Thursday, March 27, 2014

X Is For Xenophobia, X-Ray, Xylophone And X-Rated

Missed the photos of yer actual Peter Capaldi and his fab gear new sonic screwdriver which were doing the rounds on the Interweb earlier in the week, dear blog reader? Fret ye not ...
Yer actual Mark Gatiss has confirmed on Twitter that he is writing two new Doctor Who episodes. Mark his very self is scripting a pair of adventures for Peter Capaldi's Doctor, although he didn't confirm whether both will feature in the popular BBC family SF drama's upcoming eighth series. At a recent Q&A in Brazil Mark hinted that the novelist Jane Austen may be the next historical figure to feature in one of his scripts: 'One of the things which new Doctor Who sort of invented was the idea of a celebrity historical – Charles Dickens, Agatha Christie, Winston Churchill, Shakespeare. There's three writers there so I think Jane Austen stands quite a quite a good chance actually. He added: 'I'm not quite sure what the adventure would be. Maybe an alien posing as Mister Darcy.' The comedian, actor, novelist and scriptwriter has previously written six Doctor Who episodes and appeared on-screen in a seventh - 2007's The Lazarus Experiment. Mark recently told the Digital Spy website that Capaldi's Doctor brings with him 'a whole new set of rules. The Doctor is always The Doctor - but you can have a lot of fun playing with people's expectations,' Mark said. 'Everyone knows how the previous Doctor would react in any given situation - and now you just don't know!'
Meanwhile, if you're in a Doctor Who mood, allow yer actual Keith Telly Topping to point you in this direction. Because that's got to be worth thirteen minutes of anyone's time.
Yer actual MasterChef returned for its tenth series to top the overnight ratings outside of soaps on Wednesday. The cult cooking series attracted 4.33 million overnight viewers at 9pm on BBC1, which is around one hundred thousand more punters than last year's series opener. Earlier, Holiday Hit Squad brought in 3.50m at 8pm, while A Question Of Sport was watched by 2.16m at 10.35pm on what was, generally, a rather quiet night in terms of ratings. On ITV, Law & Order: UK bounced back by over a million viewers week-on-week, being watched by 4.11m at 9pm. The wretched Big Star's Little Star returned for a new series with 4.03m at 8pm. BBC2's Lambing Live interested 1.98m at 8pm, followed by The Greatest Knight with 1.17m at 9pm and the second episode of W1A, which dipped by three hundred thousand punters to 1.26m at 10pm. On Channel Four, Secret Eaters gathered an audience of nine hundred and twenty five thousand at 8pm. The much-trailed documentary Dead Famous DNA attracted an audience of eight hundred and eight thousand at 9pm and First Dates brought in seven hundred and fifty seven thousand at 10pm. Channel Five's Killing Spree debuted with 1.08m at 8pm, followed by the latest NCIS with one million viewers at 9pm and Castle with five hundred and thirty nine thousand at 10pm.

So, as noted, yer actual Keith Telly Topping's great guilty pleasure MasterChef was back on Wednesday evening with a fine opening episode that demonstrated many of the reasons why this barmy cookery show has become so addictive for many. 'Ten years, three wives, but only one co-judge,' Gregg Wallace said meaning, one imagines, that he's done a bit better at his working relationship with co-host John Torode than he has with his personal ones. Not the sort of confession you'd normally expect on prime time telly but then, MasterChef is an unusual programme at the best of times. The opening episode saw John and Gregg faced with six contestants and produced one potential star in the making - Robert, a fifty three year old professional dancer. Things didn't look promising for him when he became the first ever MasterChef contestant to include a packet of instant mash in his selected ingredients to make a potato pasta dish but whose food just seemed to get better and better as the contest progressed. He got through to the next round as did Holly - whose voice was really irritating, whose first comment to Gregg was the horribly smug 'I noticed at GSCE level I was ahead of everyone else. They were doing cupcakes and I was doing stuffed vine leaves' (ooo, get her!) and who, frankly, had a face like a smacked arse for most of the episode. But who, nevertheless, can clearly cook up a storm, and that. For the invention test, Holly did lamb burgers with a feta, tomato and mint salad, fried aubergine and a pomegranate and balsamic reduction. 'The work of somebody with a very good palate,' noted Gregg. 'I still believe Holly has a good palate,' he told John later, when they were deciding who to send packing. 'She's got a great palate,' agreed John after tasting her rosewater and cardamom rice pudding. 'We put Holly through here because we said she had a great palate,' he added, reasserting himself as the chief arbiter of Holly's palate. They seemed really impressed by said palate - mentioning it at least five times during the course of the episode. However, as so often in MasterChef, the real star of the show was the one contestant who, spectacularly and amusing, fell flat on their over-confident face. It seems the production team always take an almost perverse delight in picking out boastful and full-of-their-own-importance comments from a contestant who seems very good at bigging themselves up like there's no tomorrow but who, by the end of the episode, you just know will be skulking off home with their tail firmly between their legs having been made to look like a total plank on national telly. This is, also, one of the reasons why MasterChef is so Goddamn addictive. This time around, it was Rob (not to be confused with Robert) who was to be the chap with more egg on his face than in his cooking bowl as it were. Oh, he really thought he was it, this bloke. Or, at least, the production team appeared to want to make viewers think this judging from the editing choices which they made in the episode. A management consultant, Rob noted that he eats in lots of 'high class' restaurants and gets 'lots of ideas' from this. If that didn't put viewers collective back up from the off just as much as Holly's GCSE tales then Rob's effort in the first round, a 'deconstructed Beef Wellington', certainly managed it. Why in the name of Christ anybody would want to deconstruct a twenty four carat classic like a Beef Wellington was a question that Gregg Wallace actually felt compelled to ask. Rob's reply was: 'If you do Beef Wellington properly the pastry on the bottom is never quite right.' Gregg appeared a bit confused at this claim and noted that a mate of his 'not too far away' - standing about twenty feet across the kitchen with his usual scowl on his boat as it happened - would probably be able to knock up a pretty decent Beef Wellington without a soggy bottom. Rob looked entirely unconvinced. 'If he's in control of his food, he's going to produce a good dish,' said Torode. But, he wasn't and he didn't. 'The judges have probably had hundreds of Beef Wellingtons over the years,' Rob bragged to camera. 'But they've never had one like this.' That, at least it seemed, was entirely accurate. 'To take a grand classic and take it apart is a really dangerous thing to do,' noted yer man Torode. There were lots of uses of the word 'soggy' when it came to the judging. 'I wouldn't try to deconstruct a Beef Wellington' said Wallace. 'Leave it alone, it's done nothing to you.' Rob, of course, because he eats in lots of 'high class' restaurants, was having none of it, noting that the judges had been 'pretty intimidating' and adding that, normally, people were 'quite polite' when eating his food. 'They say "this is really nice, this is lovely"' he claimed. That's probably because, either, they're lying to you or because they're not professional judges in a cookery competition that's going out on national telly, pal. Just a couple of suggestions for you to slip into your organic toaster and see if they pop up brown. 'It's pretty rare to get somebody who is sitting there actually trying to find fault with your dish and pick holes in it.' Err ... not on MasterChef, it isn't. You have watched this programme before, right? Next, Rob presented John and Gregg with a lamb and aubergine abomination. 'Aubergines three ways' said India Fisher, huskily, in voice-over. None of which got either judge excited. Hardly surprising since it looked like a plate of inedible vomit, frankly. 'Rob, I've got to be honest with you, it doesn't say "come and eat me"' John noted when looking at the plate, adding, after tasting it, 'it's not a very successful dish.' 'Apart from the chutney, I find little to commend this,' added Gregg. Rob had a look on his face that screamed 'who are these foolish fools?' 'A little disappointed,' Rob said to camera, afterwards in the discomfort of the post-match dressing room when asked to explain himself. 'I thought it was a better dish than that.' Then he added, through gritted teeth one imagines, 'but Gregg and John know what they're talking about.' At that point the camera lingered on Rob for a couple of seconds as he looked like he was about to burst into tears. 'I don't think Rob's strong enough for this competition,' noted Gregg. 'I'm disappointed I'm going home early,' said Rob after getting shown the way out. 'I think I cooked some good food, so I can hold my head high.' No Rob, you really didn't? It's because your food wasn't any good that you were the first to get shown the door; not just first in the episode but first in the entire series. You need to hang your head in shame and return, ignominiously, to being a management consultant. One hopes you're better at that than you are at cooking.

