Friday, September 28, 2012

If You Steal, Be Robin Hood

Top Gear presenters yer actual Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond his very self have signed a new three-year deal to continue fronting the hit BBC2 car show. Which is very good news for fans of the show, this blogger not least among 'em. And, also, although they probably won't admit it, also good news for some hippy Communist lice at the Gruniad Morning Star and a few jack-booted bully boy thugs at the Daily Scum Mail since it will give them something to write about for fourteen Mondays a year. As proved by the Gruniad's, witless if wholly predictable, reaction to this news - putting up a poll for their readers to decide if yer man Clarkson 'deserves' his seven figure pay deal. As though that issue has aniything to do with them. To quote one of those Gruniad readers who expressed a preference: 'He's the very model of a Guardian-baiting, commerce-over-art, commercially viable BBC presenter that Guardian folk want to hate. He may be a right-wing, money man with some very questionable public statements, but it is simply a no-brainer that he gets a big pay check since he clearly brings in far far more for the BBC internationally. If us Guardian readers want their BBC4 Scandinavian drama imports, then Jeremy Clarkson is one of the folk who makes it possible.' And, another added: 'Oddly I was thinking only the other day that its been ages since the last Guardian Clarkson "hate-fest." Frankly his [sic] gets so much because he makes so much for the BBC, despite the Guardian's hard-on-hate for him, he makes programs [sic] the people actual [sic] want to see, not just nationally [but also] internationally and its [sic] allowed the BBC to make good sales on the back of this. So carrying on bitching, moaning and hating, the BBC, Clarkson and his management are all happy to see it. And from a personal point of view the more he upsets the chattering classes of North London, with their looking down their noses at "mass entertainment" or rather those that enjoy it approach, indicates their arrogance over what people "should like" and merely shows how detached they are from most people.' And, breathe. A third reader added, wisely: 'Guardian readers need Clarkson. He completes them. It's not unlike the Joker and Batman.' Yes, yes, and indeed, yes. Laugh? I nearly ... The new deal is likely to involve a substantial windfall for yer man Jezza and the programme's producer Andy Wilman because BBC Worldwide has taken full control of the lucrative Bedder Six joint venture which collects the commercial rights to the show and which has paid the duo millions of pounds in dividends. Clarkson has become the highest-paid BBC star on the back of his thirty per cent stake in Bedder Six, earning more than three million quid in the year to March 2012. Wilman owned twenty per cent and the BBC the remainder. However, Clarkson and Wilman have now resigned as directors of Bedder Six, which handled the merchandising spin-offs and international versions of the show. BBC Worldwide will increase its stake in Bedder Six to one hundred per cent but the BBC said it is commercially confidential how much Clarkson and Wilman will be compensated for giving up their valuable shareholdings respectively. And, rightly so. Records filed at Companies House show that Clarkson and Wilman stepped down as directors of Bedder Six two weeks ago. Bedder Six was set up five years ago to allow Clarkson and Wilman to make money from the commercial exploitation of the Top Gear brand, without inflating the salaries they receive from the licence fee for fronting the popular BBC2 show. There has been speculation - in the pages of the Gruniad Morning Star if not, actually, anywhere that actually matters, that representatives of fellow Top Gear presenters The Hamster and Cap'n Slow were concerned that the pair were missing out on a share of the DVD sales and income from live shows that went into Bedder Six. A BBC Worldwide spokesman said: 'BBC Worldwide has agreed new commercial deals with Jeremy, James, Richard and Andy to secure Top Gear's international future for another three years. This agreement secures the commercial future of Top Gear without using a penny of licence fee money and allows us to continue to grow the brand around the world, reinvest in Top Gear and return profits to the BBC.' Top Gear has been identified as one of BBC Worldwide's global brands – along with the likes of Doctor Who and Strictly Come Dancing – with the potential to generate commercial revenue internationally. Commercial spin-offs include versions of Top Gear Magazine in thirty one countries, a live tour that has visited cities including Perth, Moscow and Stockholm. The original show is broadcast in about two hundred territories and local versions have been made in countries including the US, Australia, Germany and South Korea.

The London 2012 Olympics proved to be digital gold for the BBC, with a record-breaking two hundred million viewing requests for shows on the iPlayer in August. Usage of the BBC iPlayer video-on-demand service in August broke a slew of records – the most monthly show requests, the most requests per week, the most users per week and the most usage over mobile and tablets – as Olympic fever well and truly gripped the nation. Live viewing also hit an all-time high, accounting for a third of the one hundred and fifty one million iPlayer requests to watch TV shows in August – the proportion of live versus catch-up TV viewing is typically less than fifteen per cent of the total. Overall, there was a record one hundred and ninety six requests to view TV and radio programmes on the iPlayer in August. The opening ceremony on the 27 July was the most watched with 2.98m requests, followed by the closing ceremony on the 12 August with 2.11m. There were a record twenty two million viewing requests using the iPlayer's TV and radio services on mobiles in August – and seventeen million on tablets – accounting for almost a fifth of programmes requested across all platforms. Mobile usage was up almost thirty per cent compared to July, tablet usage was up more than a fifth. A record was set for most TV requests in a week, fifty one million, and users of the iPlayer service in a week, 11.5m, on the week commencing 30 July – the first full week of the London 2012 Games. England's Test cricket series against South Africa knocked the Olympics off the top spots on the radio iPlayer, with three editions of Test Match Special dominating the August chart of most requested radio episodes. BBC 5Live Olympics took the fourth and fifth most popular spots. Other popular TV programmes included Parade's End, Accused, Citizen Khan and - horribly - Bad Education.

The era of analogue television has come to an end in England, after the final channels were switched off for good in the North East. The landmark comes as the six hundred and thirty smackers million digital TV switchover project nears its completion, with the Northern Ireland TV region the last to make the transition to digital in late October. An all-digital era was heralded for more than 1.4m households across the North East on Wednesday, as analogue BBC1, ITV, Channel Four and Channel Five were shut off permanently across the region. Analogue BBC2 was switched off at an earlier date. As with all other switched areas, the move means that extra digital channels can become available to all viewers, including the Freeview HD service being broadcast from local transmitters for the first time. Existing Freeview viewers in the North East may have found that some of their channels were missing on Wednesday morning. Yer actual Keith Telly Topping's Uncle Alan his very self certainly did and rang up yer actual Keith Telly Topping at some Christ-forsaken hour of Wednesday morning for some helpful advise on how to get Dave back! These networks have now moved to new frequencies, but could be restored by retuning the freeview set-top boxes and integrated televisions. Viewers in some areas may also find that their digital TVs or boxes load more than one regional service. Advice on this issue is available direct from switchover body Digital UK's website. Digital TV roadshows are also running today and tomorrow in Newcastle, Sunderland and Middlesbrough. John Askew, Digital UK's regional manager in the North East, said that this is a 'historic' moment for the region, as it says 'goodbye to the old analogue system forever. Viewers have responded extremely well and many are enjoying the benefits of digital TV for the first time,' he added. 'As with any change on this scale, some people may need a bit of extra help so we and the Help Scheme are on hand to give advice and assistance to those who may need it.' Alongside broadening the reach of digital terrestrial television in the UK, the completion of the switchover will also free up valuable spectrum set to be auctioned off so that mobile phone operators can offer superfast 4G mobile Internet to British consumers.

Channel Five has bought the new series of American Idol, the Simon Fuller talent which was previously shown in the UK on ITV2. The twelfth season of American Idol will be broadcast on Channel Five's spin-off channel, 5*, beginning in January next year, the same month it premieres in the US on FOX. American Idol's new series will feature a revamped judging line-up including Mariah Carey, Nicki Minaj, Randy Jackson and Keith Urban after ratings dipped for the eleventh series, won by Phillip Phillips, in May this year. Stars to have emerged from previous runs of the show, fronted by Ryan Seacrest, include Kelly Clarkson and Jennifer Hudson. Channel Five's head of acquisitions Katie Keenan said: 'American Idol is immense. We believe it's going to be a defining show for 5* building on an already impressive schedule.' American Idol, the global spin-off of Pop Idol, which was shown on ITV between 2001 and 2003, has been on ITV2 since the show began in 2002 and was one of the channel's earliest ratings bankers. The most recent series launched on ITV2 in January this year with an audience of three hundred and fifty thousand viewers. American Idol regularly tops the US ratings but its audience has fallen from a peak of 36.4 million for the final of its fifth series in 2006. This year's series final was watched by 20.7 million viewers in the US. Channel Five clinched the rights in a two-year deal for the twelfth and thirteenth series of the show with FremantleMedia, which co-produces the show with Fuller's Nineteen Entertainment.

