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| CHANNEL 4 AT 25 1985 compiled by Steve Williams, Ian Jones and Jack Kibble-White |
November 2002
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More
by Steve Williams |
DEBUTS JANUARY ... FEBRUARY ... MARCH ... APRIL ... JULY ... AUGUST ... SEPTEMBER ... OCTOBER ... NOVEMBER ... FINALES LOOSE TALK MISC ... The 1960s were celebrated in It Was Twenty Years Ago Today, a two and a half hour long theme night on New Year's Day ... C4 secured its largest audience ever - almost 14 million - with the screening of Barbara Taylor Bradford's A Woman of Substance on 2, 3 and 4 January ... Peter Sissons was the linkman for Europe in Concert, a trans-continental three and a half hour sequence of classical performances on 21 June ... 30 years of ITV were commemorated in a special evening of archive programmes on 22 September ... Spike Milligan made a one-off appearance on C4 in The Last Laugh Before TV-am in December ... and the 30th birthday of Granada Television was honoured with a night of original programmes from the '60s, including Bootsie and Snudge and a compilation of From the North, on 30 December. ON SCREEN MAX HEADROOM POB'S PROGRAMME OFF SCREEN David Dundas, composer of the four-note Channel
4 "theme", won a court battle to retain all rights to his creation
and £1000 a week in royalties in a settlement on 12 June. FOUR-WORDS "All three programmes have been running
since day one at C4 and all have proved they have got legs. All three
are really distinctive and they deserve to be there for ever and a day." "15 hours and 20 minutes of degradation
deemed art." "Arts coverage always conjures up for
me an image of a grey-green tarpaulin descending over living art. Our
programmes aim to uncover and discover art, to let art shape television,
not vice versa." "Originally we did actually try using
real steam coming from a tube fitted to Pob's mouth, but the slightly
drawback was that the puppet turned out to be too hot to hold. In the
end we settled for a well known spray polish sprayed from both sides onto
the glass." MY FAVOURITE CHANNEL 4 MOMENT ... COMEDY ZONE (1984) Yet now, most media-savvy people will tell you that British television is in crisis and that if you really want to see the best drama or comedy, it's the good ole USA you have to look to. The West Wing, Six Feet Under, The Sopranos, Oz, Sex in the City, Frasier ... whereas in Blighty we've had Spooks and Coupling and sod-all else for years. We first became aware of the discrepancy in the received wisdom of our elders when Channel 4 took the brave move to make Friday night their comedy night. Brave? Well, BBC2 seemed to have that slot sown up for years - 9pm was their primetime laugh-a-minute slot, and all of their shows were British (all the American imports were vintage shows like Bilko or I Love Lucy, which were shoved into filler slots). Channel 4 began challenging this with their own home-grown stuff like It Came From Somewhere Else (which starred Pete McCarthy) and Dream Stuffing (with a theme by Kirsty McColl). Into that mix, they also included American sitcoms as if they were as worthy as our own stuff (the heresy!) First off the blocks was a little-remembered show called Love Sidney, which starred Tony Randall as a middle-aged man living with a single mom (and it's taken 'til now for me to realise that Randall's character was gay - the 12-year old me never picked up on that). And of course, that paved the way for The Golden Girls, Cheers, Frasier, Cybill (as in the famous continuity announcer gaffe "In half an hour, the Comedy Zone starts with a new episode of Friends ... but first, Cybill.") That decision to open up our minds to American comedy opened the floodgates. Suddenly, we were getting Hill Street Blues, St Elsewhere and all those other MTM productions. And as a consequence, we started seeing our own dramas take on a different form - The Bill and Casualty came about as a direct response to these American interlopers. In early 2002, a letter appeared in the BBC's internal
magazine Ariel boasting that BBC1 doesn't show a single American show
in prime-time slots ... which just shows how out of touch the Corporation
actually is. It's funny that now, we have the irony that the BBC feel
comfortable to keep trotting out the same old lies - that they can't afford
to make sci-fi that competes with American shows like Angel or
Star Trek; shows that, before Channel 4, would have been used as
schedule filler instead of ever being offered a prime-time slot. At least
BBC2 seems to be getting the message - Twin Peaks, Buffy
and 24 have been able to find homes there. But there's still a
sniffy air about imported shows that we don't seem to find on C4. So long
as those imports remain of the quality of HBO's finest, that suits me
just fine. |
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