Shetland remained on top in the Tuesday ratings outside of soaps, despite a drop from last week, overnight data reveals. The BBC1 drama dipped by around three hundred thousand viewers week-on-week to 4.47 million at 9pm. Later, Keeping Britain Safe 24/7 interested 1.49m at 10.35pm. BBC2's Lambing Live continued with 2.28m at 8pm, followed by The Great British Sewing Bee, which fell almost three hundred thousand to 2.56m at 9pm. On ITV, River Monsters interested 1.81m at 7.30pm. A repeat of Midsomer Murders gathered 2.22m at 8pm. On Channel Four, Kirstie's Best Of Both Worlds brought in 1.36m at 8pm, followed by Food Price: The Shocking Truth with 1.47m at 9pm. Documentary The Missing interested 1.09m at 10pm. Channel Five's Benidorm ER appealed to eight hundred and fourteen thousand at 8pm. The Mentalist was watched by eight hundred and seventy thousand at 9pm, followed by Law & Order: SVU with seven hundred and seventy one thousand at 10pm.

Yer actual Benedict Cumberbatch his very self is to play Hamlet on stage next year. The thirty seven-year-old will star in William Shakespeare's tragedy at the Barbican Theatre in London from August to October 2015. Lyndsey Turner will direct the play for Sonia Friedman Productions. Friedman said she was 'thrilled' to be producing the show, describing its star as 'one of the most gifted and exciting actors of his generation.' Best known for his role in the BBC's updated Sherlock Holmes series Sherlock, Benny was recently seen in Star Trek Into Darkness and Twelve Years A Slave and heard in The Hobbit: The Desolation Of Smaug. You kew all that, right? He was last seen on stage in the National Theatre's 2011 production of Frankenstein, directed by Danny Boyle, in which Benny shared the roles of Frankenstein and his Monster with his friend Jonny Lee Miller. Turner was widely praised for her direction of Lucy Kirkwood's play Chimerica, while her revival of Sophie Treadwell's 1928 play Machinal recently ended an acclaimed run on Broadway. Booking details for the twelve-week run of Hamlet will be announced in May. Yer man Benny revealed last year that he would be playing the prince 'sometime in autumn on the London stage. It's a role I've been interested in for a long time,' he told the Daily Torygraph in 2012. 'I don't know if there is such a thing as a right age to play the part, but thirty six or thirty seven seems appropriate to me.'

Production has been confirm on the forthcoming twelfth - 'L' - series of yer actual Keith telly Topping's beloved Qi. Sixteen episodes (along with their extended XL versions) will be filmed between 6 May and 10 June ITV's London Studio (also known as ITV Towers) for broadcast on BBC2 during the autumn of 2014. Until then, you're stuck with repeats of Dave (and, of course, on BBC2 itself).
Paddy Considine his very self is to star in two new The Suspicions Of Mr Whicher episodes. ITV has ordered two new original TV movies, based on the book by Kate Summerscale. Considine will reprise the role of Jack Whicher in Beyond The Pale and 'Til Death Do Us Part - each two hours in length. The first film will see Whicher investigate threats made against the son of a powerful politician, while the second sees a case of divorce and adultery spin out into something far more complex. Award-winning playwright Helen Edmundson will script both films, which follow 2011's original The Suspicions Of Mr Whicher pilot and its 2013 follow-up The Murder In Angel Lane. 'We're delighted with the new Whicher scripts from Helen Edmundson,' said ITV's Director of Drama, Steve November. 'Paddy Considine is an extraordinary actor who brilliantly portrays Whicher's complexities, depth and vulnerability.' Speaking to the Digital Spy website last year, Paddy confirmed that he was keen to shoot more Whicher films. 'If everybody feels compelled to do it, I'd do it,' said the BATFA winner. '[We'd need] a good story - it's got to be a new landscape and it's got to open up for Whicher a little bit more. That would be the challenge.'

The BBC has outlined plans for its upcoming arts coverage. Director General Tony Hall stated on Tuesday that the corporation aims to increase its art output with its 'strongest commitment to the arts in a generation. The arts are for everyone, and from now on BBC Arts will be at the very heart of what we do,' he added. Productions from Glyndebourne and Shakespeare's Globe will be filmed for broadcast, along with Gemma Arterton's appearance in The Duchess Of Malfi at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse. The ONE Show will broadcast live from the Hay Literary Festival in May - with Alex Jones squealing out unintelligible babble at her usual rate of knots - while the makers of The Hollow Crown will reunite for filmed versions of Shakespeare's Henry VI and Richard III. The BBC Arts strand will be used on TV, radio and online via the BBC's iPlayer service. iPlayer will premiere BBC2 series The Story Of Women And Art, along with coverage of the Man Booker and Riba Stirling architecture prizes. The BBC's plans were unveiled on Tuesday at BBC Broadcasting House in London, with people including Arterton, Lenny Henry and Tom Hollander in attendance. 'We're the biggest arts broadcaster anywhere in the world, but our ambition is to be even better,' Lord Hall stated. 'We'll be joining up arts on the BBC like never before [and] working more closely with our country's great artists, performers and cultural institutions.' The BBC's arts coverage will include broadcasts from the Edinburgh Festivals, an online partnership with the Royal Academy in London, a relaunch of The Space with Arts Council England, BBC4's A Knight At The Barbican tribute to Sir Simon Rattle and a new drama strand for the channel titled Dialogues. As previously announced, a 'new take' on the classic documentary series Civilisation will be made, as well as a two-part Imagine programme about the novelist Philip Roth. There will also be a new animated film from War Horse author Michael Morpurgo and a Northern Ballet version of Three Little Pigs for the CBeebies channel. Radio coverage includes a night of drama on Radio 3 focusing on theatre company Paines Plough, and two weeks of dramas by first or second-time writers on Radio 4.

