World of TV, Harry became “upset and circulated them widely among colleagues".He told Radio Times: “Then I got pages of notes about the next episode, so I responded directly to the [BBC] person who had given the notes. “It wasn’t so much the comments, it was the tone.“I think notes are best given in person or on the phone, because emails can come across quite brutally.”However, Harry has acknowledged that the notes did help to improve the show despite their negatively perceived tone.The comedian continued: “In truth, the notes did improve the show. "But when you’re making something, you’re totally focused on it – not worried about the pandemic or the economy. “So when someone says, ‘This isn’t funny’ or ‘Isn’t that patronising?’, you take.
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