Glasgow Rangers Football Club has continued its long-running feud with the BBC after submitting a formal complaint to the corporation over a 'tasteless' TV segment which, it feels, mocked manager Ally McCoist ('it's just a wee stain'). McCoist is said to be 'angry and disgusted' at the opening title sequence for Wednesday night's Scottish League Cup television coverage on the BBC. The club said that it had also been 'inundated' with calls and e-mails from hot-under-the-collar supporters who were angry over the stylised animated sequence, which paid homage to the Mad Men titles by depicting a Rangers official, thought to be McCoist, falling from an office window at Ibrox and smashing a club crest. A user on the Rangers Media forum has posted a video of the sequence online, if you want to check it out and see what all the fuss is about. The incident follows a discussion on BBC Radio Scotland show Off the Ball last Saturday entitled 'Super Ally or Fat Sally', in which contributors debated whether fans of the Scottish third division club were still behind McCoist or not. Rangers has now contacted the BBC to complain about the animated sequence and Off the Ball discussion. In a statement, the club said: 'While the manager is known for his good sense of humour, he is both angry and disgusted by the BBC's treatment both of him personally and of the club. As such, Rangers have made contact with the BBC this morning asking why they have chosen to act in such a manner and we await their response.' This marks the latest spat in an ongoing dispute between Rangers and the BBC, which resulted in the Scottish club withdrawing its co-operation with the corporation last October over 'repeated difficulties.' Rangers also accused the BBC of a 'pre-determined negative attitude towards' the club, although the BBC has denied this.

Yer actual Clare Balding her very self has been named as the first guest host of Have I Got News For You's new series. Clare will chair proceedings alongside regular panel captains Ian Hislop and Paul Merton when the satirical current affairs quiz returns to BBC1 next month. 'We've got news for you: we're back!' read a post on the official Have I Got News For You Twitter feed. 'New series starts 12 October, with guest host Clare Balding. Wonder what she got up to this summer.' Balding was an anchor on the BBC's team for the London 2012 Olympics, and also led Channel Four's coverage of the Paralympics. She was recently named as the lead presenter for Channel Four's racing coverage and will start in her new role on 1 January 2013. However, Balding will continue to work for other broadcasters including the BBC alongside her Channel Four commitments.

Family sitcom Citizen Khan has been given a second series by the BBC. Adil Ray's studio-based series comedy centres on larger-than-life community leader Mr Khan, who lives in Birmingham's Sparkhill area with his long-suffering family. The show has performed solidly in the ratings, launching with 3.7 million and a series average of three million in its post-Watershed slot. Creator and star Ray said: 'I am thrilled. This is testament to the hard work of the cast, my co-writers and the entire crew. I have been touched to hear from families nationwide who have already taken this cuddly, bearded Pakistani Muslim from Birmingham into their hearts and living rooms. Above all, I thank community leaders who continue to spring up everywhere who provide the inspiration.' BBC1 controller Danny Cohen described the series as a 'laugh-out-loud family comedy for all generations. Citizen Khan has delivered this whilst bringing new comic talent and a fresh flavour to the channel. I can't wait for the second series,' said Cohen. Mark Freeland, head of BBC Comedy, added: 'With sitcom, to grab attention all you can ask is laugh-out-loud funny distinctiveness, authenticity and great characters. I think we've certainly grabbed people's attention.'

Justin Lee Collins pushed his girlfriend in front of traffic after a drinking session with his co-star Alan Carr, a court has heard claimed. Anna Larke told jurors at St Albans Crown Court that it was part of the alleged abuse she suffered during her nine-month relationship with Collins. Larke, of Pirton, Hertfordshire, said Collins was drunk at the time of the alleged incident. The comedian denies a charge of harassment, causing fear of violence. Giving evidence from behind a curtain, Larke spoke of her night out with Collins and Carr. 'Justin shoved me in the back and pushed me into the traffic,' she said. 'He was drunk. I was lucky a man stepped in to save me.' Asked by Sonia Woodley QC, for Collins, if Carr could confirm her story, she replied: 'Alan was drunk as well.' The Bristol-born comic, from High Park Road, Kew, pleads not guilty to harassment by causing Larke fear of violence between 1 January and 1 August last year. It is alleged he assaulted her and threatened her with violence. Under cross examination, Larke denied being 'emotional, obsessive, paranoid and volatile.' She said: 'He used to drive me insane.' Woodley put to Larke that it was her idea to compile the Pukka pad notebook about her past because she wanted to 'unburden herself.' Larke replied: 'The Pukka Pad was a stick he used to beat me in the relationship.' Prosecutor Peter Shaw said the relationship was 'characterised by this defendant exerting control over her, verbally abusing her and physically assaulting her.' The trial continues.
Lawyers acting for more than one hundred and seventy alleged phone-hacking victims, including Cherie Blair and Wayne Rooney, have dropped their claim for exemplary damages, the high court has been told, as News International accused them of seeking 'windfall' payouts. Hugh Tomlinson QC, acting for the individuals suing News International, told Mr Justice Vos at the high court on Thursday that they were dropping this element of their claim because they 'did not want to prejudice the criminal proceedings' faced by former editors and journalists on the Scum of the World. Tomlinson said the decision was taken following events at the Old Bailey on Wednesday, when News International's former chief executive and well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Rebekah Brooks and David Cameron's former spin doctor - and 'chum' - Andy Coulson were given a provisional date of 9 September 2013 for a trial relating to phone-hacking charges. News International said it 'welcomed' the decision. Dinah Rose QC, the publisher's counsel, went on to accuse the phone-hacking claimants of trying to punish News Group Newspapers, the News International subsidiary that published the now closed Scum of the World. And, the problem with that is, exactly? 'We are prepared to pay full and fair compensation in every appropriate case,' Rose told the high court. But she added that the claims for exemplary damages were 'not reasonable and were not about compensation. It was an attempt to persuade the court to punish NGN by awarding financial windfalls. [Exemplary damages are] unsustainable in law, unjustified and bound to fail.' The change in tack by the phone-hacking claimants came during a case management conference at the high court, overseen by Vos.

South Yorkshire's chief constable says that his force will not apologise to former Sun editor and odious scumbag Kelvin MacKenzie over fallout from the Hillsborough disaster. McKenzie's lawyers had, reportedly, sought an apology for the 'vilification' Mackenzie had received after false accusations were passed off as fact in his newspaper. MacKenzie claimed senior officers were the source for the story. Chief Constable David Crompton said MacKenzie and Mackenzie alone was responsible for the article's headline The Truth. MacKenzie printed the front page story shortly after the 1989 disaster. Many in Liverpool - and beyond - boycotted the Sun after the article claimed fans pick-pocketed the dead and urinated on police. The Hillsborough Independent Inquiry report, which was published two weeks ago, said there was no evidence to support any of the allegations in the paper. MacKenzie, writing in The Spectator magazine, claimed that he suffered had 'personal vilification for decades' as a result of the newspaper's reporting of the disaster. Which is probably true. it was also self-inflicted. The former editor claimed police patrols have been increased around his house and he said he faced a 'physical danger' if he ever went to Liverpool. Probably best not to go then, in that case. MacKenzie wrote, 'But the people who have got away scot-free are South Yorkshire Police,' adding he is seeking recompense for 'the lies their officers told.' In a statement David Crompton said: 'South Yorkshire Police have received a letter from Kelvin MacKenzie's lawyers, which demands the force makes an apology to him. We have publicly apologised to the Hillsborough families and the Liverpool fans but we will not apologise to Mr MacKenzie. He chose to write his own headline and he should accept responsibility for it.' Yeah, like that's likely to happen.