TV hard man Danny Dyer is known as much for running off his north and south as he is for his film roles and it appears BBC bosses aren't all that happy about it. And now, it it would seem, the geezer is in danger of attracting the unwanted attention of a new, and far more deadly, foe. Really angry Cumberbitches everywhere. The EastEnders actor has reportedly had 'a sit-down meeting' with the show's producers over his Twitter battles, but the Daily Lies, quoting from an interview he gave in Woman magazine, reports him as saying that the online rows happen because he's not a 'posh boy' like Benedict Cumberbatch. And, to be fair, no one could possibly mistake him for that. 'They're taking a risk with me and that's what is going to make it exciting,' he said. On the subject of yer man Benny, Dyer added: 'There's definitely some snobbery. You've got actors like Cumberbatch, a great actor, but he's a posh boy playing posh boys. He does it well and doesn't get mocked for that. I play working-class people and I get mocked for it.' Yes. Because he's a good actor playing a type and you're extremely not. Dyer also, according to the Lies, 'hit out' at 'snobbery' within showbiz circles and said that he struggles with 'playing the game. I'm stereotyped, [Benny is] not. I've done plays at the National Theatre, come off stage and gone into the bar and I ain't got nothing in common with those people. When it comes to playing the game, I'm rubbish. The middle-class actors are better prepped at working the system, because they've got more in common with the decision makers,' he whinged. Dyer also claimed that EastEnders 'bosses' asked him to tone down his remarks on Twitter now that he is working for the BBC. He said: 'I sat down with the producers of EastEnders and the Twitter thing was one of their main worries. But they have to understand that they've brought me into the show for my brand and there's a side effect of that. They're taking a risk with me and that's what's going to make it exciting. It's tough landing as high profile [a job] as EastEnders because I have to be me but dumbed down, and I don't do that very well.' Others may, of course, disagree. A BBC spokesman suggested to the Lies that this was all a bit of a storm in a tweet cup. 'There's no truth in the story that Danny Dyer is in trouble with BBC bosses,' he said. Dyer was last heard of hiding from a gang of really vexed little girls who were not best pleased with his comments of yer man Benny.

Andi Peters has described Noel Edmonds's BBC buying plan as 'a ludicrous thing.' Yes, we know. Next ...
The BBC has axed long-running culture programme The Review Show. Sunday's edition of The Review Show on BBC4, covering Harry Hill's The X Factor musical I Can't Sing and BBC first world war drama The Crimson Field, will be the last, the corporation confirmed on Thursday. The programme began life as on BBC2 as The Late Show spin-off Late Review in 1994 and has been through various weekly incarnations since, before pitching up on BBC4 in a new monthly format about a year ago. A BBC spokeswoman said: 'The next Review Show is the last. The series has made a valuable contribution over many years but as outlined this week, the BBC has ambitious plans for arts on TV, radio and online. Review will continue to have a place across the BBC alongside more topical arts coverage.' There were fears that The Review Show's switch from BBC2 to BBC4 and a monthly rather than weekly slot a year ago signalled the death knell for the format, despite presenters Martha Kearney and Kirsty Wark staying with the programme. In its original format the show was was presented by Mark Lawson from 1994 until 2005, when Kearney and Wark took over, and in the early years often featured a regular panel of Tom Paulin, Allison Pearson and Tony Parsons. After The Late Show's demise in 1995 Late Review continued as a stand alone show in the late evening BBC2 line-up. It was renamed Review and made a short-lived moved to Sunday night in March 2000, before being rebranded Newsnight Review early the following year and switching back to Friday nights, when its frequency was doubled to fifty editions annually.

The chief executive of Discovery has held talks with potential partners about launching joint bids for premium sports such as the Premier League TV rights. The owner of the Discovery factual channel, the new majority shareholder in Eurosport, is 'aggressively eyeing the UK market', its biggest outside the US, including bidding for Richard Desmond's Channel Five.

Tom Courtenay and former This Morning presenter Fern Britton are to feature in religious programmes to mark the Easter holiday, the BBC has announced. Britton will host The Great North Passion on BBC1, an outdoor retelling of the Easter story on the South Tyneside coast. Courtenay, meanwhile, will travel to Bradford to appear in a Palm Sunday edition of Songs Of Praise. US singer Beth Nielsen Chapman will also feature in the 13 April broadcast. Good Friday - 18 April - will see Diane Louise Jordan joined, on Radio 2, by the actor Stephen Tompkinson for 'an evening of music and poetry' from Winchester Cathedral. On Easter Sunday, meanwhile, Clare Balding will broadcast Good Morning Sunday live from Canterbury Cathedral. Her guests on 20 April will include Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the Archdeacon of Canterbury, the Venerable Sheila Watson. Other radio offerings include a performance of Bach's St John Passion on Radio 3, conducted by Sir Simon Rattle and 'a personal meditation on the Crucifixion' by John Sentamu, the Archbishop of York, on Radio 4. 'Easter is the cornerstone of Christianity and our programmes across the BBC both mark and celebrate its significance,' said Aaqil Ahmed, head of BBC Religion and Ethics. In 2012, Britton hosted a contemporary retelling, in Preston, of the last hours of Jesus's life. Bradford provided some of the settings for 1963's Billy Liar and 1983's The Dresser two of actor Courtenay's most celebrated films.

Brian McFadden has signed up to present Channel Five's new dating show Stand By Your Man. So, that'll be worth avoiding, then.

BBC2 satire W1A may operate in a parallel universe to the actual BBC, but that hasn't stopped the Beeb being nervous about how the corporation might be perceived. Episode two, which was broadcast on Wednesday, featured head of values Ian Fletcher travelling to the BBC's headquarters in Salford to appear on Radio 4's Woman's Hour. However, the carriage given to the W1A production crew by Virgin to film Ian preparing for his grilling by Jenni Murray was (horrors!) a first class one. Keen to reassure licence fee payers that BBC staff do not routinely travel to Salford first class, the crew removed all the luxury trappings such as curtains, free newspapers, cutlery and plates and head protectors to make it look like a standard class carriage. It even added extra commuters and used tight camera angles to make the carriage appear more cramped. Mind you, this is all according to some middle-class hippy Communist louse of no importance at the Gruniad Morning Star so, it's probably all lies.

Nick Frost is set to star in his first American sitcom. The Hot Fuzz, The World's End and Cuban Fury actor has signed up for the pilot episode of the FOX comedy Sober Companion. Nick is to play an ambitious, but drink-addicted lawyer, who is given a court-appointed guardian to take control of his life for ninety days to 'put him on the straight and narrow.' The sober companion his very self will be played by Justin Long, whose credits include Jeepers Creepers, Galaxy Quest and Dodgeball. The show us written and run by by David S Rosenthal and Jennie Snyder Urman, who previously worked together on 90210.

6Music presenter and former Pulp singer yer actual Jarvis Cocker has defended plans to axe BBC3, saying 'young people don't watch television.' It is 'all about tablets for them so we shouldn't be too bothered,' the musician and broadcaster told Radio Times. Earlier this month the BBC's Director General Tony Hall announced plans to make BBC3 available only online, subject to approval by the BBC Trust. He said the cost-cutting plans were 'financially necessary.' Whilst many full-of-their-own-importance gobshites like odious lanky streak of piss Jack Whitehall and that Russell Kane (very popular with students) have whinged like big girls about the decision (mainly because it will affect them personally rather than any genuine interest in the viewers, one suspects) other high-profile names have been supportive of the move. 'BBC3 as a channel should always be at the forefront of things that are new and exciting,' said unfunny berk James Corden. 'So long as BBC3 keeps making interesting shows and good shows that are aimed at a young audience then that audience will find it.' At the launch of the new BBC Arts programme, Hall said BBC3 remained 'key' to the corporation's future. He said iPlayer would help 'engage with audiences', as would the eventual broadcast of some BBC3 programmes on BBC1. Asked by the Radio Times website whether the BBC, or its current system of funding through the licence fee, would eventually end if young people stopped watching television in large numbers, Cocker said: 'We mustn't worry about that. We should worry about what we do now. If the next generation want the BBC, they will have it.' Cocker is currently on a sabbatical from his Sunday evening 6Music show, with Iggy Pop standing in for him. He told Radio Times that he was taking a year away from his presenting duties on Jarvis Cocker's Sunday Service, in order to 'find out if I have any creative energy left.' He is working on new music but ruled out a Pulp reunion. 'We have done that, we won't do it again,' he said. 'But hopefully I will find a way of inflicting any new music on an unsuspecting public.'

