As tends to be the case with all sketch shows, the comedy is very much hit and miss. Some segments will be laugh out loud moments (like the running gag of a guy mistaking the situation) and some sketches that not only don’t seem to draw in the laughs but baffle altogether (the possessed Enid Blyton).
Problem with Clever Peter is that some jokes are repeated too much, and by the end they get tiring (the sexual Gorilla). Others have been done better by other sketch shows, like …And Other Stories at the Underbelly (the guys that hear each other’s thoughts).
Clever Peter offers some lads comedy, the kind of jokes that big boys tell each other down the pub, a pint or two in one hand, football or rugby on the television. Jokes which are funny, but repeated once and again tend to get boring.
In saying that, the three performers (Richard Bond, Edward Eales-White and William Hartley) are very good, and can interpret different characters and accents easily. They are also quite easy to watch, and their audience love their friendliness.
It is not the most inventive of sketch shows, but Clever Peter does have some great punch lines and, just for that reason, it deserves a view. Even if afterwards you might forget them pretty easily.
3/5 
Adrian G. Velazquez