Lock up your Toblerones and set aside the big plates, Alan Partridge is back and in no mood to take prisoners after spending a year adjusting to life overseas.
Whether it is photo stunts or snippets of conversation caught on film, the embattled Prime Minister seems stumble into one of Steve Coogan 's scenes again and again.
ROLAND WHITE: We all know we are not supposed to tell jokes about sex or race or pretty much any of the things people laughed at during the 1970s. But there is a way that it's still allowed on television...
Long-serving broadcaster Garry Richardson will step down from BBC Radio Four’s Today programme this autumn, becoming the latest in a long line of on-air talent to leave the corporation.
This Morning's Martin Lewis took to social media to issue an apology after appearing on BBC Radio 5 Live today, as he likened himself to comedy character Alan Partridge.
Steve Coogan has been acting as fictional character Alan Partridge since 1991, starring in various television series and even a feature film based on his comedic alter ego.