Archive for October, 2007

Watch with … The Stars

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

[another edition of The TV Club]

Hello and welcome to the fourth in our weekly live-review slots. Each week, we critically live-blog whatever happens to be on television on a given day, seeking to commune with the medium by watching it, describing it in mildly disparaging tones, and hoping that this, in some small way, will stick it to The Man, and the quality of television will, where needs be, naturally improve as a direct result.

I’m Anna Pickard, and with Janine Gibson tonight we’ll be live-blogging the National Television Awards on ITV, to find out what important things the Overlords of British Culture can teach us this evening through the medium of the jabbering tellybox in the corner.

8.15: So yes. I, Anna Pickard will be with you for the first half of the ceremony. A ceremony where they haven’t wanted to do anything as judgemental as ascribe the word ‘Best’ to any category - for where there is a best, I suppose, there must also be a worst.

And I’m sure that the big people in television would refute the fact that there could be a ‘worst’ in British television at all. They clearly haven’t seen Food Poker yet.

So instead of the ‘Best’ things, I think we are to be presented with the ‘Most Popular’ things. And we all know what a true purveyor of quality THAT is.

8.18: Sorry, I should have pointed out that when I said ‘with the stars’ I meant ‘the famous people on telly’. Not ‘Me and Janine’.

So why are we here? To reel off the answers? To presume to know better than the deciders of what is ‘popular’? No. The great British public are many things, but they can’t be derided for being wrong, in this case. They may not know much about art, but they know what they like.

So we’re here to comment on the quality of the television programme itself. How does this slice of television reflect on the greater nature of television? When television turns the lens upon itself, what does television see? When television meets television casually in the bathroom at a television awards ceremony ON the television, what does television say? How many times can I use the word television in this paragraph before it stops making sense to me? About eight less than I have, I think.

8.30pm: God, there’s no such things as punctuality on ITV, is there? Where is this show? Here I am, sitting in the dark, typing silently and hiding from the knock-and-mug teenagers hammering on my door, and it’s not even on yet. Instead, it’s a trail for Trinny and Susannah.

No good. Ooh, here it is.

8.33: (tut) “It’s starting! The show that you’ve been talking about all day!” … Bloody liars. No I haven’t … “A host of glittering stars have gathered at the Royal Albert Hall” (yep, there’s Martine McCutcheon) “for Sir Trevor McDonald to present …”

Yes, yes, the National Television Awards.

8.36: It’s all completely live, apparently, so if the Queen looks like she’s walking out in a huff, jokes Trevor, she really is!

Well I say ‘jokes Trevor’. Deadpans. Or ‘Trevor says, a bit like a newsreader would’.

Most popular reality show, first, introduced by Kelly Brook and some dancing man.

8.39: And the nominees are:
I’m A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here
Big Brother Shipwrecked: Battle of the Islands
The Apprentice

See, I was wondering how they were going to fill this whole two hour slot with so few nominations, but now I realise. All the clips are about three hours long.

And the winner is … I’m a Celebrity.

Really? Oh. I’m a Celebrity is the most popular reality show of the year. There we are. Not the Apprentice. Booooo. Well, The British public are clearly wrong. NEXT!

8.44: Most popular actress in a Drama? No, just Most popular Actress.

And, in a move that may set Gay Children’s rights back twenty years, the award for being the best actress is being presented by camp young character from Ugly Betty. Justin. I can’t spell his correct name without looking it up. No time.

“Oooh! He says! I had not idea how dressed up I should get. I didn’t know how smart you Britain would be!”

Bless him. Can someone page the on-set educator for Ugly Betty, please?

Nominees:
Freema Agyeman
Lacey Turner
Kara Tointon
Sue Cleaver

And I’ve kind of not heard of one of those. Possibly two. Until yesterday, three. The winner is …

One of those! Oh! It’s Stacey from ‘Stenders! She’s getting married tomorrow. Or IS she?…

Adverts: I swear if I see this Katie Melua advert one more time, I’m going to go out on to the streets and brain someone. That’s allowed, right? Halloween? I’m allowed to brain anyone I like, as long as I say ‘Trick or Treat’ first?

What I’m hoping for, of course, is at least one showing of the RSPCA campaign voiced by Simon Cowell. I mean, I know he loves animals and he means it deep down, but getting the most sarcastically-voiced man to try and sound sincere about dogs being used as ashtrays is frankly the most hilarious thing ‘I’ve seen In Ages’. Really. I have it permanently open on my screen for when I want a giggle. That’s not wrong, is it? Oh, we’re back.