Andrew Davies, the television dramatist behind such hit adaptations as Pride And Prejudice, Bleak House and House Of Cards, is to be honoured at this year's Broadcasting Press Guild Awards. The seventy seven-year-old will receive the Harvey Lee award for outstanding achievement to broadcasting at this year's event in London on 28 March. Davies' other successes include Little Dorrit, Middlemarch, A Very Peculiar Practice and Mr Selfridge. His latest drama, about fellow Welshman Dylan Thomas, will be broadcast in May. A Poet In New York, which will have its premiere on BBC1 Wales before screening on BBC2, focuses on the poet's fateful final visit to America in 1953. Rev star Tom Hollander plays Thomas in the seventy five-minute drama, produced to mark the centenary of the Under Milk Wood writer's birth. Davies, who is currently adapting Tolstoy's War And Peace for the BBC, will attend Friday's awards lunch at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane. He received a BAFTA Fellowship in 2002 and a lifetime achievement award from the Writers' Guild of Great Britain in 2009. John Humphrys was the last recipient of the Harvey Lee award, named in honour of the former Daily Torygraph media correspondent and Broadcasting Press Guild chairman who died in 1991. The awards, now in their fortieth year, are voted for by BPG members - journalists who specialise in covering television, radio and the media for newspapers, broadcasters, trade journals and websites.

Channel Four has announced that Tessa Ross is to stand down as controller of film and drama at the network. Ross will join the National Theatre as chief executive, replacing Nick Starr from November. She will work alongside outgoing director Nicholas Hynter before fully taking up the role in April 2015, with Rufus Norris replacing Hynter. Lisa Burger will remain as the NT's chief operating officer. Tessa Ross joined Channel Four in 2000, before becoming head of Film4 in 2003. She was later appointed controller of film and drama in 2008. During her time at Film4, she was involved in developing and financing films including Twelve Years A Slave, Slumdog Millionaire, The Last King Of Scotland and The Iron Lady. She was previously head of drama at the BBC's independent commissioning group, launching shows such as Clocking Off and Playing The Field. Ross was also on the National Theatre's board from 2011 to 2014, and was previously a governor at the National Film and Television School and the British Film Institute. National Theatre chair John Makinson said: 'The National has grown enormously in scale and complexity under the leadership of Nicholas Hytner and Nick Starr. We are both a national and an international organisation, with a global audience of four million. Tessa's international experience and reputation as a producer and executive need no introduction, and her partnership with Rufus Norris will give us the strongest possible platform on which to extend the National Theatre's creative and commercial leadership.' Norris added: 'I am both thrilled and honoured that Tessa Ross is coming to join us at the NT, and to be my partner at the helm of this unique organisation. She is an extraordinary woman: a world-class producer, a tireless supporter and promoter of both emerging and established artists, a great manager and businesswoman.'

Yer actual Eddie Izzard is to perform his stand-up show in three languages in one night. Steady Eddie has scheduled three back-to-back performances of Force Majeure at Yale University on Friday night; first in German, then in French and finally in English. Each show at the Connecticut university's Whitney Humanities Centre will last an hour – and is free to attend. The English version at 9pm sold out quickly, but tickets are still available for the others at 7pm and 8pm. Eddie performed a run of German gigs in Berlin earlier this year, after a similar engagement in Paris in 2011. He said: 'In my show I say I'm on the fifth floor, cooking something, and I need to get the steam up to the tenth floor. I need to cook my German up.' It was also revealed that Eddie will be performing the French version in Normandy on the seventieth anniversary of D-Day in June. The People's Action Transvestite has previously donated what charity organisers called 'an eye-watering' sum to help ensure that seven hundred veterans of the Normandy landings can make the trip to the beaches to commemorate the date.

A Channel Four show which attempts to sequence the DNA of historical figures from Adolf Hitler to Marilyn Monroe claims to have discovered what could have caused Elvis Presley's early death. Dead Famous DNA has already hit the headlines after it emerged that producers had paid the historian and convicted Holocaust denier David Irving thousands of pounds for a lock of what was supposed to be the hair of Adolf Hitler (who only had one). At an advance screening on Tuesday of the first episode in the new series, it was revealed that tests have also been performed on what could be bone from the Nazi scumbag's ribcage, while producers have discovered that the hair which they paid Irving three grand for had not come from the German dictator at all. DNA analysis on a hair sample thought to have come from the king of rock n' roll his very self, which was bought from a friend of the singer's barber, has revealed that the singer could have suffered from a heart muscle disease. Which is a different theory to that given by Presely's doctor, Nick Nichopoulos ('hi, doctor Nick!') that yer man Elv died from a serious bout of constipation. The DNA results – analysed by doctor Stephen Kingsmore in Kansas – showed mutations, known as 'variants', which cause migraines, glaucoma and obesity. Presley, a junk food addict who relied heavily on prescription drugs, was known to have suffered from headaches, bad eyesight and ballooned in weight towards the end of his life. Scientists also found a 'crucial' variant known to cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy – a heart muscle disease that causes thickening of the heart and weakening of the heart muscle. Presley displayed many of the symptoms of this disease, including an irregular heartbeat, fatigue, fainting and high blood pressure. The singer was found dead in 1977 at the age of forty two slumped in a lavatory at Graceland, his mansion in Memphis. Which, whatever way you look at it, isn't a good way to go. Producers said that although it was officially known that Presley died of heart failure, the cause of this was still 'subject to speculation' and had fuelled 'a melting pot' of 'conspiracy theories.' Or, indeed, constipation theories in doctor Nick's case. Kingsmore, director of the Centre for Paediatric Genomic Medicine at the Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, described the results as 'a smoking gun.' He said that the results indicate it could be unfair to blame the singer's lifestyle for his death. Presenter Mark Evans said: 'For years, Elvis has been blamed for his own death, for overeating or overdosing on drugs. Both of these addictions wouldn't have helped. But it seemed Elvis had a flaw in his DNA.' Producers have sent the results to Presley's daughter Lisa Marie, but said that they have not heard back from her. Evans said that they were 'very, very confident' that the sample of hair had come from the singer, after spending three years doing their research. 'I'm massively confident that it's Elvis' DNA but I can't prove it,' he said. 'I can't tell you one hundred per cent that is Elvis' DNA. That's not possible.' The show also attempts to examine the DNA of Charles Darwin and from King George III, the latter from a hair sample which turned out to be from a wig. Most controversially, they're also trying to get Hitler's DNA. Producers would not confirm whether the bone sample, said to be from Hitler's ribcage, turned out to be genuine and defended the decision to seek his DNA. Results of scientific testing on the bone, which was given to the show's presenter by an unidentified man, will be revealed in later episodes. 'The one thing that no-one has ever, ever looked at is the one bit of him that he couldn't fabricate, he couldn't influence. He couldn't not change his DNA. His DNA was what he was. The DNA can't lie,' said Evans. Channel Four said that Irving sold them the hair sample 'in good faith' but their view of the science 'strongly suggests' that it was not Hitler's barnet. Evans said that he was 'proud that Channel Four has had the balls' (or, in Hitler's case, the ball) to tackle 'an incredibly difficult subject' and that the series would help 'stimulate a debate on the issues (surrounding) human genomes.'

A secondary school maths teacher has used the power of Game Of Thrones plot spoilers to control noise levels in his class, reports the Independent. When faced with a noisy auditorium, the teacher allegedly 'threatened to write the names of all the characters who die in Game Of Thrones series three on the board.' After discovering the majority of his students watched the popular fantasy series, the - nameless and, therefore, almost certainly fictitious - teacher allegedly said: 'I've read all the books. If there is too much noise again, I will write the names of the dead on the board.' The Belgian newspaper nieuwsblad reports him as saying: '[The dead characters] are enough to fill the whole year and I can even describe how they die.' When some students did not take the threat seriously, he began to write the names of those killed on the board, to the dismay of students who apparently 'sighed in disgust.' The class was then, reportedly, silent for the rest of the lesson, according to the pupil who first wrote about the anecdote on a French Internet forum.

