshadeHanging comments on how ironic it is]].
203* WhoShotJFK: ''Anger Man'' begins with Toast, at a professional low, preparing to record an audiobook of a very strongly worded conspiracy tome, ''JFK and The Bastards Who Killed Him'', which states that anyone who believes the lone-gunman "bullshit" is "an asshole". Though Toast stays professional even if his contempt for the material is obvious, he can't make it a sentence in before [[Creator/LarryDavid the author]] has already jumped down his throat three separate times.
204----
205-> ''"So take my hand, we'll disappear..."''

Top