EL James has vacated the top of the UK book charts after twenty two weeks, according to trade magazine The Bookseller. Fifty Shades, her trilogy of spankbuster erotic novels, has been replaced at number one by the latest book from celebrity chefs The Hairy Bikers. Si King and Dave Myers' latest title, The Hairy Dieters, sold over thirty six thousand copies in the week up to 22 September. Fifty Shades Freed, which is the third book in James' series, slipped into second place. It ends her dominance of the top slot, which started in April. The Hairy Dieters accompanies a popular BBC2 television series of the same name on loving food and losing weight at the same time. Its sales of over the last week are the strongest from a paperback non-fiction book since April 2009, when the late Jade Goody's memoir, Fighting to the End sold forty one thousand copies in seven days to an equal number of sad, crushed victims of society. Despite being knocked off number one, James' Fifty Shades books occupy the second, third and fourth places in the official top fifty chart.

Public fury is growing towards French IT firm Atos for their role in helping the government slash benefits. More than half all of people stripped of disability benefits after being ruled 'fit for work' by Atos were left unemployed and without income, according to a Government study. The Department for Work and Pensions, who hired the French IT firm to help them slash the benefits bill, have admitted finding out in a survey that fifty five per cent of people who lost benefits in the crackdown had failed to find work. Only fifteen per cent were in jobs, with thirty per cent on other benefits. The DWP claimed people left high and dry were given 'tailored support' to find jobs. Whatever the hell that means. But the extent of the hardship suffered by the Atos victims in the study will only add to the growing public anger about the firm and their methods. Atos have reportedly assessed patients with terminal illnesses as 'fit for work.' And thousands of victims of genuine, chronic conditions have complained of being humiliated by the company's tests. So far, Citizens Advice Scotland have received a shocking twenty four thousand complaints about Atos, who rake in one hundred and ten million quid a year from the taxpayer for their controversial work. The extent of unemployment among people denied benefits after Atos assessments was revealed by the DWP after a Freedom of Information request. Investigators from the department spoke to eleven hundred claimants deemed fit for work and found that fifty five per cent had no jobs or benefits. Thirty per cent were getting jobseekers' allowance or other benefits and just fifteen per cent were in employment. A later, follow-up survey of five hundred and ninety of the claimants revealed that forty three per cent were still jobless and without income. Twenty-eight per cent were receiving benefits and twenty nine per cent were in work. The snapshot surveys were taken between April and June 2009 and included in a report compiled for the DWP in 2011. The figures were released to a member of the public under Freedom of Information law on September 10 this year.
Police are investigating the death of a Sons of Anarchy actor in Los Angeles on Wednesday after he apparently killed his landlady. Johnny Lewis was found in the driveway of his house, after appearing to have jumped or fallen to his death from the roof. He is the only suspect in the death of Catherine Davis, eighty one, who was apparently beaten to death at the property. Court records show Lewis had been released from prison a week earlier. Records show the actor had pleaded no contest to charges of assault with a deadly weapon and attempted burglary in two unrelated cases earlier this year. Over the summer he was enrolled in a drug, alcohol and psychiatric treatment programme and was released from county jail on 21 September, records indicate. His lawyer said on Thursday that he was 'surprised' and 'baffled' by the deaths. Los Angeles Police Commander Andrew Smith said neighbours reported that they heard a woman screaming inside the house in the Los Feliz neighbourhood before the bodies were discovered on Wednesday morning. They also told officials that a man had jumped over the fence, assaulted a painter and a neighbour and then jumped back over the fence. Police say it is not clear if drugs or alcohol were involved. Lewis had a role in Sons of Anarchy in 2008 and 2009, and played Kip Half-Sack Epps in the FX Show.

Yer actual Keith Telly Topping's beloved (though unsellable) Newcastle United's boss, Alan Pardew his very self, has signed a contract extension that will keep him at the club until 2020. Pardew originally signed a five-and-a-half year deal when he succeeded Chris Hughton in December 2010. However, the fifty one-year-old has been rewarded for guiding Newcastle to fifth place in last season's Premier League and a spot in the Europa League. Pardew was named the manager of the 2011-12 season by both the Premier League and League Managers Association. He became the first Englishman to win both awards in the same season. Newcastle, who had been expected to struggle after narrowly avoiding relegation the season before, won nineteen of their thirty eight league games, keeping fifteen clean sheets.

Cast members of MTV's The Valleys have defended their outrageous behaviour on the reality show, arguing that 'everyone' their age conducts similar activities. Welsh MPs and locals have voiced their disapproval for the show this week, following a launch episode which included a fair bit of boob and bum flashing, lewd activities in nightclubs and candid sex talk. Anna Kelle appears on the series as a mentor for the wannabe models and musicians who have left the Valleys to live together in Cardiff. The thirty one-year-old model insisted that none of the young cast members did anything wrong in the first episode. 'They're kids having fun,' she told Newsbeat. 'At sixteen, seventeen, I got my bum out, flashed my boobs, who hasn't?' Err... This blogger hasn't. And he feels as though he's missed out on life, frankly. 'If they haven't, they're boring.' Yeah. Fair comment. 'Life's about being kids, living life and having fun. They're having fun and they're working hard. So what if there's bum flashing. They're jealous.' Meanwhile, cast member Nicole Morris argued: 'It's not for old people, for nanas and stuff. If you've got a bum like me, let me tell you, it's banging, so get it out. You're not going to get it out when it's wrinkly.'

Herbert Lom, best known for playing Charles Dreyfus in the Pink Panther movies, has died aged ninety five. The Czech-born, London-based actor starred opposite Peter Sellers in several films as Inspector Clouseau's irritable, and increasingly homicidal, boss. Lom appeared in more than one hundred films during his sixty-year acting career, including such classics as The Ladykillers, Spartacus and El Cid. His family said he died peacefully in his sleep on Thursday. Lom also portrayed Napoleon Bonaparte on two occasions. One of them came in the 1956 screen adaptation of Tolstoy's War And Peace, also starring Audrey Hepburn and Henry Fonda. He first appeared as police chief Dreyfus in 1964's A Shot In The Dark, a character who became increasingly mentally unstable as a result of Clouseau's incompetence as the film series went on. Lom was born Herbert Charles Angelo Kuchacevich ze Schluderpacheru in Prague in 1917, where he grew up and attended the city's university. He began acting on stage and screen in Czechoslovakia, before leaving for England at the start of World War II. He trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London before making his English language acting début in 1940 film Mein Kampf - My Crimes. He was offered a seven-year contract with Twentieth Century Fox and secured several lead roles in the 1940s, including Napoleon in The Young Mr Pitt. In a rare starring role he played twin trapeze artists in Dual Alibi (1946). By the 1950s Lom was considered a British counterpart to the screen idol Charles Boyer, whom he resembled. He did not get the same number of starring roles as Boyer, though he developed a growing reputation as a reliable character actor. In the decade he played opposite Alec Guinness and Peter Sellers in Ealing comedy The Ladykillers and opposite Robert Mitchum and Rita Hayworth in Fire Down Below. He made a speciality of playing the sinister character in a string of low-budget horror films including a number of Hammer studio productions - playing the Phantom in their production of The Phantom of the Opera - and their chief rivals, Amicus. Lom's exotic features and manic eyes made him ideally suited for horror movies and saw him play doctors, vampire hunters, witchfinders, murderers and all manner of obsessive characters. One controversial film - Mark of the Devil, in which he starred - was acclaimed both as a work of genius and denounced for its inclusion of a litany of medieval torture techniques. Sick bags were reportedly given out to members of the audience during the film's opening run. When asked about his various roles in low-budget movies, Herbert said he felt it was better to be miscast than not be cast at all. It was some of those parts, however, which persuaded director Blake Edwards to give him his most famous role as Inspector Clouseau's long-suffering boss in several of the Pink Panther movies. 'It was a godsend when I was offered the part,' he said of the role. 'But it did become a double-edged sword as people started to associate me with Dreyfus.' Lom was married to Dina Schea in 1948 and divorced in 1971. In the mean time he had a long relationship with the celebrated potter, Brigitte Appleby, with whom he had a daughter, Josephine. He also wrote two novels alongside his acting career: Enter A Spy published in 1971 and Dr Guillotine in 1993. His later acting career saw him work with director David Cronenberg in a 1983 adaptation of Stephen King novel The Dead Zone, opposite Christopher Walken. The actor once grumbled at directors who asked him to give it his best. 'It's my job to give my best,' he said. 'I can't give anything else.'