The latest episodes of The Big Bang Theory, Modern Family and Grey's Anatomy are piling up in Spanish TV studios, as a strike by voiceover actors enters its third week. Most foreign films and TV shows are dubbed on Spanish television and the strike by two hundred and fifty actors has delayed the broadcast of new episodes, leaving major networks showing reruns. With season four of Game Of Thrones due to be broadcast in early April, the actors are warning viewers of further delays if the strike continues. They have been working to secure a new collective agreement since labour reforms in 2012, said Juan Carlos Lozano of ADOMA, the union representing voiceover actors in Madrid. Faced with companies aggressively trying to undermine them by paying lower rates for the same work, they were left with few options but to strike, he said. Lozano has spent nearly twenty years lending his husky vocals to some of TV's most popular characters. When asked to name a few, he demurred, saying only: 'We all do a little bit of everything.' Last week, there was a setback for Lozano and his co-workers, when the third season of the fantasy series Resurrection was broadcast with an all-new cast of voices from Galicia. 'We had voiced it for two seasons,' said Lozano. 'We all felt really terrible.' He took some comfort in pointing out that advertisements for the show still featured the Madrid ensemble. The striking workers have now turned their attention to their competitors, striking a deal with their counterparts in Barcelona, who focus on dubbing over movies. 'We know that a few series have tried to get them to voice over, but they said no,' said Lozano. 'There's rumours of all sorts flying around.' He said the strike came 'at a sensitive time' for the industry, as some on social media argue that dubbing in Spain has made it harder to learn English. Lozano dismissed these concerns, pointing to the consistently large audiences. 'I think the majority of people aren't worried. If there wasn't a market, they wouldn't dub over.'
Well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Rebekah Brooks's former secretary has denied 'fabricating' a story in relation to events leading up to the closure of the Scum of the World in 2011, the Old Bailey has heard. Cheryl Carter told the prosecutor in the phone-hacking trial that she had been 'brought up well' and was 'not dishonest' and had 'not lied to police.' Prosecutor Andrew Edis QC put it to Carter that 'you have invented your memory of what happened since' the day she retrieved seven boxes of notebooks labelled as belonging to well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Brooks from the NI archive. Carter said that she never. 'That's totally wrong, you are wrong there Mr Edis with respect,' Carter said. He then put it to her that parts of her account given to police of events relating to the original archiving of the notebooks was invented memory. 'Mr Edis, I was dragged out bed at seven in the morning, I got watched while I went to the toilet, watched while I got dressed, told I would be handcuffed, put in a cell for four or five hours, I was cold, I was scared, yes I got things wrong but I did my very best for police,' Carter claimed, in her second day in the witness box. She requested the boxes from the archive on 8 July, two days before the Scum of the World closed and has told jurors that the boxes were 'mislabelled' and, in fact, contained about thirty of her notebooks containing cuttings of a beauty column she had in the Sun. Carter and well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Brooks have both been extremely charged with concealing the boxes - which have never been found. Carter denied that the timing of her request for archive boxes, two days before the Scum of the World closed in shame and ignominy, was odd. 'It never occurred to me, it was my stuff.' Edis also put it to Carter that an explanation that she was looking for documents to support her case in a trademark dispute in relation to a make-up brand she had launched had not been in her one hundred and fifty eight-page police interview. Carter claimed that she would not have thought of it at the time because she had no documentation or diaries to prompt her memory, but that she now had. Carter was accused of giving a 'dishonest' account of communications with well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Brooks after police turned up at her home in November 2011 to search for potential evidence in relation to the archive boxes. Carter told jurors that she had phoned well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Brooks but had not told her that the archive books were labelled as belonging to the former chief executive. This was, Carter claimed, because 'she would have thought I was mad. She had no idea I had done that.' Asked if she had told well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Brooks in the conversation if she had informed police she retrieved the boxes when she was at boot camp, Carter replied that she did not. Carter said she didn't 'feel she needed to tell' her about the conversation with police because she thought whatever they were investigating would be cleared up and the matter would go away. 'I'm going to suggest that evidence is dishonest,' said Edis. 'No Mr Edis, I'm not a dishonest person. I was brought up very well,' Carter claimed. Edis put it to her that she had not been asked to downsize material in the archive after receiving an e-mail from the NI archivist advising her they were moving the archive from Wapping to Enfield. 'No you are very wrong there,' Carter said explaining she had read the e-mail. Carter denies one charge of conspiring with well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Brooks to conceal material from police investigating News International between 6 July 2011 and 9 July 2011. The trial extremely continues.

Today, yer actual Keith Telly Topping's A To Z of Groovy Tunes reaches X, dear blog reader. And, as we all know, X is for XTC.

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

W Is For Wibbly-Wobbly

The Lord Thy God Steven Moffat has confirmed that Doctor Who ninth series - ie. the one after the one which is currently filming - will 'definitely' be broadcast in 2015 and will avoid being split in two as with previous series. 'We're not going to do splits [in series eight], and the same format will repeat exactly the following year like that – so it will be the traditional form,' The Moffinator told Doctor Who Magazine.
The terrific Life, Doctor Who and Combom website - a particular favourite of yer actual Keith Telly Topping - has revealed a series of screengrabs and a short video from recent location filming on Doctor Who's forthcoming eighth series. Which you can check out here. These reveal our first sight of Peter Capaldi his very self wearing a (rather fetching) dark pink lab coat, a glimpse of his sonic screwdriver (which looks very much like Matt Smith's) and a new monster (reportedly being played by Jimmy Vee). The claim that the episode is to be called Robots Of Sherwood is, as yet, unconfirmed. Mangled and badly written versions of broadly the same story have also appeared in the Daily Lies, the Daily Scum Express and the Metro.
Some very sad news now; the excellent Hebburn has been cancelled by BBC2. The acclaimed comedy will not return for a third series, its creator Jason Cook has confirmed. In a - very dignified and praiseworthy - statement, Jason said: 'Just so everyone knows, the BBC will not be renewing Hebburn for a third series. We've had such a great time making series one and two and I'd like to thank the BBC for allowing us to do this. The team that made Hebburn were so committed to it and those both in front of and behind the camera were what made Hebburn so special.' The sitcom was first shown on BBC2 in October 2012 and followed  the story of Jack Pearson (Chris Ramsey), a local boy who returns to his home town with a new girlfriend - secretly his wife - in tow. It was proper good, an'aal with a quality ensemble cast and some fine scripts. Of course, elements of the London-based media never liked it. Largely because it featured people from north of Watford. And, whilst it is sad news - particular for two good friends of yer actual who were part of the cast - to be fair, at least we got thirteen (great) episodes of Hebburn; that's one more than Fawlty Towers had! I think Jason's (public) reaction to the news is tremendously dignified, not having a go at the Beeb for cancelling it but thanking them for commissioning it in the first place and for letting it run two series. A few full-of-their-own-importance BBC3 types - yes, you 'very popular with students' - could learn a thing or two from that.
The Widower came out on top in Monday's overnight ratings outside of soaps. Reece Shearsmith's ITV drama climbed by over one hundred thousand viewers from the previous week to 5.15 million at 9pm. Earlier, I Never Knew That About Britain was watched by 3.24m at 8pm. On BBC1, Bang Goes The Theory had an audience of 3.35m at 7.30pm, followed by Panorama with 2.53m at 8.30pm. Silk's latest episode dipped by around one hundred thousand overnight viewers to 3.81m at 9pm, while The Michael McIntyre Chat Show dropped a further three hundred thousand to a pitiful 1.77m at 10.35pm. Back to the drawing board in terms of looking for somebody to host a chat show for the Beeb, by the look of things. BBC2's University Challenge was watched by 3.02m at 8pm, followed by Mary Berry Cooks with 2.73m at 8.30pm. The documentary The Plantagenets continued with 1.64m at 9pm, while the return of Rev for a very welcome new series brought in 1.53m at 10pm. On Channel Four, Shop Secrets appealed to nine hundred and sixty six thousand at 8pm. One Born Every Minute brought in 1.63m at 9pm and Eight Out Of Ten Cats had nine hundred and fifty two thousand at 10pm. Channel Five's Police Interceptors attracted 1.05m at 8pm, followed by My Spiral Into Debt Hell with eight hundred and thirty seven thousand at 9pm. On BBC3, the second part of Life And Death Row was seen by nine hundred and ten thousand at 9pm.