8.55:

Best factual: No, hang on, I just saw the list, not ‘best factual’. ‘Most popular’ Most Popular Factual Programme:
Gordon Ramsay’s F Word
The Jeremy Kyle Show
This Morning
Top Gear

And, knowing what we know about television this year, I should have probably put some quote marks around ‘factual’, too. I’m racking my brain and can think of at least eight great documentaries I’ve seen this year…

…I’m currently watching Janet Street Porter throwing plates at Gordon Ramsay while swearing. The award goes to … Top gear

Top Gear is most popular factual programme in the UK. And people will whoop like tickled morons whoever wins, and however famous the whoopers are.

8.58: To cover their bottoms, ITV explains how this all came to pass. There was some kind of national poll (of how many? And whom?) and then you could vote online, or by post.

Apart from the newest category, ‘Most Popular Talent Show’, whose eventual winner will be decided by a phone vote tonight.
Nominees:
Any Dream Will Do
Britain’s Got Talent
Dancing On Ice
Strictly Come Dancing
The X Factor

I’m not sure whether I should be making guesses at this point, but I’d go for ‘Any Dream Will Do’, their fans are, to use one word, ‘excitable’.

9.04: Most popular Newcomer otherwise known as ‘Top of the People I’ve Never Heard Of’:
Gemma Merna
Kym Ryder
Joseph Gilgun
Jo Joyner

I remember this category from the voting forms (because I did vote, because women died for my right to do so) and, because you couldn’t skip a category, I just voted for the one with the funniest name.

Oh, she didn’t win. It’s Kym Ryder! Oh wait, now I see her, I realise I have heard of her! She was in that thing with those people in that show with those things in it! Another ad break. Yay!

9.21: Come Ooonnn! Adverts - one of those badly dubbed deoderant ones. Which is good, because there’s still a faintly bad smell in the air from the nomination of Jeremy Kyle for best factual. Peh.

HANG on. The sound of ‘It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas’ is suddenly assaulting my senses. Oh come on, Argos. Please, wait at LEAST until, I don’t know, November has actually started? Please? Though it has reminded me to do all my shopping online this year. Not at Argos though. Just for that. Oh! There’s someone knocking at the door! Turn the sound down!

9.12pm: Best piece of script from Sir Trevor this evening: “I like nothing better than to come home to a small box in the corner whose contents can transport me to another galaxy. Or, sometimes, the local police station. But sometimes I don’t touch the drinks cabinet, and just watch television instead.”

Brilliantly, his delivery is such that this moves past deadpan, into first confession of the ITV newsroom AA meeting.

9.15: Nominees for Most Popular Drama:
Doctor Who
Life On Mars
Shameless
The Bill

Well, I’m betting it’s one of two. And simultaneously wondering how The Bill got in there.

Oh dear, they’re showing that dreadful Messianic clip from the last episode of Who. I hated that bit. Where they’re all chanting ‘Doctor, Doctor, Doctor’, praying his name and asking that he save the world. Not good.

A better clip from Life on Mars, all filmed in their patented ‘ALWAYS FILM POINTING UPWARDS’ technique that saved them so much on sets “Just stand next to a brick wall, or a chimney, in flares. Drive an old car past! BAM! it’s the seventies!’

Who wins? Doctor Who, obv. It was mainly an internet vote you know.

9.20: David Tennant has just wished that he and Freema had time to individually kiss each and every one of the audience/the voters/the watching public.

*Sigh*

Oh, it’s Sharon Osbourne, presenting Most Popular Entertainment presenter. Now, if we can only get her to stay on stage for the whole segment, we’ll be on to a winner. Nominees: Ant & Dec (who are, as ever, one person) Fern Britton (also one person, who has perhaps eaten another person)(like I can talk) Graham Norton (One person who has enough love in him for all the other people in the world) Jonathan Ross (One and a half people, counting height and hair, but being paid the wages of forty-seven cheaper people) Paul O’Grady (Half a person, having left the female one far behind. Yonks ago)

And the winner is: Ant and Dec

Well that’s just bad grammar. They can’t pick up their award, because they’re in LA, working. Which is funny, because Dean Gaffney informed us that they couldn’t pick up the award because they were in Australia. I smell Faking! FAKING!

Aw, aren’t they nice, bless’em.

9.28: It’s Simon Cowell, accepting the award. The flattest voice in television. But he REALLY hates dogs being used as ashtrays, you know. Hates it. Oh! It’s the adverts, and I’m off, ta ra …

UNTIL….