A police office has been left embarrassed over an investigation into a 'suspicious bright light' at a beauty spot. Which turned out to be the moon. The unfortunate incident was published in the latest edition of Police magazine. The PC only realised his mistake after he had called his colleagues for back-up. The magazine is released by the Police Federation to one hundred and thirty two thousand rank-and-file officers across England and Wales. It revealed the gaffe in its popular Dogberry column. It reads: 'While single-crewed on night duty in Worcestershire, a PC called up his sergeant letting him know that he was going up into the Clent Hills to investigate a "suspicious bright light" that he could see shining from the other side of the hills. The call was for safety reasons as he might need back-up once he found the source. Twenty minutes later the PC called his sergeant back to reassure him that everything was okay and that he had found the source of the light. This diligent PC had in fact discovered the moon." So, you see, dear blog reader, back in 1969, Neil and buzz didn't need to have bothered going, they could've just got George Dixon on the case. Evenin' all.

The NME has this week celebrated sixty years as one of the world's leading music magazines, but the print title is also looking to an uncertain future in the digital age. The New Musical Express was launched in 1952 when the Accordion Times merged with the Musical Express. The weekly title has been the most popular choice among music fans to read about their favourite groups or artists and discover new talent. It is also a household name overseas. However, the UK market for print magazines remains increasingly challenging, as sales fall and people increasingly get their content for free from the Internet. Monthly magazine The Word closed down this year after almost a decade in circulation, and NME itself has also seen a big fall in sales. At its peak in the 1960s, the magazine shifted two hundred and thirty thousand copies per week, but that has dropped to around twenty four thousand. Mike Williams, the NME editor who took over from Krissi Murison this year, said that NME has always 'changed and evolved' over its sixty-year history. 'If the reasons for publishing a magazine are habitual or tokenistic, then you're in trouble,' he told Metro in an interview earlier in the week. 'What magazines need to offer now is something clear, relevant, visually striking and significantly different from what is available for free on the Internet. If all you're offering is an inflexible hard copy of something you can get for free online and attempting to charge someone a couple of quid for it, then it shouldn't come as a surprise if no one wants to buy it.' Released yesterday with the cover price of £2.70, the latest NME is a souvenir issue which has several different covers featuring artists such as The Manic Street Preachers, Paul Weller, John Lydon, The Arctic Monkeys and Noel Gallagher. NME is also celebrating the most famous covers from its sixty-year history in the Behind NME Lines exhibition at the new riverside development NEO Bankside, located adjacent to Tate Modern. In the words of NME, 'these are the covers that have defined not only the artists, but sixty years of rock 'n' roll and NME itself.' In a statement, Williams added: 'Every generation lays claim to the golden age of music and culture and every generation has its batch of legendary NME covers that defines the times. For me it was the beautifully sad Kurt Cobain obituary and the brilliantly cocky Liam versus Damon Britpop showdown. For others it's The Clash and The Sex Pistols, or The White Stripes and The Libertines. The NME cover can immortalise the times unlike any other magazine and Behind NME Lines is a celebration of this. Sixty years of iconic covers that say everything about rock 'n' roll as we know it.'

On Thursday evening, dear blog reader, yer actual Keith Telly Topping was, again, Record Playering at the Tyneside. The week's featured record is also, by a curious coincidence, yer actual Keith Telly Topping's 33 of the Day. Every other sentiment would, after all, be an antique. As obsolete as warships in the Baltic. You don't get words like 'obsolete' in rock and roll anywhere near enough, do you dear blog reader? Here's Paddy, Martin, Wendy and Neil, yer actual Prefab Four. Skill.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Each Time You Hear A Loud Collective Sigh

Doctor Who writer Tom MacRae has praised 'fantastic' new companion Jenna-Louise Coleman. MacRae told the Digital Spy website that he had been impressed by the twenty six-year-old actress's original audition tapes. 'She just had this amazing energy,' he explained. 'She's actually a couple of years older than Karen [Gillan] but she seems younger - she seems more of a teenager and bouncy. She's fantastic. It's really hard to take over from any companion that's loved like Amy and Rory are, and she's just going to be so different whilst still being a Doctor Who companion. It's a very good choice from the producers.' MacRae also confessed that he had been 'aware' of Coleman's surprise guest appearance in Doctor Who's series seven premiere Asylum of the Daleks prior to transmission. 'I was amazed that it stayed secret, but thrilled that it did,' he revealed. 'It was a very clever decision of Steven's to tease in that way, because he's given away absolutely nothing but created a lot of interest.' MacRae's most recent contribution to Doctor Who was 2011's superb The Girl Who Waited, with the writer admitting that he had been overwhelmed by the 'extraordinary' reaction to the episode. 'It got just incredible, incredible reviews,' he said. Like on this blog for instance. 'I don't think Doctor Who fans liked me very much before that, because I was very young when I got the job and I think they thought I hadn't really earned it. "So I worked really hard to do something that would prove the point that I had the right to sit at that table, and then everyone just loved it and I couldn't believe it. I was so overwhelmed.' However, he refused to confirm if he would be contributing a new Doctor Who episode for the show's initial 2013 run. 'I can tell you there are some unconfirmed spots, but I can't say anything more than that,' he stated.

BBC1's latest period drama, The Paradise, set in an 1870s department store in Northern England, launched with an overnight average audience of 5.5 million viewers on Tuesday night. The Paradise, loosely adapted by Bill Gallagher from an Emile Zola novel, won its 9pm slot comfortably. BBC1's new drama was up against ITV's Midsomer Murders, which averaged 4.3 million. Other 9pm competition included BBC2's Vikings (1.7m) and Channel Four's The Boy Who Can't Forget (2.3m). The Great British Bake Off continued its strong ratings performance on BBC2 in the 8pm hour, averaging 4.5 million viewers and beating Midsomer Murders in the quarter hour to 9pm. 8pm competition included BBC1's Holby City (4.7m). BBC3's new comedy Cuckoo, starring Greg Davies, silly little Helen Baxendale and former Saturday Night Live comedian Andy Samberg, started with an average of 1.15m viewers – the network's best ever launch figures for a comedy from 10pm. Competition at 10pm included BBC4's Lilyhammer (two hundred and twenty one thousand).

BBC4's Only Connect was Monday's most-watched multi-channel broadcast. Shown at 8.30pm, eight hundred and nine thousand watched the quiz show's latest episode, picking up nearly one hundred thousand punters week-on-week. Fronted by the divine Victoria Coren, the programme has steadily grown since its 2008 debut into one of the channel's most popular shows. Both New Tricks (7.52 million) on BBC1 and ITV's Leaving picked up viewers week-on-week, the latter logging 3.73m and a further two hundred and ninety thousand on +1. Elsewhere on BBC1, Panorama interested 3.02m at 8.30pm, while Citizen Khan was watched by 2.8m from 10.35pm. Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Dogs continued to go from strength to strength, attracting 4.74m in the 8pm junction between Coronation Street's double bill on ITV. University Challenge managed 2.83m for BBC2 at 8pm, then Nigella Lawson's new finger-licking series Nigellissima took 2.61m at 8.30pm. Overall, BBC1 led primetime with 23.7 per cent of the audience share, ahead of ITV's 21.7 per cent.

