Frank and Strictly star Anton Du Beke celebrate their love for Kenneth Williams with a few choice impressions, and Anton reveals his past life as a baker.
Frank and actor/comedian Aisling Bea discover the dirty secrets of clean eating, ponder the downfall of Fanny Cradock and wonder whatever happened to the umbrella hat. Show more
Frank joins comedian Tom Rosenthal to discuss hover cars and hallucinogenic cacti, while they squirm together over the brilliant comedy of awkwardness Him & Her.
Peep Show’s Isy Suttie and Frank bond over their love of cake, marvel at marching geese and ask “will they/won’t they” in a romantic comedy set in Brighton.
Frank and impressionist Jon Culshaw take a walk on Mars, sample a new recipe for Porridge, and enjoy the best combover in showbiz history. Show more
Frank and actor/comedian Sally Phillips share a love song from Bill Bailey, enjoy female Full Contact Medieval Fighting, and discuss ‘the world’s most dangerous philosopher’. Show more
Frank and comedian Alex Horne share a delightfully awkward Wogan Christmas special, look back at Tomorrow’s World, and enjoy brilliantly filthy new sitcom Fleabag.
Frank and Gabby Logan enjoy Micky Flanagan's comedy short 'Foxageddon', and follow the journey of a young man locked in his own body, before swapping Michael Sheen impressions. Show more
In the final episode Frank meets Olly Murs, who sings the praises of a brilliant new sketch show and reveals his geeky gaming side. Show more
Frank riffs with rapper, writer, comedian and actor Doc Brown at home in his ‘creative hub'. Doc's iPlayer picks cover childhood games, young footballers and Frank Sinatra. Show more
Frank meets EastEnders' Maddy Hill to marvel at the con artists of the animal world, sample some spoken word poetry, confront the issue of loneliness and contemplate Craig David. Show more
Frank and actor Laurence Fox get a history lesson from Keith Richards and celebrate the work of Professor Brian Cox.
Frank Skinner and Ricky Wilson bond over the brilliance of QI, and discover why Cathy Come Home is still one of the most iconic British dramas ever made.
Frank Skinner and Proms presenter Katie Derham hang out in Handel’s practice room discussing Brazilian oddities, dark dramas, and the art of whistling.
Frank meets fellow Brummie comedian Joe Lycett. They are gripped by a true crime series, mesmerised by Francis Bacon, and chew over a documentary on Elvis’s eating habits. Show more