BBC Two
The Secrets of Scott's Hut, BBC TwoSunday, 17 April 2011![]() Captain Scott's doomed 1910-1913 expedition to the South Pole has become one of the enduring myths of the later British Empire, a paradigm of pluck, grit and a refusal to surrender in the teeth of hideous odds. Subsequently, some historical... Read more... |
Britain's Next Big Thing, BBC TwoTuesday, 12 April 2011![]() The talent show search - not for another star but for another field to devour - has reached its logical conclusion. Whereas most such shows - The X Factor, for example - are ostensibly about one skill or another as a pretext for marketing, Britain... Read more... |
The Crimson Petal and the White, BBC TwoWednesday, 06 April 2011![]() Playing a prostitute on film has been big career business for some very famous actresses, not least Jane Fonda, Elizabeth Taylor and Julia Roberts, but it hasn't worked quite the same way on TV. Unless you count Secret Diary of a Call Girl. Or Moll... Read more... |
This is Britain, BBC TwoSaturday, 26 March 2011![]() The history of the census is a fascinating one. The Babylonians and the Chinese held censuses mainly for military and taxation purposes, and Egyptians in order to organise the huge number of people required to build the pyramids and to redistribute... Read more... |
Christopher and His Kind, BBC TwoSaturday, 19 March 2011![]() Is there a televisual instruction manual for Nazi-era dramas? Cabaret singers with heavily kohled eyes, champagne from unmatched glasses in a shabby-chic apartment, smoke-filled gay bars in cellars with muscled trade, Stormtroopers marching in... Read more... |
Great British Food Revival, BBC TwoWednesday, 09 March 2011![]() If you know which side your bread is buttered on, you should be up in arms about the white fluffy stuff you’ve been hoodwinked into putting into your toaster, implied a positively evangelical Michel Roux Jr in this first of a five-part series on the... Read more... |
A Culture Show Special: The Books We Really Read, BBC TwoSaturday, 05 March 2011![]() Unlike Sue Perkins, I’ve never sat on the Booker Prize judging panel. So I’ve never had the dubious pleasure of wading through 130-plus contemporary “literary” novels, of supremely variable quality, in a supremely short space of time (it’s... Read more... |
The Tudors, BBC TwoSunday, 23 January 2011![]() It's a strange mixture, this Tudors malarkey. The opening episode of the fourth and supposedly final series spent an age spinning through the back story as if earnestly trying to educate us in the history of the bloodthirsty English ruling family.... Read more... |
Nurse Jackie, BBC TwoSaturday, 22 January 2011![]() Medical dramas have a never-ending appeal to television viewers; but whereas British versions are more about the heartstrings than open-heart surgery, America prefers its programmes to be done with scalpel-sharp wit and incisive social commentary.... Read more... |
Horizon: What is Reality?, BBC TwoMonday, 17 January 2011![]() Horizon took a funny turn this week. The new series started off gently enough – there was a nostalgic look back at 60 years of science on the box, then an exploration as to what makes us clever (the fun this entailed when vaguely well-known people... Read more... |
The Trip, BBC TwoTuesday, 02 November 2010![]() There’s an interesting back story to The Trip. Before Rob Brydon was “discovered” by Steve Coogan’s Baby Cow production company in 2000, he was a workaday comic and Coogan was then at the height of his Alan Partridge-induced success. Since then... Read more... |
Stephen K Amos's new TV showSaturday, 30 October 2010![]() Stephen K Amos, who was born in London to immigrant Nigerian parents, always used to joke that he would get a television series only when Lenny Henry died, because commissioning editors were working on a “one out, one in” basis where black comics... Read more... |