Several Strictly Come Dancing  contestants have reportedly been struck down with a cold virus. Dani Harmer, Louis Smith and Denise Van Outen were among the celebrities who were hit by the illness and were unable to train at different stages over the last few days.
The Tracy Beaker actress told the Sun: 'I've come down with man-flu. I caught it off Vincent [Simone] but we've all got it, everyone on Strictly. It's crazy. My eyes are watering so much and I can't stop coughing which makes training difficult but I am still really enjoying the rehearsals.' Van Outen had previously tweeted on Monday: 'I've got a stinking cold.' Last week, Louis Smith wrote: 'Really don't wanna leave my house today feel ill.'
Former News International executive and well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Rebekah Brooks and ex-Downing Street communications chief - and the prime minister's former 'chum' - Andy Coulson have learned that their trial over phone-hacking claims will take place next September. The pair and five other ex-Scum of the World journalists appeared at the Old Bailey on Wednesday, accused of conspiracy to access voicemails, and the date was set. Prosecutors say the charge could relate to more than six hundred victims. Private investigator Glenn Mulcaire also appeared in court. Mulcaire is accused of four counts relating to specific people. The former staff members from the disgraced and disgraceful Scum of the World newspaper who are also appearing are its ex-managing editor Stuart Kuttner, former news editor Greg Miskiw, former head of news Ian Edmondson, ex-reporter James Weatherup and former chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck. The five journalists, plus Coulson and well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Brooks, are accused of conspiracy to unlawfully intercept communications. Coulson was Scum of the World editor from 2003 to 2007 and Brooks edited the paper from 2000 to 2003, before moving to edit the Sun and then becoming chief executive officer of the two papers' parent group News International. In a separate case, well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Brooks, from Churchill in Oxfordshire - along with her husband, millionaire Old Etonian Charlie, and five others - are accused of perverting the course of justice. The charges relate to an alleged attempt to hide evidence from police investigating phone-hacking claims and illegal payments to public officials by the Scum of the World and the Sun. Well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Brooks's chauffeur Paul Edwards, former personal assistant Cheryl Carter, head of security at News International Mark Hanna, and security staff Daryl Jorsling and Lee Sandell also face the charges. The provisional trial date was set for 9 September next year and all defendants were released on bail.

Ex-Sun editor and odious louse Kelvin MacKenzie, staggeringly, wants South Yorkshire Police to apologise, to him, for the 'vilification' he received in the wake of the lies he printed related to the Hillsborough tragedy. MacKenize, a despicable wretched carbuncle on the backside of humanity has employed lawyers who have contacted the force asking for an apology over his 'personal vilification for decades,' the BBC reports. MacKenzie printed a front page story about Liverpool fans, shortly after the 1989 disaster, headlined The Truth. Ninety-six football fans died as a result of the tragedy in Sheffield. In an article for The Spectator to be published on Thursday, MacKenzie writes: 'I hope that after twenty three years we can all agree on the truth.' Most of us could agree with it in 1989, Kelvin. People in Liverpool (and beyond) boycotted the Sun - a protest which continues to this day in many parts of Merseyside - after the article claimed that some fans had pickpocketed the dead and urinated on police. The Hillsborough Independent Inquiry report, which was published two weeks ago, said that there was no evidence whatsoever to support the allegations made in the paper. It stated: 'The documents disclosed to the panel show that the origin of these serious allegations was a local Sheffield press agency informed by several SYP officers, an SYP Police Federation spokesperson and a local MP. They also demonstrate how the SYP Police Federation, supported informally by the SYP chief constable, sought to develop and publicise a version of events that focused on several police officers' allegations of drunkenness, ticketlessness and violence among a large number of Liverpool fans.' MacKenzie, who says he has been 'deeply affected by the affair,' adding that he is not a victim but has 'suffered collateral damage.' Were he to visit Liverpool, he claimed, he would 'literally be in mortal danger.' And that , almost certainly, is the most truthful thing that Kelvin Mackenzie has ever written in his journalistic career. Describing the circumstances which, he claims, led him to publish the false story, he said a 'trap was sprung' when he was handed copy from 'a reputable news agency.' The story was sourced from four senior South Yorkshire police officers, he says, and 'copper-bottomed' by a Conservative MP. 'I thought nothing of running the story with the headline The Truth,' he writes. 'There was not a doubt in my mind - and I was by no means the only man in Fleet Street who believed the police's story.' And interesting claim. Certainly some other newspapers did, indeed, carry versions of the same story, although by no means all - the Daily Mirra, for instance, famously asked its reporters in Sheffield and Merseyside whether there was any truth to the the claims, was told that there was not and refused to touch it. All of the other newspapers which did carry the story - the Evening Standard, the Daily Scum Express and the Daily Scum Mail amongst them - at least, did so with headlines that made clear these claims were exactly that, and were unsubstantiated. Within four months of the tragedy occurring, in August 1989, Lord Taylor's report had already established that Liverpool fans were not to blame for the tragedy - the police were - and yet, for years, Mackenzie and the Sun brazenly stuck to their story. As late as November 2006 MacKenzie is reported to have said, at a private function, of his coverage of the Hillsborough disaster: 'All I did wrong there was tell the truth. There was a surge of Liverpool fans who had been drinking and that is what caused the disaster. The only thing different we did was put it under the headline The Truth. I went on The World at One the next day and apologised. I only did that because Rupert Murdoch told me to. I wasn't sorry then and I'm not sorry now because we told the truth.' Nice. MacKenzie's Spectator piece concludes: 'This week my lawyer, Ian Rosenblatt, sent a letter to South Yorkshire Police explaining that the lies their officers told to the news agency had led to my personal vilification for decades and that on that basis I was seeking an apology in terms to be agreed between us. I hope that after twenty three years we can all agree on the truth.' Talking more broadly about Hillsborough, MacKenzie highlights the countless other publications which ran the same 'copper-bottomed' story. He goes on to suggest a political motive for the Sun being singled out by a city for which he and the paper 'had nothing but warm thoughts prior to that ghastly day. Liverpool fans didn't turn on other media, only the Sun. That has always puzzled me. Was it picked out because the paper had always backed Thatcher, while the city had always been pro-Labour?' Simply staggering, dear blog reader.

Amusingly, David Cameron may struggle at passport control when he returns home from his current trip to the US and Brazil after fluffing a mock citizenship test on The Late Show with David Letterman. 'You have found me out. That is bad, I have ended my career on your show tonight,' the prime minister said, after struggling when Letterman fired a series of questions at him. Oh, if only wishing made it so. Shifting slightly awkwardly in his seat, Cameron first ran into trouble when Letterman asked him who composed the music for 'Rule Britannia.' 'Elgar,' Cameron said uneasily. 'You are testing me,' he added. Letterman waited until near the end of Cameron's appearance to point out that Thomas Arne composed the music, and that the poem was by James Thomson. Letterman picked on 'Rule Britannia' to remind the prime minister that Britain once had an empire on which the sun never set. Cameron showed a better grasp of American history as he rattled through Anglo-American relations. 'We had a bit of a falling out, [though] I think we are getting over that,' the Oxford PPE graduate said. 'We interfered in your politics two hundred years ago when we sailed up the river and burnt the White House.' Cameron asked to become the first sitting prime minister to appear on the Letterman show, recorded at the legendary Ed Sullivan Theatre on Broadway, to fly the flag for British business. He told Letterman he was 'shamelessly' exploiting the afterglow of the Olympics and Paralympics. Cameron retrieved his honour when asked to explain the difference between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. He summed up the partition of Ireland in a few seconds and went on to praise the Queen's visit to Dublin last year. He made one minor slip when he said she was the first member of her family to visit since independence. The Prince of Wales has visited there on numerous occasions. The interrogation turned to Magna Carta. It seems, she really did die in vain. '1215,' Cameron shot back when asked the date it was signed. It took him a few minutes to give the venue – Runnymede – before delivering a first class essay about its significance in checking the powers of the English crown. But he did not know the English for Magna Carta. Cameron's Eton chum, Boris Johnson, the mayor of London, who has appeared on the show, will no doubt be chuckling. Letterman eventually ended Cameron's agony, explaining it meant 'Great Charter.' Letterman's producers gave the show a Southern English middle class theme, providing the US audience with a guide to the British class system. The other guest was the British actor Jonny Lee Miller, who made his name in Trainspotting. Miller, the former husband of Angelina Jolie, is from Kingston-on-Thames, and was educated at Tiffin, a local grammar school. Mumford & Sons, the folk rock band from Wimbledon, offered a song from their new CD Babel. Cameron, who ran rings round Jeremy Paxman during the 2005 Tory leadership contest, took care to prepare for his encounter with Letterman. One joke doing the rounds was that Sir Kim Darroch, Britain's national security adviser who has a quick and dry humour, would stand in for Letterman in rehearsals. In the end the Cameron prep team, led by his communications director and former television news editor Craig Oliver, fired a series of questions at him. Top of the list were queries about the Queen after the Letterman team told No 10 they were fascinated by the British monarch after her walk-on part in the James Bond section of the Olympics opening ceremony. The Cameron team studied with care Johnson's appearance on the Letterman show in June, when the mayor was asked how long he has been cutting his hair. 'That's a low blow,' Johnson replied with a smile. One alleged senior British 'source' allegedly said: 'It is just a good opportunity. Britain has had an extraordinary year with the Jubilee, with the Olympics and with the Paralympics. We have got something good to shout about. So getting out there talking up Britain is important. We should never forget that we are the biggest investor in America, America is the biggest investor in us. There is a saying in business that when you want to do better you go back to your biggest customers and try and squeeze out a bit more.' Cameron sought to show a modern Britain. Letterman did his best to counter that in laying the ground for Cameron's appearance by releasing dry ice to depict 'London fog.'