Mr Selfridge achieved its best overnight ratings since its second series premiere on Sunday. The ITV period drama's series finale attracted 4.64 million at 9pm, up one hundred thousand punters from last week. Earlier, Catchphrase was watched by 3.70 million who said what they saw at 7pm and Prince Harry's South Pole Heroes gathered 3.20m at 8pm. On BBC1, Countryfile topped the evening overall, caning the opposition's arse with 6.63m at 7pm, followed by Antiques Roadshow with 5.72m at 8pm. The Musketeers' penultimate episode was watched by 4.08m at 9pm, whilst Match Of The Day 2 scored 2.30m at 10.30pm. BBC2's Lambing Live returned with 1.84m at 8pm, followed by Louis Theroux's new series LA Stories which had an overnight audience of 1.78m at 9pm. On Channel Four, the animated film Rio brought in 1.77m at 6.15pm. The documentary The Million Pound Necklace was watched by 1.38m at 8pm. The Tourist starring Johnny Depp attracted nine hundred and eighty five thousand at 9pm. Channel Five's broadcast of The Great Escape was seen by nine hundred and seventy one thousand at 5.45pm - and more of them would've gotten away if it hadn't been for that plank Nigel Stock tripping over his own feet - followed by the documentary The First Great Escape with eight hundred and twelve thousand at 9pm. And as for Gordon Jackson getting caught out when boarding the bus - juvenile schoolboy-type error.

Meanwhile, here are the final and consolidated ratings for the Top Twenty Two programmes, week-ending Sunday 16 March:-
1 Coronation Street - Mon ITV - 9.12m
2 EastEnders - Mon BBC1 - 8.12m
3 The Voice - Sat BBC1 - 7.72m
4 Ant and/or Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway - Sat ITV - 7.53m
5 Emmerdale - Mon ITV - 7.40m
6 Top Gear - Sun BBC2 - 7.01m
7 Jonathan Creek - Fri BBC1 - 6.82m
8 Countryfile - Sun BBC1 - 6.45m
9 Shetland - Tues BBC1 - 6.37m
10 Casualty - Sat BBC1 - 6.15m
11 BBC News - Sat BBC1 - 5.63m
12 The Musketeers - Sat BBC1 - 5.45m
13 Six O'Clock News - Mon BBC1 - 5.35m
14 Silk - Mon BBC1 - 5.16m
15 DCI Banks - Mon ITV - 5.17m*
16 Ten O'Clock News - Tues BBC1 - 5.02m
17 Mr Selfridge - Sun ITV - 5.01m*
18 Rugby Six Nations - Sat BBC1 - 4.93m
19 The National Lottery: Who Dares Wins - Sat BBC - 4.84m
20 UEFA Champions League Live - Tues ITV - 4.71m
21 The ONE Show - Mon BBC1 - 4.64m
22 Holby City - Tues BBC1 - 4.56m
ITV programmes marked '*' do not include HD figures. BBC2's top-rated show of the week apart from Top Gear was Line of Duty (3.73m), followed by University Challenge (3.22m). Channel Four's highest-rated show was, again Gogglebox with 2.87m. Can't Pay? We'll Take It Away! was Channel Five's best performer with 1.88m.

Now, dear blog reader, here's a link to an excellent article by yer actual Keith Telly Topping's old pal Greg Bakun at his From The Archive blog. It's the final part of a series of articles celebrating Doctor Who's fiftieth anniversary; this one is on the long-running family SF drama's great missing story, Shada.
Yer actual Ant McPartlin - for once, not joined at the hip to his mate Dec - and his mother were, reportedly, 'assaulted' during a family meal at The Old Station House gastro pub in Chiswick last week. Which isn't a very nice to do under any circumstances - even if you're not a fan of the chap's telly work. Still, sadly that's Cockneys for you - a right bunch of ignorant bonehead scum with diarrhoea for brains. The Saturday Night Takeaway presenter - one half of the North East's favourite double act just in case you didn't know - was apparently having dinner with members of his family at The Old Station House when 'a group of troublemaking youths' outside the gaff started 'making rude gestures' and 'using mobile phones to film him through the window.' One might've expected yer man Ant to either turn the other cheek, wave at them, smile cheekily and make some eating gestures for their home movies or, if he felt threatened, ring the poliss and get the scallywags aal carted off to the local nick for causing a disturbance to rich people. But, instead, Ant - extremely unwisely, in this blogger's opinion - decided to try the direct approach and 'went outside to ask them to leave.' Yeah, that was always going to end well, wasn't it? The group seemingly took offence at his offence and promptly 'put him into a heedlock', and gave him a damned good chinning, the Sun reports. So, of course, all of this must be true and not even slightly exaggerated. His mum, Christine, was also seemingly 'pushed to the ground' by these big hard brave London youths when she attempted to intervene and tell them to leave her lad alone. A Metropolitan Police spokesman said that they were called to 'an incident' in Spencer Road, shortly after 8pm on Thursday 13 March. He said: 'No allegations were made and no one suffered any injuries.' So, after all that hyperbole, a bit of a non-story it would seem. It's probably worth Ant considering, however, that he orobably wouldn't have gotten such rough and uncouth treatment if he'd, instead, been having a nice quiet meal in Newcastle city centre. Actually, no, who am I kidding? Some Bigg Market meat-head beer monster would've probably planeted one on him in that scenario, as well. For, you know, 'looking at me in a funny way.' Or something. Next time, stick to having yer mam over to your own gaff Ant, kidda, and cook her something nice yourself. It's much safer than venturing out into the real world.

And, speaking of North Eastern favourites, Wor Geet Canny Robson Green and former EastEnders actress Kacey Ainsworth have been cast in a new crime drama from ITV. Grantchester will star James Norton as Sidney Chambers, a vicar who solves crimes. Wr Geet Canny Robson will play his 'plain-speaking partner' - Police Inspector Geordie Keating - in the six-part series, set in Cambridgeshire, 1953. Ainsworth is cast as Keating's wife Cathy, while Morven Christie and Tessa Peake-Jones will also star. Grantchester - written by Daisy Coulam and based on the work of author James Runcie - will shoot from later this month until June. 'Grantchester is an exciting commission,' said ITV's Director of Drama, Steve November. 'Daisy Coulam's scripts are vivid and beautifully written with some wonderful characters at the heart of the stories. There's an emotional truth and gravity to this series which makes it a very compelling drama.'

