That’s one of the downfalls of sketch comedy.  Some things work, some don’t.  Some characters are worth the payoff, and some aren’t.  Bing Gordyn isn’t.  The character just doesn’t work for me in the slightest, and I hope he won’t show up too much more or they can figure out a way to make it as funny as his appearance in the first show.   Arguably, they should have done more of it for Little Britain USA, as that’s something Americans are pretty used to in our own sketch comedy programs.   One of the many difficulties in translating the show to the States is that the way things are done here are so different.   Our sketch comedies are always in front of live audiences, and the way a character becomes recurring is that it gets a huge reaction from the assembled crowd.  In a show like this, created in basically a bubble, you have to hope a character will work if you’re going to keep bringing him or her back.   With most of the show’s characters being recycled from the British version, the shows creators have a pretty good idea of what should work over here (after all, it’s been screened in the US on our version of the BBC).  It’s the newer characters that might have some trouble finding traction, or being worthy of being recurring.   This week was a bit of a step back from the second episode for me.  It had its moments, especially Harvey and Sebastian, but Bing kind of dragged the show down, as did the lackluster appearance of Vickie.  It’s still better than the first show, but it lacked flow and the pacing seemed odd, like they were a little short and had to drag out certain sketches.   Dragging is very bad.  Sketch comedy is also a mixed bag, but you can’t have such a wide disparity between one episode to the next if you want to keep people coming back.  When you’ve got only 3 hours (well, less) to fill, there’s no excuse for every sketch not to be as funny as possible.  I’m not dissatisfied enough to stop watching, but I am a little disappointed. US correspondent Ron Hogan is clinging tenaciously to his former glory. Find more by Ron at his blog, Subtle Bluntness and daily at Shaktronics and PopFi .