Peter Kay turned down a Netflix offer for his early 2000s sitcom Phoenix Nights because the streamer wanted to add a trigger warning, the British comedian and actor has claimed.
Speaking on UK radio station Capital this morning, Kay claimed the streamer had contacted him about licensing the show, which was officially titled Peter Kay’s Phoenix Nights and ran for two seasons in 2001 and 2002 on Channel 4. He also said Netflix sent him an air fryer, and suggested with his tongue in his cheek that this could have been as a means of sweetening a deal.
“They got in touch with me last year because they wanted to put Phoenix Nights on Netflix,” he said. After receiving the paperwork on an agreement, Kay noticed a stipulation to add a trigger warning at the beginning of the episodes.
Kay said he the rejected the deal, adding: “I just said, ‘I’m not keen on that. I don’t really want a warning before it,’ so, I just said, ‘No, I’ll leave it.’ Anyway, they sent me an air fryer.”
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Phoenix Nights, which Kay wrote with Neil Fitzmaurice and Dave Spikey, was set in a working-men’s club in Bolton, England, and revolves around an eclectic group of characters who reflected various people and tropes from the late 1990s and early 2000s. “Basically, it’s not very politically correct now,” said Kay.
There are numerous instances of comedy films and TV shows being reappraised by new generations – often negatively in light of modern sensibilities. In 2023, Jennifer Aniston noted that there was “a whole generation of… kids, who are now going back to episodes of Friends and find them offensive.”
Kay’s other shows include BAFTA winner Peter Kay’s Car Share, Max and Paddy’s Road to Nowhere, a Phoenix Night spin-off, That Peter Kay Thing and Channel 4 special Britain’s Got the Pop Factor… and Possibly a New Celebrity Jesus Christ Soapstar Superstar Strictly on Ice. He has also acted in several Wallace & Gromit titles, Inside No. 9, Doctor Who and Cradle to Grave.
He is also known for disliking repeats of his shows being played too often – another potential reason why Phoenix Nights remains hard to track down despite its enduring popularity.
Netflix declined comment on Kay’s remarks.