God, Julian is an icon. Guys like him who camped it up in the 90s get a lot of flack now from people who think they were "putting it on" but as a naturally effeminate gay kid, I would have been so lost without them. People don't get it. There weren't a ton of ways to be gay on TV back then.
As an American, even I know that if any Brit has a statue of them sitting on a unicorn in their garden it would be Julian Clary. Back in the days when BBC America was worth watching, they aired a show Julian hosted. I became a fan back then. Today BBC America's schedule is back-to-back airings of that most British of shows, Star Trek Deep Space Nine. In the afternoon it switches to back-to-back airings of Bones until midnight. Tomorrow's schedule is exactly the same. The only thing BBC about BBC America is that they do show Graham Norton.
@@cuckoobrain7999 Yep, and it used to be a great channel. Before BBC America, about the only place you could watch any British shows was the handful that you could catch on PBS channels, such as Doctor Who, Monty Python, and a few others. Back in 2000 or 2001, they ran a multiday marathon of all of the Red Dwarf episodes (available up to that point). It was full of British comedies and dramas. The channel still exists, but in name only. Despite its name, it has very little British content. Usually, it's constant repeats of not so British shows such as Star Trek the Next Generation and Law and Order.
Julian got cancelled for a while for telling a joke about fisting a member of parliament who's name i will omit. Genius comedian, massively underrated.