No, not that one. This one hails from Jersey and has an unnatural obsession with Eighties prog rockers Marillion.

It's not so much that he owns every CD they ever made or that as a teenager he wore a home-made harlequin outfit to a gig, or even that he fronted his own awful prog band (sample song: City Of Clouds) - the worst part of this sorry tale is that Will loves Marillion so much, he's created more than an hour of material which follows his fandom from puberty into his 30s.

The conceit is simple - video footage of him going to meet lead singer Fish, combined with his retelling of his musical odyssey. It's a metaphor for the wonder of youth and what happens when we grow up and have to shake off dreams of becoming a rock star.

These child-like quests have become fashionable in recent years, from Dave Gorman's superb Are You Dave Gorman? to comedy books such as Tony Hawk's One Hit Wonderland and Danny Wallace's Yes Man. And with heavy reliance on video footage, it's impossible not to compare this mockumentary format with The Office.

Will's set alternated between tender and sad moments and him hamming it up - the effect being that he split the real Will Smith and his obsessional, exaggerated, alter ego.

Where The Office played cringe-making moments so deadpan it made you wince, Will's comedy acting lagged behind his stand-up shtick.