Tag: TV shows

  • Kids TV – No, you’re not the only one.

    The eloquent and witty SAHDandProud has vented his spleen about the TV he and his kids watch.  He wonders if he’s the only one to loathe and despise the majority of the edutainment out there.

    You’re not alone.  Oh, trust me, you’re not alone!

    SAHD, you’re only scratching the surface!

    The Bad.

    In the Night Garden.  Really, who dreamed this stuff up?  And what sort of a contract do they have Sir Derek Jacobi under?  Are they holding his nearest and dearest hostage?  None of the characters can actually speak.  If they can speak, it’s little more than their name.  And there’s the issue of scale.  Let’s get this straight.  In the real world, some things are bigger than others and some things are smaller.  This does not change from one second to the next unless mind-altering chemicals are involved.  But this happens all the time …in the Night Garden.  As an aside, this is the reason behind the shopkeepers in League of Gentlemen.  When the show started on the radio, the character of the shopkeeper changed height frequently for the purposes of whatever joke was involved at the time.  This just wasn’t practical for TV and so the legends were born.

    Postman Pat.  If ever anything celebrated the incompetence and general cack-handedness of an individual, it’s this.  For years now, Pat has been delivering the mail …with hilarious consequences.  A typical episode will involve him having a single expensive item to deliver to a certain location by a certain time.  Does your postman do this?  Nope, didn’t think so.  In the course of the episode said item will be dropped, carried away by farm animals, mis-delivered to one or more wrong addresses before finally arriving (miraculously safe and sound) at it’s destination in the nick of time.  And that goes double for Special Delivery Service.  Who thought it was a good idea to trust Pat and his smegging cat with a helicopter, anyway?  It really does put the “special” into special delivery.

    The Fimbles.  If ever there was cause for a Doom mod, it’s the Fimbles.

    One common thread running through a lot of these programs is that if your name is in the title, you’re going to win.  No matter how stupid it seems, no matter how forced or contrived the victory, you’re the named individual and you’re going to succeed.  Bob the Builder has never had a contract fail despite the best efforts of his machines to screw things up.  Pat has never apologised for losing a parcel.  The Real World (capital R, capital W, if you’re taking notes) DOES NOT WORK LIKE THIS.  If you behave like this in the Real World you will experience life as the Unemployable.

    Other things that annoy me.

    • Badly-done CGI updates of puppet/claymation shows.  Bob the Builder.  Thomas the Tank Engine.  You don’t need CGI!  Leave them the hell alone!
    • Things that don’t speak properly.  You’re trying to teach kids to speak, not make noises that are almost but not quite speech.
    • Repetition.
    • Have you got your squiggle sticks ready?  They’re CRAYONS you moron!
    • Tweenies.  Tellytubbies.
    • Repetition.
    • Changing the schedules.  Okay, so this has to be done from time to time, but some of us time our exit from the house based on when a certain show starts/finishes.
    • Repetition.  I know we’re not meant to have the TV on through the whole day, and I don’t!  But if I switch on in the morning and see a particular Show Me, Show Me, why should it have to be the same one again if I happen to switch the TV on again in the afternoon?

    The Good.

    There is some good stuff out there.  The Dr Who Retirement Home that is Tree-Fu Tom, The Octonauts.  Timmy Time & Shaun the Sheep.  Yes, Tom’s on my hit list as “individual named in the title and therefore can do no wrong” but the animation is well above average.  Peppa Pig – leaving aside the fact that Satan appears to be voicing the elephant, the humour in this is clearly aimed at the grown-ups watching along with their kids.  And that’s the key to making it work for me.  The humour.

    If it’s pitched right, the humour will hit both the kids and the adults.  Programs like The Shiny Show, Peppa Pig, Octonauts and their kind have managed this.  And these are the ones we love.