10.40-and-a-bit Hello, Anna back again for the customary What have we learnt summary of this evening’s enlightening spell of British television, which, as you can see, Janine has more than ably covered above. So … Um …

What have I learnt? Well, I’ve learnt A) That the British people stand firm on many things. The Euro. Rice Pudding. Distaste for dogs being used as ashtrays. And Ant and Dec being lovable cheeky chappies no matter WHAT reprehensible audience shaking-down they preside over. B) I’ve learnt that I like the delivery of Sir Trevor McDonald, but cannot cope with Funny Trevor. I admit that he maybe as funny as kingdom come As A Person, but put him in front of an audience and the delivery goes all newsreaderlike and I just can’t hear the jokes. I can just hear Really Odd News. C) Jeremy Clarkson is, apparently, a deity. D) The word ‘Soap’ is gauche. We must now use ‘Dramatic Serial (with slightly wooden acting, cardboard sets and utterly outlandish visions of social interaction)’ because it is more PC.

On a personal level, I’ve learnt that students act like pillocks on All Hallows Eve, that the iPhone is a lot less overhyped than I may previously have thought, and, presently, I’m learning that this Friday’s episode of ‘The Green Green Grass’ should have been put down at birth. Or used as an ashtray.

And on that, thank you, on behalf of myself and of Janine (again), and goodnight. And see you next … Wednesday?

[The original (and the rest of it) can be found here]

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Watch this: Wednesday October 31, 2007

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

[For The Guardian, 380 words, G2 supplement television pages]

The National Television Awards
8.30pm, ITV1
Sir Trevor McDonald presides over the mighty and glowing stars of the television firmament as they come together to slap each other on the back, trying not to cause huge great explosions of television magic with their mighty glowing fiery arms. Oh. It’s just an awards show. But one that will decide once and for all the best TV shows. They’ll fight for it, live! With their starry, fiery arms! Or, less excitingly, through a live phone vote.
(more…)

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!!!: Yadnus

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

Day. Two men sleep in the back of a car.

It is !!!. Which, we understand, is pronouced “chk chk chk”. Though that’s the most common way of saying their name, according to their website they could just as easily be called “Pow Pow Pow”, “Bam Bam Bam”, “Uh Uh Uh”, etc.

So now we’re pronouncing punctuation, are we? Fine. Every time I enter an ellipsis - … - please don’t pause, as is traditional, but instead growl like a little angry dog, as that is how those three periods are pronounced. Thank you.

[Find the full deconstruction, with pictures - the only way it makes sense, really - here]

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Watch This: Tuesday 30 October 2007

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

[For The Guardian, 380 words, G2 supplement television pages]

Imagine
10.35pm, BBC1
“I’ve met him,” moons Alan Yentob breathlessly to another journalist on the Indian Film Awards red carpet. “He touched my hand!” And then you wonder if he might cry, or wet himself, but he doesn’t. Maybe they meant to film it separately and edit it in later. Still, so keen is Yentob here to relay the global appeal of Amitabh Bachchan that he not only tells the story of India’s biggest film star, but quite abandons himself to fanboy giddiness in doing so. A too-brief profile skimming the surface of its modest and charismatic subject, but as Yentob would tell you, it’s good to see one at all. Probably in a really high, squeaky voice. While crying.

Property Ladder
8pm, Channel 4
Sarah Beeny is back, helping developing developers develop their developments, mainly through the medium of shouting at them. Steve, a solid, sensible man in the throes of a self-professed mid-life crisis, converts a beautiful old chapel with a vigorous lack of sympathy. Beeny shouts. Meanwhile, a charming couple have a hell of a time fixing up a thatched cottage. Beeny shouts. They listen, capitulate, and end up making lots of money. Take note, future developers.

Heston Blumenthal: In Search of Perfection
8.30pm, BBC2
Heston’s on a quest to reinterpret some of the world’s greatest dishes. Here, his eight-course take on Peking duck: involving, of course, things like a large sewing needle, a cake rack, an industrial air pump, jasmine oil and, oh I don’t know, a pirate hat. And a chest of drawers, an alarm clock, a lightning mast, some socks, and a model train. Possibly.

Roger Cook’s Greatest Hits
9pm, ITV
For 13 series Roger Cook travelled the world, doorstepping baddies and wrong ‘uns, confronting them with their evils, and often getting hit with an umbrella for his trouble. But where has he been of late? Well, according to this, lurking in a dark attic, eating biscuits and silently waiting. Here we see some of his biggest cases, and revisit them now to see if things have changed. Generally, they haven’t. But we should probably ascribe that to the enduring nature of evil than the inefficacy of Cook.