BBC3 will make 'far fewer' shows when it shifts online, channel controller Zai Bennett has admitted. Which is, of course, sad news concerning their documentary output which is, for the most part, excellent - but bloody brilliant news elsewhere as it, hopefully, means we'll have far less of the likes of odious lanky streak of piss Jack Whitehall and Russell Kane (very popular with students) stinking up out telly schedules. Marvellous. In autumn 2015, BBC3 will close as a broadcast TV channel, with its most popular programmes heading to iPlayer. Speaking this week at a BAFTA TV Question Time panel, Bennett - the man whose first act on becoming BBC3 controller was to cancel the channel's one genuine twenty-four carat comedy masterpiece, Ideal, let us never forget - whinged that the shift would affect the quantity but not the quality of the channel's output. 'We won't be able to do everything we do now,' he snivelled. Oh dear. Our hearts bleeds for you, mate. '[Instead] we'll have to make some big bets - what we need to make sure we do is commission the very best shows we can,' he continued. Whether that 'we' will include Bennett himself is another matter entirely as, one imagines, he's currently busy planning an escape route back to ITV where the jewel in his crowing glory when he was 'responsible for editorial content' at ITV2 was being the very chap who commissioned the Kerry Katona reality show Kerry Comes Clean. So, you know, thanks for that, Zai. Bennett also claimed that BBC1 and BBC2 will now face 'an added responsibility' to cater for younger viewers - BBC3's target demographic. 'The BBC across the board has to pick up the baton for young audiences,' he said.

Labour is 'broadly supportive' of plans to decriminalise people who do not pay their television licence fee ahead of a House of Commons vote on whether to review the law this week, alleged 'sources' have allegedly said. A further example, if any were needed, of the truism that all politicians - without exception - are scum. After the coalition said that it backed the idea of a consultation on scrapping the crime, Labour will also make clear that it, while it claims, rather unconvincingly, to be a strong supporter of the BBC, it nevertheless thinks that it is difficult to justify sending people who do not pay their television licence fee to prison. Under the assumption, no doubt, that this move is a vote winner. With criminals. The idea of decriminalisation has been pushed by more than one hundred and fifty MPs from all parties, led by Tory backbencher Andrew Bridgen. Many Conservatives were pushing for immediate decriminalisation but agreed to a compromise with the government allowing for a long consultation about the idea. This pushes the decision into the next parliament and makes it more likely the law will be reconsidered as part of the BBC's charter review of 2017, meaning there is more time to investigate how much it could cost the corporation and how the shortfall would be made up. And by whom. The odious fraction Bridgen, a particularly scummish right-wing MP, has proposed making non-payment a civil rather than criminal offence through an amendment to the forthcoming deregulation bill - a bit of a slap in the face to all of us who've always paid our licence fee on time. The government then indicated its partial support when Oliver Heald, the solicitor general, put down a joint amendment with a promise to review the issue. This is what will be voted on by MPs during the committee stage of the bill on Tuesday. The BBC - showing the sort of lack of backbone we've sadly become accustomed to of late - has, meekly, ''raised concerns' that the proposal could lead to reduced revenue - to the tune of two hundred million smackers - and force it to axe services but also appeared relieved that it has been given a reprieve from any instant change in the law. Responding to the government's position last week, a spokesman for the corporation said: 'The BBC is content that this proposal balances a timely examination of this issue with a proper review of the options, while not taking any decisions prior to charter review.' A BBC Trust spokesman said: 'This is an issue that should be discussed in the round, including the potential impact on licence fee income and BBC output, with any decisions made as part of the charter review process. This amendment appears to be in line with that.' The review will have to start within three months of the deregulation bill passing and take no longer than a year. Its findings will be presented to the BBC Trust as well as both houses of parliament. Cases of people accused of evading the £145.50 fee accounted for more than one in ten of all criminal prosecutions last year – with one hundred and fifty five thousand of them convicted and fined. The amendment, due to be voted on next week, said that the review should start 'within three months' of the deregulation act being passed and complete it no later than a year after it began.

BBC2 period gangster drama Peaky Blinders has landed six nominations for the BAFTA Television Craft Awards. ITV's Broadchurch is close behind with five nominations, while Channel Four's conspiracy thriller Utopia has four. The awards honour behind-the-scenes programme-makers and will be handed out on 27 April in London. Odious, unfunny lard bucket (and drag) James Corden and Mathew Baynton received their first - completely undeserved - writing nominations for BBC2's vastly over-rated The Wrong Mans. They are up against Steve Delaney and Graham Linehan for BBC2's not even rated at all Count Arthur Strong, Sam Bain, Jesse Armstrong and Tom Basden for Channel Four's Fresh Meat and Graham Linehan, who gets a second nod for Channel Four's The IT Crowd. The best drama writer contenders are Chris Chibnall for Broadchurch, Dominic Mitchell for the supernatural BBC3 series In The Flesh, Sally Wainwright for BBC1's romantic drama Last Tango In Halifax and Dennis Kelly for Utopia. Documentaries Educating Yorkshire, Her Majesty's Prison Aylesbury, The Murder Trial and The Unspeakable Crime: Rape are all recognised in the best factual director category. The best director in fiction nominees are James Strong (for Broadchurch), Otto Bathurst (Peaky Blinders), Jane Campion and Garth Davis (BBC2's Top Of The Lake) and Marc Munden (Utopia). ITV's Downton Abbey received a nomination for best costume design, alongside BBC Worldwide's and Starz's Da Vinci's Dragons, BBC2's Doctor Who origins biopic An Adventure In Space And Time0- one of three nominations it received - and ITV's The Suspicions of Mr Whicher: The Murder of Angel Lane. The fiftieth anniversary episode of Doctor Who has also been nominated for a craft award. The Day Of The Doctor was nominated for special, visual and graphic effects with the nomination going to Milk VFX, Real SFX and The Model Unit for their work on the story. It was announced last week that the crew behind BBC1e's Strictly Come Dancing will receive a special BAFTA Craft Award in recognition of their achievements over the last ten years. BAFTA chairman Andrew Newman said that the show had 'set new standards for talent and creativity.' Actor Stephen Mangan will host the ceremony.

BBC1 has announced the cast for its new drama series Our Zoo. Inspector George Gently actor Lee Ingleby will star as George Mottershead, an ex-serviceman with a dream to build the first British zoo without bars. Life On Mars' actress Liz White is cast as his wife, Lizzie, while Ralf Little will play her 'mischievous brother', Billy Atkinson. Anne Reid, Sophia Myles, Peter Wight and Stephen Campbell-Moore will also feature in the upcoming drama. Our Zoo is based on the true story of the eccentric Mottershead family, who established Chester Zoo in the 1930s. Written by award-winning playwright Matt Charman, the series will be produced by Marcus Wilson. Our Zoo has already begun principal photography and is scheduled to be shown on BBC1 in late 2014.

