Big Boys (TV series)

Big Boys is a British television sitcom created and written by Jack Rooke, first broadcast on Channel 4 and available on All 4 from 26 May 2022. It stars Dylan Llewellyn and Jon Pointing as first-year university students who live together, set in 2013, told from the point of view of Llewellyn's character Jack—a semi-fictionalised version of Rooke, who narrates the series—as he recovers from his father's death and explores his sexuality for the first time.

The show was renewed for a second series in August 2022, which began filming in May 2023. Set during the 2014–15 academic year, it began airing on 14 January 2024. A third series was confirmed in June 2024.

Main

 * Dylan Llewellyn as Jack, a closeted, shy 19-year-old student on a journalism scholarship, who is grieving over his father's death and unused to the heavy social life of university, having been cooped up at home for the past few years with his mother.
 * Jon Pointing as Danny, a 25-year-old mature student, who is keen on nights out and trying to chat up female students, while dealing with, and disguising, his mental health issues for which he takes antidepressants.
 * Katy Wix as Jules, a former Brent Uni student-turned-student union officer, possessing an overenthusiastic and zealous approach to integrating new students
 * Camille Coduri as Peggy, Jack's mother, who hides her struggles over sending her son away to university, having had him to rely on for the past couple of years. Jack has hidden his sexuality from her, expecting a bad reaction.
 * Izuka Hoyle as Corinne, a studious and serious Oxbridge reject, who is also eager to let her hair down.
 * Olisa Odele as Yemi, a gay fashion student who accompanies Jack as he tries to explore his sexuality at university.
 * Harriet Webb as Shannon (series two, recurring series one), Jack's effervescent cousin, whose job running children's parties is not fulfilling her aspirations as she would like.

Recurring

 * Annette Badland as Nanny Bingo, Jack's grandmother
 * Ian Burfield as Laurie, Jack's father, who passed away from cancer two years before Jack started university
 * Sheila Reid as Iris, Danny's grandmother, whose Alzheimer's is slowly worsening
 * Robert Gilbert as Tim, a young journalism lecturer who readily deals in caustic language when approaching student queries
 * Lucia Keskin as Kelly, a student union representative who apathetically assists Jules
 * Kristy Philipps as Leisa (series one), a feminist student initially hesitant to Danny's charms, but get together down the line
 * Callum Mardy as Ash (series one), a student union representative who deals drugs to new students on the side
 * Rhiannon Clements as 'Mad Debs' (series one), a first-year student from Newcastle upon Tyne who drops out in the first week
 * Mark Silcox as Dhru 'Ru' Pal (series one), a security officer at the university halls
 * Jake Dunn as Oscar (series two), a gay fresher who has an attraction towards both Jack and Yemi
 * Marc Warren as Dennis King (series two), Danny's estranged father
 * Shane Zaza as Tariq Miller (series two), a delivery driver and the father of Shannon's baby
 * James Doherty as Russell (series two), Peggy's new love interest

Series 1 (2022)
All episodes were made available on All 4 prior to broadcast on 26 May 2022.

Series 2 (2024)
All episodes were made available on 29 December 2023 for subscribers to the paid tier of Channel 4's streaming service; this expanded to all users on 14 January 2024.

Production
The show's commissioning was announced in November 2020, following a pilot that was shot around 2018.

The series is based on Rooke's comedy stage shows Good Grief, Happy Hour, and Love Letters. Rooke said that the series is semi-autobiographical; when asked "how truthful to his life" the show is, Rooke commented it was "[a]bout fifty-fifty".

Viewership
Over the six episodes, the series averaged 410,000 viewers including catch-up within seven days post-broadcast. Including viewership prior to broadcast - through the series being made available in full on-demand on All4 following the broadcast of the first episode - and all viewership on devices aside from televisions (smartphones, laptops and tablets), the series averaged 669,000 viewers.

Critical reception
Big Boys has been critically praised. Carol Midgley in a four-star review for The Times, wrote that it is "one of the most funny, tender, profound sad-happy comedies I've seen this year and is worth anyone's time, not just because it tackles the themes of grief, coming of age and sexuality with a beautifully light touch, but because the cast give the impression that they love performing it."

Lucy Mangan writes in her four-star review for The Guardian; "[i]t is warm and funny, but with a melancholic undertow that fades in and out as the episode – and the series – goes on, but never disappears entirely", and that "[a]lthough it is gentler and less frenetic, Big Boys' combination of frankness, heart and wit – and the seriousness with which it treats young people and the problems they face – evokes the mighty Sex Education", but simultaneously, "Rooke makes it entirely its own thing – and one that can pierce your heart when you least expect it". She touches upon the relationship between Jack and Danny in the series, saying [t]he growing friendship between the two young men, in a genre and world when such things are seldom showcased or made part of the cultural narrative, is genuinely uplifting", and also praises Katy Wix's "tremendous turn".

In a further four-star review for The Telegraph, Anita Singh poses that "this bubbly sitcom ... is also a sensitively handled study of friendship and loss", and "[t]he heartfelt bits are skilfully woven around more standard comedy", with "plenty of laughs, but at its heart this is the story of a friendship that you dearly hope will work out". In comments also for The Telegraph, Victoria Coren Mitchell wrote that "[d]epicted well enough, as they are here, surely any viewer can relate to those feelings of social awkwardness, wrongness, outsiderism and embarrassment which characterise teenage existence and – for many of us – the rest of our lives as well" - recalling how she felt at university - and that the show "triggers tears in the eyes from both comedy and poignancy, which is very hard to do in a first series", comparing Jack Rooke's writing and lines to that Victoria Wood may have written, and "[w]e can't know how accurate a portrayal this is of Jack Rooke's actual life, but we can know he has a wonderful comic touch".

The show was included on The Guardian list of "the best TV of 2022 so far" in June 2022, which lauded Jack Rooke as "TV's most exciting voice of 2022", and the series as "a perfectly written and performed ode to gay-straight male friendship". Later in the year, it ranked sixth in The Guardian's top 50 shows of 2022, with Hollie Richardson saying that when she finished watching the series: "I thought of all the men in my life I immediately wanted to implore to watch it. My initial hesitation about any awkwardness this might cause was proof that conversations around men's mental health still need to be normalised. But recommending this show to people is a gift – one I truly believe might change, maybe even save, some men's lives."