[The original from the paper can also be found here]

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Watch this: Monday October 29, 2007

Monday, October 29th, 2007

[For The Guardian, 380 words, G2 supplement television pages]

When Hell Freezes
9pm, Channel 4
If you’ve been wandering around complaining that it’s turned a bit chilly, this unflinching recreation of Douglas Mawson’s ill-fated 1912 trip to the Antarctic should leave you feeling toasty warm in comparison. Modern explorer Tim Jarvis painfully replicates the hike - pulling the same type of crap sled, wearing the same ineffective gear, eating the same basic rations (though not the dogs). Will they be dropping scientists down crevasses if history demands it? Mawson’s journey was a remarkable feat, and a great story - but do we need to watch someone half kill themselves replicating it to appreciate that?
(more…)

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Watch with … Mother

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

[Another installment of the TV Club - a live review/dissection/discussion of one random hour of television every week. I still love this idea. Got kind of jumped on by the advent of twitter, of course. There still must be some other way of using it, though…]

Yes, Watch with Mother. Well, not YOUR mother, unless she’s there, nor mine, as she doesn’t have a telly. Nor am I anyone’s mother, and would certainly never presume to ask that you think of me as yours. What I meant was that this week’s live-blogging a slice of British television had something in common with early television hit ‘Watch With Mother’, you see. Because it was about kids, and so, this evening, are we.

We are, in fact, all about Richard & Judy’s Best Children’s Books, because that’s what we’ll be watching from 8-9, reviewing televisual history as it happens, and hoping to provide the channel bosses with some idea of what we, your average, normal, bog-standard viewer, might think about their meagre profferings.

Or that’s the idea, anyway. Or perhaps it isn’t. Who can tell.
(more…)

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Duran Duran: Falling Over

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007

As music conspicuously doesn’t start, the camera pans down a very long, very black limousine. The atmosphere is charged. The quality is filmic. The band is… Duran Duran? Hang on, aren’t they dead?

Apparently not. They have survived to become the only band EVER to have featured in both Classic Pickard of the Pops and, now, the regular kind. And they have brought us something really, really special.

Yes. It’s two people in a car. With drinks.

One wears a pair of glasses so big they look like an advertisement for a new brand of armoured face shield, able to protect the wearer from fire, nuclear strikes and tigers. The other is either rubbing his gums with cocaine or scratching his nose. We understand what this means: these people are young, hip and famous. So, what are they doing in a Duran Duran video exactly?…

[Find the full deconstruction, with pictures - the only way it makes sense, really - here]

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Britney Spears: Gimme More

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

… Suddenly, the camera flips around and we see that this whole thing has been taking place in the back room of a fast food joint! The whole thing is ACTUALLY a brilliantly biting satire of consumerism, fast food and sexual appetites and …

No, it’s no good. I’m lying. Nothing changes. There’s just some more pole dancing.

I give up …

[Find the full deconstruction, with pictures - the only way it makes sense, really - here]

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Watch with … slight trepidation: How To Have Sex After Marriage

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

[First in a series of ‘TV Club’ liveblogs, picking one random thing a week to liveblog]

That’s right, welcome, it’s brand new experimental feature on Organ Grinder, ‘Watch With …’, where we take one hour in the life of British television, and review it, live, here at the top of the post, and down in the comments. Basically, we so enjoyed the community spirit (or mob rule) in previous live-blogs of The Apprentice, Celebrity Big Brother, Comic Relief and many more, that we wanted to do it again. Unable to pick a show, we thought we’d just do whatever was on and cross our fingers.

The hour will be 9-10, but what will the show be? Click on ‘read more’ to read more, hit refresh for updates, and if you have any comments, about this week’s ‘Watch With …’ show, or whatever you happen to be watching instead, do please leave them after the beep.
(more…)

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Tunng - Bullets

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

Ladies and gentlemen, we are floating in space. With a tennis racket. And also, possibly, a snooker cue. We will consider why in a moment. In the meantime, we will simply enjoy the fact that we are watching a video quite literally filmed IN SPACE! This has got to be the highest-budget video for an experimental electronic folk band ever made! Brilliant.

This is incredible. That’s the sun we’re looking at, people. Before it floats some kind of nubbly planetoid, unidentifiable as of yet, but possibly to do with this nice song by these pleasant Tunng types that we like. Well done, everyone.

Oh, the planetoid is a ball of junk. But there is something so pleasing about this junk-ball, built, as it seems to be, of old plastic toys, musical equipment and men with beards in briefcases, it spins gently through space - and you wonder just how the tiny label to whom Tunng belong could afford this incredible promo. Filmed, quite literally, In Space.

Stunned by the expense, here. I mean, we’re talking about a specially commissioned ball of junk, one major shuttle towing it into space and slinging it in the appropriate direction and then another whole manned spacecraft to film it from. So, yes, probably some second-hand arrangement with NASA could get you the two craft for a matter of a couple of hundred billion pounds. But really, does anyone invest that kind of upfront capital in folk electronica any more?

[Find the full deconstruction, with pictures - the only way it makes sense, really - here]

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