The BBC has denied claims that BBC Breakfast is planning to return part of the show to London because it is struggling to attract high-profile guests. The flagship BBC1 news programme moved to its new home of Salford earlier this year. Reports quoting an unamed 'source' claim the 'light news' section of the show could be transferred to London. A BBC statement said 'there are no plans to move any part of the show.' On the contrary, 'the show is working very well from Salford,' the statement continued. 'We're delighted with the calibre of guests and experts regularly appearing on the programme.' The Daily Scum Mail - that well known bastion of truthful, accurate and fair reportage - claimed, with absolutely no supporting evidence whatsoever, that 'discussions had been held' about whether to turn the latter part of BBC Breakfast into a separate programme based in the South. The section of the show, broadcast between 08:30 and 09:15, is currently known as 'the bridge' as it 'bridges' the transition from morning news to daytime TV. Breakfast relocated to Salford's Media City in April this year, joining several other departments including 5Live, Blue Peter, Newsround and BBC Sport. The move was intended to help the BBC be better placed to reflect the whole of the UK.

Vic Reeves is to transform York into 'a magical wonderland' with his artwork. The comedian, who studied art, was given 'free rein' to design three huge light projections to illuminate the ruins of St Mary's Abbey, the Yorkshire Museum and part of the city walls for the Illuminating York festival, which runs from 31 October to 3 November. Born in nearby Leeds, and brought up in Darlington, Vic is said to have taken his inspiration from absurdist works such as Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. A spokeswoman for the event, which attracted sixty thousand visitors in 2011, said that the comedian and writer and his project team would be 'creating a new world that turns the expected upside down and revels in the beauty of the unexpected.' Councillor Sonja Crisp said: 'The scale and ambition of this year's festival will be truly spectacular.'

A man has been found guilty of causing a public nuisance after disrupting this year's University Boat Race by swimming into the path of the crews. Trenton Oldfield of Myrdle Street, East London, denied the charge of causing a public nuisance, at Isleworth Crown Court. But he admitted swimming in front of the crews. The incident stopped the one hundred and fifty eighth race between Oxford and Cambridge for about half-an-hour on 7 April. Footage of the race, which was eventually won by Cambridge, was shown to the jury. Earlier they heard from a statement by rower Sir Matthew Pinsent, who was assistant umpire of the race. The four-time Olympic gold-medallist was immediately behind the two eight-man university crews on a launch with umpire John Garrett and was followed by twenty five motorised boats with officials, police, sponsors and camera crews. He spotted what he believed was a balloon about halfway through the race and informed Garrett, but when they got closer Sir Matthew was 'alarmed' to realise that it was a person and he was 'worried about the safety of the swimmer.' His statement, read by prosecution barrister Louis Mably, said: 'The risk for the swimmer was great. He could have been killed if he had been struck by an oar or the rigging, which is metal.' Oldfield said he decided to 'demonstrate' after hearing about the government's public spending cuts, which he said were 'worse than in Dickens' time.' On targeting the race, he said: 'It's a symbol of a lot of issues in Britain around class. Seventy per cent of government pushing through very significant cuts are Oxford or Cambridge graduates. It was a symbolic gesture to these kind of issues.'

TV presenter Justin Lee Collins compiled a graphic dossier of his girlfriend's sexual history, a court has heard claimed. St Albans Crown Court heard Collins had a 'prurient' interest in her previous relationships, which he 'used against her in arguments and assaults.' Collins is on trial after denying causing fear of violence in Anna Larke, of Pirton, Hertfordshire. It is alleged he verbally abused and physically assaulted her, last year. Collins, star of Channel Four's Friday Night Project, is currently appearing in the West End musical Rock of Ages. The jury heard that to 'control' Larke, he forced her to close her Facebook, Twitter and e-mail accounts once he had read messages. He is said to have asked her who she was texting or phoning, insisted she did not sleep with her back against him and made her get rid of DVDs which featured actors she might find attractive. Prosecutor Peter Shaw said Collins began a 'campaign of abuse' and asked questions about Larke's sexual history and wrote 'done' in the notepad when he was satisfied with an answer. 'The defendant would refer to entries in the pad about particular sexual activities that she had engaged in and then question why she had not done such things with him,' he said. 'Collins would often verbally abuse her and mention details in the pad. He once told her she was riddled with sexually-transmitted diseases.' The Bristol-born comic from High Park Road, Kew, pleads not guilty to a charge of harassment by causing Larke fear of violence between January and August last year. The couple had a nine-month relationship from November 2010, during which Larke struggled with alcoholism, the court heard. Collins would lose his temper and hit her in the face, pulled her hair and 'would at times threaten to put her in hospital unless she shut up,' the court heard. Larke screamed so loudly after Collins grabbed her hair, pulled her to the floor and spat on her in a hotel room that staff came to check on them, Shaw said. On another occasion, in May last year, she was 'forced to flee the flat, screaming for help,' when he accused her of infidelity and slapped her, the jury was told. A recording was played to the court of Larke on her mobile phone, in which Collins apparently called her a slag and accused her of having unprotected sex with many men. Shaw said Larke told police she had made the recording in case she ever needed reminding of why the relationship ended. When questioned by police, Collins said Larke had wanted to detail her sexual history for therapeutic reasons and said she had self-harmed. The case continues.

One of the most colourful characters in 1970s football, the former Norwich City and Manchester City manager John Bond has died at the age of seventy nine. During three years in charge at Maine Road, Bond took City to the 1981 FA Cup final, where they lost 3-2 to Tottenham in a memorable classic. He also took Norwich to Wembley for the 1975 League Cup final but missed out on the trophy as Aston Villa beat his Canaries 1-0. Born in Colchester, renowned as a goal-scoring right-back he spent sixteen years as a player at West Ham United, making four hundred and forty four appearances for the Hamsters and was in the side which won the FA Cup in 1964. He then moved on to Torquay, playing under former West Ham teammate Frank O'Farrell for a further three years before calling time on his playing days in 1969 – opening a sweet shop in the south coast town called Bondy's Tuck Shop. 'John was a real character with a great sense of humour and presence. He will be sadly missed,' said Howard Wilkinson, chairman of the League Managers' Association. It was during his time at West Ham that Bond formed his management ethos. He would join a number of his West Ham team-mates - all future managers, Malcolm Allison, O'Farrell, Ken Brown, Noel Cantwell and Dave Sexton - to discuss forward thinking ideas about tactics and formations. After he finished his career, Bond took his first steps into management at Bournemouth & Boscombe United. Helped by the goals of centre-forward Ted MacDougall, Bond masterminded The Cherries' promotion from Division Four in 1970-71. In November 1973 he took charge at Norwich and recovered from relegation during his first season in charge to win promotion back to the top flight a year later. After seven successful years at Norwich, he resigned in 1980, replacing his old mate Allison at Manchester City, and took the club to the FA Cup final during his first campaign as manager. During his time at City, Bond was reportedly interviewed for the Real Madrid job. Bond subsequently went on to manage Burnley, Swansea, Birmingham City and Shrewsbury Town without repeating his earlier success. His last post as a manager was a short spell at Northern Premier League side Witton Albion in 1998. Ken Brown, his assistant at Bournemouth and Norwich, said Bond was passionate about being a manager. 'He used to think it was his fault if the game didn't go right,' he told BBC Radio Norfolk. 'It wouldn't be the players' fault. I couldn't quite get to grips with that but when I became manager I got the same feelings - you do have to take responsibility.' John is survived by his wife, Jan and their children Kevin - recently Harry Redknapp's assistant at Tottenham - and Toni. Bond's son Kevin played under his father at Bournemouth, Norwich and Manchester City, as well as a spell at Southampton.

