Was It Something I Said? is a British comedy panel gameshow broadcast on Channel 4, presented by David Mitchell and featuring team captains Richard Ayoade and Micky Flanagan. Celebrity guest narrators appear in each episode and, for the first series, narrators included David Harewood, Phil Daniels, Charles Dance and Mariella Frostrup.
The show was spun off from the Quotables website commissioned by Adam Gee at Channel 4 in collaboration with the Arts Council England in 2011. The programme includes a play-along second screen game based entirely on Twitter.
The panel has to guess which of three celebrities said a particular quote read out by the guest narrator. The same celebrity could have more than one quote. At the end of this round, Mitchell asks the home viewers to complete a famous quote via Twitter, and upon return from the commercial break, asks the panel to complete it.
The panelists are given only specific key words and must complete the entire quotation. For example, the words "score" and "seven" would lead to Abraham Lincoln's famous opening line from the Gettysburg Address, "Four score and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal."
Was It Something I Said? is the third album recorded by singer-songwriter Eytan Mirsky, released in 2001.
Bonus tracks