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Jonathan Pie
Fictional British news reporter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Jonathan Pie is a fictional character portrayed by British comedian Tom Walker. Pie is a political correspondent who rants angrily about Western politics with a focus on popular topics of British, American, and Australian politics,[1][2] giving his true personal opinions before or after filming a scripted news segment with a mild demeanour.
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The first spoof news report featuring Pie, released just after the election of Jeremy Corbyn as leader of the Labour Party in September 2015, was responding to mainstream media reports that gave particular weight to Corbyn's past relationship with Diane Abbott.[3] Walker was soon approached by several media companies, including RT UK. He worked with RT for several months before leaving in July 2016, just before his appearance at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in August.[4]
The character received international coverage after the 2016 American presidential election, when his comments on Donald Trump's victory went viral and became a YouTube trending video.[5] As of 2022 the video had more than 4.5 million views, double that of the second-most popular.
Pie has occasionally appeared as the London correspondent for the Australian satirical news and current events programme The Weekly with Charlie Pickering.[6]
Pie went on his second tour in 2018 with Back to the Studio. He performed 45 dates in the UK, five dates in Australia, and six dates in the US.[7] In January 2020, a collaboration with environmental filmmaker Franny Armstrong led to a 13-minute mockumentary called Pie Net Zero.[8] Some episodes, including the post-US election episode, were co-written with Irish comedian Andrew Doyle, who contributed to the character's early portrayals,[9][10] beginning when the live show started.[11] In a 2023 interview with Mark Steel, Walker stated that he has not worked with Doyle since 2019.[12]
In February 2022, Pie made his first of several appearances on The New York Times website and YouTube channel as part of their "opinion" section. These videos comment on UK politics for an American audience. Topics have included Boris Johnson,[13] the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the influence of Russian oligarchs' investments and political donations,[14] as well as the UK energy crisis, rising inflation, and labour strikes during the Conservative Party leadership election of Prime Minister Liz Truss.[15]
The BBC radio series called Call Jonathan Pie[16] featured Pie unwillingly co-opted as the host of a phone-in radio show. Pie responds to fictional callers' opinions, sometimes agreeing but often not. He also engages with his production team who usually counter his own views. A range of views on complex subjects are thus encapsulated. 2023's ten episodes are: The BBC; Money; Brexit; Race; Online; Women; Comedy; Drugs; NHS; The Environment. 2025's episodes were An Abusive Auntie, A Strange Musk, Arise Sir Roger, Great British News, Strictly Moscow, Identity Crisis, Japanese Wiskey, and So Long and Thanks for all the Cash.[17] Each episode begins with a warning about "very strong language".
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