Singer Andy Williams has died at his home in Branson, Missouri, after a year-long battle with bladder cancer, aged eighty four. Williams revealed in November 2011 that he had been diagnosed with cancer but said he planned to continue performing at his own theatre. In July he left hospital in order to spend his final days at home with his family. He is probably most famous for his Oscar-winning rendition of Henry Mancini's 'Moon River', featured in the film Breakfast at Tiffany's. Oddly enough, it was never issued as a single although he had plenty of massive hits with other songs including 'Can't Get Used To Losing You', 'Solitaire', 'Almost There', 'Can't Help Falling In Love', 'The Most Wonderful Time of the Year' and 'Where Do I Begin?' the theme from the film Love Story. From his first Transatlantic number one, 'Butterfly' in 1957, as late as 1999 he was still having top ten singles with a reissue of his lounge classic 'Music To Watch Girls By' after it was used in a car advert. Williams was born in Wall Lake, Iowa. He first performed in a children's choir at the local Presbyterian church. Williams and his three older brothers Bob, Don, and Dick formed The Williams Brothers quartet in late 1938, and they performed on radio in the Midwest. The Williams Brothers sang with Bing Crosby on the hit record 'Swinging on a Star' (1944). They also appeared in four musical films: Janie (1944), Kansas City Kitty (1944), Something in the Wind (1947) and Ladies' Man (1947). This led to a nightclub act with entertainer Kay Thompson from 1947 to 1951. In 1962 he started popular Andy Williams Show on NBC with a cookie-loving man in a bear costume as his co-star. Trust me, dear blog reader, when you were eight it was the funniest thing in the world. The show won three Emmy Awards for outstanding variety programme. Apart from the bear, among the series other regulars were The Osmond Brothers. Andy gave up the variety show in 1971 while it was still popular and retrenched to three specials per year. His Christmas specials, which appeared regularly until 1974 and intermittently from 1982 into the 1990s, were among the most popular of the genre. Williams also hosted the most Grammy award ceremonies (seven from 1971 to 1977) He returned to television to do a syndicated half-hour series in 1976–77. He also ran the Andy Williams Moon River Theater in his home town since the 1990s. The singer was one of the most enduring stars of the 1960s and 70s whose easy style and mellow voice led President Ronald Reagan to call him 'a national treasure.' Despite being a lifelong Republican - and, at times, a pretty right-wing one at that - Andy was close friends with Robert and Ethel Kennedy, campaigning for Kennedy's 1968 presidential campaign. Williams was among the celebrities who were present at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles on the night Sirhan Sirhan shot and mortally wounded Kennedy in June 1968. Williams solemnly sang 'The Battle Hymn of the Republic' at RFK's funeral, by request of his widow. No fan of Nixon, Andy also raised funds for George McGovern's 1972 presidential campaign, performing at benefit concerts. Williams is survived by his second wife, Debbie, and three children, Robert, Noelle and Christian from his first marriage to the dancer Claudine Longet.

The Hubble Space Telescope has produced one of its most extraordinary views of the Universe to date. Called the eXtreme Deep Field, the picture captures a mass of galaxies stretching back almost to the time when the first stars began to shine. But this was no simple point and snap - some of the objects in this image are too distant and too faint for that. Rather, this view required Hubble to stare at a tiny patch of sky for more than five hundred hours to detect all the light. The XDF will become an invaluable tool for astronomy. The objects embedded in it will now be followed up by other telescopes. It will keep scientists busy for years, enabling them to study the full history of galaxy formation and evolution. The new vista is actually an updating of a previous HST product - the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. That was built from data acquired in 2003 and 2004, and saw the telescope burrow into a small area of space in the Constellation Fornax. Again, it necessitated many repeat observations, and revealed thousands of galaxies, both near and far, making it the deepest image of the cosmos ever taken at that time. But XDF goes further; it dials down into an even smaller fraction of the UDF. It incorporates more than two thousand separate exposures over ten years using Hubble's two main cameras - the Advanced Camera for Surveys, installed by astronauts in 2002, and the Wide Field Camera Three, which was added to the observatory during its final servicing in 2009. To see what it does, Hubble has to reach beyond the visible into the infrared. It is only at longer wavelengths of light that some of the most distant objects become detectable. Of the more than five thousand galaxies in the XDF, one is seen as it existed just four hundred and fifty million years after the Universe's birth in The Big Bang. Scientists time that event to be 13.7 billion years ago. This remarkable image will be updated again when Hubble's successor gets into orbit. The James Webb Space Telescope is scheduled to launch in 2018. This next-generation observatory's larger mirror and more sensitive infrared instruments will allow it to go deeper still, to witness the very first starlight in the Universe.

And so to yer actual Keith Telly Topping's 45 of the Day. Heeeeer'es Andy.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

You Got All Your Friends, I Got A TV Set

Matt Smith has, yet again, confirmed that he has no immediate plans to leave Doctor Who. And, in today's other news, my lightbulb still works. Last month, a tabloid report claimed - with absolutely no supporting evidence other than one-line from an interview taken massively out of context - that the twenty nine-year-old was 'quitting' the BBC's long-running popular family SF drama drama, but Smith later denied the claims, insisting that he is 'not leaving any time soon. There are absolutely things I'd like to do,' he told the Radio Times. 'I'd love to go to the States and do a film, but for the moment, I've more than enough to keep me busy, and it's work I love.' Smith, who has played The Doctor since 2010, described his role as 'an amazing, extraordinary job. I don't think there's any point in concerning yourself with what you might be doing if you weren't doing this,' he argued. 'It would be madness - total madness - to be wishing it away when it's such a gift.'

Arthur Darvill has described his Doctor Who exit as 'emotional and exciting.' The actor - who plays Rory Williams - will depart the BBC drama in this Saturday's episode, alongside co-star Karen Gillan. 'When we were discussing how we were leaving, Steven just said, "You're going to go out with a bang," and it's brilliant,' Darvill told TV Choice about his final episode The Angels Take Manhattan. 'There were lots of people crying at the read-through,' he revealed. 'It was great, because it does mean so much to all of us, and I think that's right. I don't think we were being over-emotional about it, it's a really emotional script.' Darvill added that he will 'always be proud' of his association with Doctor Who, calling the long-running series 'an amazing thing. I can't really speak for anyone else but I'm so proud of what we've done on this show, and it's been the best job I've ever had,' he said. The thirty-year-old also voiced his support for new companion, Jenna-Louise Coleman, who will join the show this Christmas. 'I know nothing about anything that she's involved with, but I don't think she's going to be a [direct] replacement for us,' he suggested. 'She's a brand new companion, she's a brilliant actress and she's going to be great.'
The high court judge presiding over one hundred and fifty five civil damages claims for alleged phone-hacking being brought against the Scum of the World's publisher has disclosed that one of his relatives is among the fresh cases. Mr Justice Vos opened a case management hearing at the high court on Tuesday by revealing that Major David Brooks, one of the claimants, is his niece's husband. Brooks lodged a claim earlier this month in time for the 14 September deadline set by Vos for the second tranche of claims against News Group Newspapers, the News International subsidiary which published the disgraced and disgraceful Scum of the World. 'Major David Brooks, he is the husband of my niece, my brother's daughter,' Vos told the high court. 'I can't see there is a present problem but there might be if Major Brooks is chosen as a lead case.' Vos made his remarks before the opening of the tenth case management conference on civil litigation in relation to alleged phone-hacking. The court was told by lawyers acting for alleged victims there were now one hundred and fifty five new claims being brought by one hundred and seventy five claimants, including public figures such as Cherie Blair and Sarah Ferguson, and celebrities like yer actual Christopher Eccleston and Hugh Grant. Also suing are members of the public who found themselves in the centre of crime cases including Joanne Lees, the girlfriend of outback murder victim Peter Falconio. Tuesday's hearing is focusing on claims for exemplary damages sought by victims. Dinah Rose, QC for News International, asked the court to strike out the claims for exemplary damages on several grounds. Opening her argument, she questioned whether they should be paid out for alleged misuse of private information. Vos said he was concerned that any application for exemplary damages which implied knowledge by any senior staff at News Group Newspapers would interfere with criminal proceedings in relation to alleged phone-hacking at the Scum of the World.