    Making it More Bearable

    Sometimes you just have to sit down and watch with the smalls.  It’s expected.  So, to keep your mind active, try and link shows together.  There’s a small set of voice actors providing the voices for the majority of the CBeebies shows.  The voice of Scoop on Bob the Builder also crops up in Octonauts.  If you’re not paying close attention, it can get confusing.  I was in another room when Andy Hamilton first appeared on Peppa Pig and wondered why the kids were listening to Old Harry’s Game.  So see how many times a particular voice actor crops up during your viewing time.  It gets even weirder when they crop up in proper TV – Pete vs. Life, for instance…

  • Random Wednesday – Storytelling

    The art of telling a story.  Telling your reader (or the audience) enough to keep them happy while maintaining enough mystery to draw them along.  Some people do this well, others less so.  I hope to be in the former category this year with my NaNoWriMo project, “Benton’s Irregulars”.

    There’s some good stuff on TV at the moment, some great storytelling – and some pretty poor as well.

    The Good…

    Being Human.

    Russell Tovey, Lenora Crichlow and Aidan Turne...
    Image via Wikipedia

    On repeat on “Really” at the moment, this story of 3 Bristol housemates (who happen to be a werewolf, a vampire and a ghost) is one of the best series to hit TV in years – the British one, of course.  Not seen the US remake yet.  Anyway.  Before episode 1 is done you know there are 3 types of supernatural creature, you know about the emnity between vampires and werewolves, you know that something big is happening in the background and you’ve had enough laughs and gore to come back for more next week.  The characters are likeable – even the main villain gives you a warm, fuzzy, feeling inside before ripping out your throat.  I’ve seen all 3 seasons of this show, and the pilot episode and if I ever write TV I want it to be this good.

    End of season 1.  Problems resolved, answers received, small teaser for season 2 should funding be made available but no great problem if it isn’t.  Ditto seasons 2 and 3.  If they’d cancelled it at the end of season 2, Id’ve been screaming “You can’t leave it there” at the TV but would soon have got over it.  I did with Firefly (Though how they could cancel Firefly and keep some of the other shite alive is beyond me).

    The Bad…

    Lost.

    7 seasons, no answers.  I gave up.  I promised myself that if someone told me after the final episode “Ah, that all makes sense now.” then I’d invest the time and watch the whole damn thing end to end.  No-one has, so I haven’t.

    Doctor Who.

    Don’t get me wrong, I’m a fan.  I know enough Whovian trivia to keep my kids entertained for days and my wife in her well-practiced “Oh, for goodness sake” shrug.  But the last couple of series have fallen foul of having a far-too-complex metaplot.  The standalone episodes (The Doctor’s Wife, for example) still shine.  The episode with James Corden and the Cybermen exceeded my expectations.  But the arc-story took far too much space.  Bring back the old format – standalone stories, 3 or 4-parters, longer episodes.  That’s me harking back to the halcyon days of my youth when Tom Baker was The Doctor.  He still is.

    The Not Sure Yet

    The Fades

    Spoiler Alert if you’ve not seen the show yet.

    I like it when the BBC try their hand at SF/Fantasy/Horror.  I really do.  I admire their tenacity.  Not everything is going to be a Being Human or a Doctor Who.  Unfortunately, when they fail it’s going to be expensive and set the cause back years.  Just look at last year’s “Outcasts.”  My goodness that was appalling.

    Anyway.  The Fades. End of episode 1 you know you’ve got a special kid, you’ve got ghosts that hang around (the eponymous Fades) and you’ve got Angelics (though they’re not explained, which is fair enough as it’s only episode 1).  You’ve also got birds dropping out of the sky, sometimes en-masse.  Moving on you’ve got the special kids getting more special, the Fades killing and eating people to bring themselves back from the dead and you’ve got internal continuity issues.  The Fades have killed quite a few folk now (end of Ep 5) but the ghosts of these deceased haven’t shown up.  Maybe they’ll explain it – if you’re killed for food that’s it, you don’t get a ghost – more likely they’ve forgotten and the ghost F/X are expensive.  Did I make a cuppa and miss the bit where they explained the birds?  And there’s no media circus.  All these missing people, earth tremors, a high profile murder investigation and not one TV crew have shown up.

    They’ve got 1 episode to sort this out.  1 episode to wrap everything up in a suitably conclusive manner.  I reckon they’re pinning their hopes on a season 2 and they’re going to sort out nothing.  I hope I’m wrong.

    Anyway.  I know what I’m aiming for – beyond the obvious 50,000 words in November.  I’ve got a plan.  I’ve got some truly dreadful jokes.  And I hope I can hit more Being Human than Lost.

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