Everyone Else Burns is a British television sitcom made for Channel 4 by JAX Media and Universal International Studios, starring Simon Bird, Kate O'Flynn, Amy James-Kelly, Harry Connor and Morgana Robinson. The first series premiered in January 2023, with a second broadcast in October 2024; all episodes were made available at once on streaming.
A coming-of-age sitcom about a Manchester family who are part of a puritanical Christian sect.
All episodes were made available on All 4 prior to broadcast on 23 January 2023.
All episodes were made available on 3 October 2024 for subscribers to the paid tier of Channel 4's streaming service; this expanded to all users on 17 October 2024.
In May 2022, Channel 4 announced the project had been commissioned, with the cast in place, and JAX Media and Universal International Studios producing from a script written by Dillon Mapletoft and Oliver Taylor, and Nick Collett as director.
Speaking about his wig for the show, lead actor Simon Bird told The Independent: "My first reaction [upon seeing the wig] was laughter, annoyingly, which was pretty much everyoneâÂÂs reaction. Which meant that we had to go ahead with it."
In May 2023, Channel 4 renewed the series for a second season. Sian Clifford joined the cast for the second series.
In April 2024, filming for the second series took place in Heaton Moor, Greater Manchester.
The sect to which the family belongs, although superficially inspired by the practices and beliefs of many actual groups, is entirely fictional. The show is fundamentally a comedy, as reflected in the comic name of the sect: "Order of the Divine Rod". The beliefs of the group also do not correlate well with even "puritanical Christian fundamentalism".
Everyone Else Burns premiered in the UK on Channel 4 on 23 January 2023. The first season consisted of six episodes in total, which are also available to on the streaming service All4.
The series debuted in Canada on W Network on 29 May 2023. In the United States, the series debuted on The CW on 26 October 2023 before being pulled from its schedule in November 2023. Brad Schwartz, President of Entertainment of The CW, blamed the marketing of the show for it being pulled. The series is currently available in Australia on SBS On Demand.
The series opened to 1.4 million viewers with four weeks of post-broadcast viewership included. The show was "the biggest comedy launch since Derry Girls on Channel 4's streaming service".
Everyone Else Burns has received critical acclaim, with a 90% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
Writing in The Daily Telegraph Anita Singh said "there is much to enjoy here. It's not a comedy going for cheap laughs about Christianity. It is a show about family, and it has a lot of heart" and said that the comedy derives from a "subversion of norms". She also praised the writing, performances and characterisation âÂÂfrom the leads down to the supporting players", noting that "there are truths about family and friends that make it seem like more than a throwaway sitcom." Lucy Mangan in The Guardian commented that it is "simply very, very funny" and that the "hyper-religiosity is used to look anew at family dynamics and dysfunction; how blind you can be to abnormalities if they are all you know". Carol Midgely in The Times described it as "a small delight" and praised the performance of Simon Bird and the cast, as well as the "sharply, wittily written" script, adding that "it is a brave comedy that targets religion, but only a clever one could do it with this much heart and jolliness." The i described it as "funny as hell" while, in a four-star review for The Evening Standard, Vicky Jessop wrote "who knew eternal damnation could be this fun?".
Reception in the United States has been similarly positive. Time Magazine described it as "a fantastically warped family sitcomâ and âÂÂeasily the best new broadcast comedy since Abbott Elementary". The New York Times labelled it "a charmer - smart, distinctive, lovely". The Hollywood Reporter called it "very funny" while The LA Times named it "a dysfunctional family comedy you can believe in". Similarly positive reviews came from The New York Post ("hell yeah") and The Daily Beast, which called it "really goddamn funny" and "the sort of laughs-at-any-cost sitcom rarely made in the UK these days".
In February 2024, the series was nominated at the Broadcast Awards in the Best Comedy Programme category. In March 2025, O'Flynn was nominated at the 2025 British Academy Television Awards in the Best Female Performance in a Comedy category.