The BBC is to feature more arts stories in programmes like The ONE Show in a bid to make the subject less elitist. Well, having something introduced by squealing Welsh airhead Alex Jones certainly ought to help in demystifying pretty much any subject. On Tuesday, the corporation's Director General Tony Hall announced new commissions including a series in collaboration with The Tate. Lord Hall notes that the arts are 'at risk of becoming marginalised' for future generations unless more is done to get children and young people engaged. As part of the plans, acclaimed 1960s arts show Civilisation is to return. The landmark thirteen-part series series telling the history of Western art was fronted by the historian Kenneth Clark when it was screened by BBC2 in 1969. The BBC is now looking for a new authoritative presenter to follow in Clark's footsteps for the new series, which will use modern digital technology to provide a fresh overview of the history of art. The BBC said: 'Civilisation was a landmark programme. Producing something of equal scale will be a huge challenge, but we believe it is time to once again create something with the same impact for a new generation. The arts have been central to the BBC's past and are central to its future. As all arts organisations face the challenge of delivering more in a tight economic climate, it is vital that we work together in new ways to create a bigger and better offer to the public.' As well as including arts content in The ONE Show, the idea will be spread to other popular programmes such as BBC Radio 2's Simon Mayo Show. Lord Hall announced last October that funding for the BBC's arts coverage would increase by twenty per cent. The Director General, who was Royal Opera House chief executive for twelve years before his appointment to the BBC, said he wanted to return the arts to the corporation's 'heart.' At that time, he announced that Simon Schama would front a five-part series in partnership with The National Portrait Gallery exploring the history of Britain through portraiture, and that Andrew Marr would present a new series looking at the greatest writers in Scotland.

The Voice producers have asked Sir Tom Jones to 'spice things up a bit' on the show as they fear he is becoming 'too boring.' The Sun claims that 'the programme's crew' had to talk to Jonesy during breaks in a bid to 'pep up his performance' and were seen 'gesturing frantically' at him when the cameras were rolling. An unnamed - and, therefore, almost certainly fictitious - alleged audience 'source' allegedly said: 'He called everyone "great" and his responses were flat and awkward. It was obvious the crew were doing everything they could to get him to be more lively.'
In replacing Adam Boulton as chief political editor with Channel Four's Faisal Islam – who did not figure at all in the initial betting – Sky News made a bold choice, as Islam's entire career has been spent as a business or economics reporter. If Robert Peston does harbour ambitions of eventually replacing Nick Robinson at the BBC, as is often rumoured, that might give him some encouragement. Meanwhile, Channel Four News editor Ben De Pear reportedly marked Islam's appointment with an e-mail to staff mixing praise with wryly noting his qualities as 'a dedicated follower of fashion' and his 'impressive' ability 'to match editorial assignments - to Manchester, Milan or Munich - with Man United matches.' Ooo, get her. According to some louse of no importance at the Gruniad Morning Star, the e-mail ended with 'an unflattering reference' to Islam's new workplace: 'congratulations, Faisal, we wish you well. At Fraggle Rock.'

The ABC Family channel has called time on controversial pilot Alice Of Arabia following widespread condemnation of the show's premise, which had been accused of racial and cultural stereotyping. The project, which was greenlit just last week, was to centre on 'a rebellious American teenage girl' who is kidnapped by her Saudi Arabian family. Writer Brooke Eickmeier scripted the pilot while working as a US army cryptologic linguist. Following an enormous backlash on social media, Buzzfeed obtained an early draft and claimed that the script as 'exactly what critics feared.' The Council on American-Islamic Relations had requested a meeting with ABC representatives last week. 'We are concerned that, given media references to the main character "surviving life behind the veil", the pilot and any resulting series may engage in stereotyping that can lead to things like bullying of Muslim students,' said CAIR-LA executive director Hussam Ayloush. 'We urge ABC Family Channel to meet with representatives of the Muslim and Arab American communities to discuss this important issue.' Following the uproar, ABC issued a statement announcing that Alice Of Arabia would not go ahead. 'The current conversation surrounding our pilot was not what we had envisioned, and is certainly not conducive to the creative process, so we've decided not to move forward with this project,' they said.

The Gruniad reports that this week we will be told the name of the BBC's new head of human resources (apparently an outsider), replacing Lucy Adams, who decided to move on after getting caught up in the row over humongous pay-offs.
A woman who was an extra in the James Bond movie Octopussy has told a court that she kicked Max Clifford 'between the legs, really hard' after he pushed her on to a sofa and tried to kiss her. One imagines that made him shaken. And not a little bit stirred into the bargain. The woman claimed that the publicist gave her money to buy 'sexy lingerie', and then took pictures of her wearing it, before telling her that she had been accepted for a role in a Charles Bronson film. He then 'put his hands all over' her, she told Southwark Crown Court. Clifford denies eleven counts of indecent assault. The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, told the court that the incident happened in the early 1980s when she was twenty. She said that she had changed into the underwear Clifford had instructed her to buy and he then took photos of her in his London office. But, she said, she soon realised that 'things weren't right at all' when she saw that he was not using a professional camera. She claimed he asked her to 'sit with her legs apart' and she had 'become frightened' and refused. She then said that she got dressed and Clifford emerged from his office with a phone, saying Charles Bronson was on the line and had agreed to give her a film role. She spoke to the man on the phone, whom, she noted, 'had an American accent' and he confirmed that she had the part. After thw phone conversation the woman said Clifford had 'lunged' at her, pushing her on to a sofa and trying to kiss and fondle her. 'I got very frightened,' she said, adding that it was at this point she kicked him, 'really hard', in the plums before 'running away.' She told the court that she had never spoken to 'the real Charles Bronson' and that there had been no more communication about the alleged part in the alleged film. She was later successful in gaining an extra role in the film Octopussy, she said. The court heard that while working on that film she had told 'several people' about her alleged experiences with Clifford, including Barbara Broccoli, the daughter of the Bond franchise producer Cubby Broccoli. Ms Broccoli - who is now, herself, responsible for the franchise - also gave evidence in court. She said that the casting director on Octopussy did have some contact with Clifford about the film, but Broccoli herself never met him. The trial has previously heard that Clifford claimed to represent Cubby Broccoli and that he had told one alleged victim she would have to sleep with the producer to be in one of his films. Giving evidence on Monday, Ms Broccoli said she did not believe that Clifford knew her late father. 'As far as I know he did not know him,' she told the jury. Clifford, from Hersham, denies eleven counts of indecent assault - relating to seven alleged victims aged from fourteen to twenty - between 1966 and 1984. The trial extremely continues.

The former comedian Jimmy Tarbuck has been released without charge after his arrest over an allegation of child sex abuse dating back to the 1970s. Tarby was arrested in Kingston upon Thames in April last year. North Yorkshire Police said the seventy four-year-old was arrested after information was passed to them by Metropolitan Police officers. The force said that a decision had been made not to proceed with the case 'following a detailed investigation.'

The frontman of the heavy metal band Gwar, Dave Brockie, has been found dead at his home in the US at the age of fifty. Officers were called to a home in Richmond, Virginia, on Sunday evening to a report of a dead person, said Dionne Waugh, a spokesperson for local police. When police arrived, Brockie was found dead inside the home. Waugh said that the medical examiner's officer would determine the cause of death but foul play is not suspected. 'Dave was one of the funniest, smartest, most creative and energetic persons I've known,' former Gwar bassist Mike Bishop told Richmond's Style Weekly newspaper. 'He was brash sometimes, always crass, irreverent, he was hilarious in every way. But he was also deeply intelligent and interested in life, history, politics and art.'
And finally, the world's only risible celebrity couple made entirely of hummus, Coldplay's resident boring cocksplash Chris Martin and his even more boring missus, Gwyneth Paltrow, have reportedly decided to split (or 'consciously uncouple', as they pretentiously call it in a press release) after ten years of, ahem, 'coupling'. A spokesperson for the pair later claimed that the split had been due to 'insufferable similarities'. Or something. Of course, it's not very nice to giggle at the misfortunes of others. However, there are exceptions and those two full-of-their-own-importance cheb-ends are, definitely, two of them. It's their children - Apple and Moses - that this blogger feels particularly sorry for. I mean, imagine getting lumbered with names like that, dear blog reader.

Keith Telly Topping's A To Z Of Groovy Tunes reaches W, dear blog reader. W, of course, is for Jah Wobble.