altariel: (Default)
altariel ([personal profile] altariel) wrote2010-10-15 06:54 pm

Comfort and inspiration for a nation

So rewatching that Mitch Benn video (AS I HAVE BEEN RIGHTLY DOING ALL AFTERNOON), I think there are only a handful of the TV shows mentioned that I have never watched: Charlie and Lola, Fireman Sam, and Horrible Histories (don't have kids around the house - tho' even then I've seen Teletubbies and In the Night Garden!). I'd heard of them though. Everything else I've seen at least one episode, or tuned in at some point (Last Night of the Proms, Glastonbury), or I've used the service (iPlayer, website, World Service). I don't listen to the radio much, but I recognized all the broadcasters, and I think I've seen them all do something on the tellybox, and I think I've heard all the radio shows mentioned. I can't quite make out all the things mentioned at the end, and I haven't actually watched everything on BBC Four (yet). Anyway I'd be really interested to know what other people's recognition and viewing or listening levels were. You know, from a sociological perspective. How well did he capture a kind of universal experience of things BBC.

[identity profile] altariel.livejournal.com 2010-10-16 10:54 am (UTC)(link)
And David Attenborough was a producer from the early 50s.

Both The Archers and EastEnders are there! (I caught a bit of an episode of EastEnders just the other night - before I saw this - and thought it was really well acted and written. I used to watch it religiously back in the 80s.) I counted Tinker Tailor as serious drama.

[identity profile] jhall1.livejournal.com 2010-10-16 05:01 pm (UTC)(link)
I watched EastEnders for the first five years or so, and then gave up. It was so unrelentingly miserable. At least Coronation Street had a leavening of humour (though eventually I gave up on that too).