Speaking of which, former News International boss and well-known Crystal Tipps lookalike Rebekah Brooks and David Cameron's former communications director - and 'chum' - Andy Coulson are due to appear in court on Wednesday on charges related to alleged phone-hacking. They are expected at the Old Bailey along with five former Scum of the World journalists, accused of conspiracy to access voicemails. Prosecutors say the charge could relate to more than six hundred victims. Private investigator Glenn Mulcaire will also appear in court. Mulcaire stands accused of four counts relating to specific people. The former staff members at the disgraced and disgraceful Scum of the World newspaper are its ex-managing editor Stuart Kuttner, former news editor Greg Miskiw, former head of news Ian Edmondson, ex-reporter James Weatherup and former chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck. Coulson was the Scum of the World editor from 2003 to 2007. Brooks edited the paper from 2000 to 2003 before moving to edit the Sun and then becoming chief executive officer of the two papers' parent group News International. They are both accused, along with the five other journalists, of conspiracy to unlawfully intercept communications. In a separate case, Brooks, from Churchill in Oxfordshire - along with her husband, millionaire Old Etonian Charlie, and five others - are expected in court accused of perverting the course of justice. The charges relate to an alleged attempt to hide evidence from police investigating phone-hacking claims, and illegal payments to public officials by the Scum of the World and the Sun. Brooks's chauffeur Paul Edwards, former personal assistant Cheryl Carter, head of security at News International Mark Hanna, and security staff Daryl Jorsling and Lee Sandell also face the charges.

TV comedian Russell Howard has criticised the BBC for 'censorship' of comedy during the London 2012 Olympics. So, that's the last series of Russell Howard's Good News you're likely to see, then. The stand-up claimed that the broadcaster should have been 'bolder' and allowed comedians to poke fun at the games. 'I was quite upset really. There was no comedy on during the Olympics at all. None whatsoever,' he told the Digital Spy website. 'There's too much money in it. The powers that be didn't want people making jokes about the Olympics, it's too important apparently.' Speaking about how he would have liked to work around the sporting spectacle, he said: 'We'd have made jokes about the Olympics in the same way as we always do. It would have been a light touch and we'd have only touched on things that were genuinely funny like Boris on the zip wire, the Queen during the Opening Ceremony with the most bored face ever. But nobody ever commented on these things because of a weird censorship. No comedy allowed during the Olympics. That moment where all this incredible stuff was happening in the stadium and they just cut up and the Queen looked so bored shitless. That was a brilliant comedy moment. We'd have been all over things like that and the Mo Farah running away from things viral. There's a preconception that all comedy is mocking and piss-taking. But it can actually still be good in a light way.'

The BBC has apologised for revealing that the Queen raised concerns with the government about why radical cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri had not been arrested. The apology comes after security correspondent Frank Gardner told BBC Radio 4 details of a private conversation he had with the Queen. The BBC said it and Gardner were sorry for the 'breach of confidence,' which both 'deeply regret.' Quite why the BBC, or Gardner, felt they needed to apologise for factually reporting comments made by the monarch is unclear. Apart from the fact that they're terrified the Daily Scum Mail will get on their case again. On Monday, Abu Hamza lost his latest appeal against extradition to the US. The European Court of Human Rights ruled the extradition could go ahead. The Home Office hopes this can be achieved within three weeks. The Strasbourg court's decision means that the cleric and four other terrorism suspects can face terrorism trials in the US after delays going back to the late 1990s. In the case of Abu Hamza, he was first arrested in 2004. The development was being discussed on Radio 4's Today programme on Tuesday morning when Gardner revealed details of his conversation with the Queen on the matter. He said that the Queen had told him, in a private meeting, how she had been 'upset' that Abu Hamza could not be arrested. The radical cleric had risen to prominence for his sermons in and around Finsbury Park mosque, which gained wide media attention for their content. Gardner said the Queen had told him she had spoken to a former home secretary about the case. In a statement, the BBC said: 'This morning on the Today programme our correspondent Frank Gardner revealed details of a private conversation which took place some years ago with the Queen. The conversation should have remained private and the BBC and Frank deeply regret this breach of confidence. It was wholly inappropriate. Frank is extremely sorry for the embarrassment caused and has apologised to the Palace.' A spokeswoman for Buckingham Palace said it would 'never comment on private conversations involving any member of the Royal Family.' The Home Office also said it would not comment on such conversations. Former Home Secretary David Blunkett claimed that he never discussed the case with the Queen. 'I can categorically state that the Queen never raised the issue of Abu Hamza with me. Not surprisingly, because my views and attitude in relation to this individual were very well known,' he said. Labour MP Keith Vaz, chairman of the Commons Home Affairs Select Committee, said it showed 'how deeply concerned' the Queen is for the 'welfare of her subjects.' He told BBC News: 'It's good that she has mentioned this to the home secretary and absolutely appropriate.' But campaign group Republic has accused the BBC of revealing details of the Queen's interest in the case to put her 'on the right side of public opinion.' 'The decision to disclose this one conversation while keeping all else secret smacks of a deliberate PR stunt to put the Queen on the right side of public opinion,' the group said. Abu Hamza and four other men accused of terrorism offences had fought against extradition for years, arguing at the European Court of Human Rights that they faced inhumane conditions in the US. Abu Hamza is wanted over allegations he plotted to set up a terrorist training camp in the US and was involved in kidnapping Western hostages in Yemen. If convicted, he faces life imprisonment. The case of Babar Ahmad - who, with co-accused Syed Talha Ahsan, is alleged to have run a jihadist website in London that provided support to terrorists - relates to a website run from London which, the US says, supported terrorism overseas.

George Entwistle's senior management reorganisation at the BBC looks set to lead to the departure of John Smith, the long-serving BBC Worldwide chief executive, who could leave with a one million smackers-plus pay-off and pension of almost four million quid. According to some hippy Communist louse of no importance or worth at the Gruniad Morning Star. The new director general Entwistle laid out a plan to bring BBC Worldwide, the corporation's commercial arm, closer to the public service broadcasting side of the corporation as part of his pitch to replace Mark Thompson as director general earlier this year. The plan included replacing Smith with the BBC's director of audio and music, Tim Davie, although alleged 'sources' allegedly suggest that Davie himself is 'not keen' on the role. Final details of the BBC Worldwide changes are, the Gruniad claim, now being 'fleshed out' after Entwistle formally took over as director general last week. 'This continues to be nothing more than speculation,' said a spokesman for the BBC. 'George has expressed his firm commitment to BBC Worldwide and has not announced any changes to its management structure.' Negotiating Smith's departure is a delicate affair, not least because of the expected scale of the payout and pension. Smith received almost nine hundred grand in total remuneration in the year to the end of March, including a one hundred and seven thousand knicker bonus and several hundred thousand from a profit share plan and deferred bonus matching scheme, according to the latest BBC Worldwide annual report. Last year the BBC was criticised - by the usual suspects, admittedly - when deputy director general Mark Byford was made redundant after thirty two years and left with a multimillion financial package. The BBC has been reducing executive remuneration in its operation, against a backdrop of criticism from Conservative politicians and scum newspapers about public sector management pay. However, BBC Worldwide executives have been exempt from pay reductions, with the corporation arguing that their remuneration reflect the commercial success of the business and the fact that such payments are not funded from the licence fee. The fifty four-year-old Smith joined the BBC from British Rail as an accountant in 1989. He succeeded Rupert Gavin in charge of BBC Worldwide in 2004. Smith has a one-year notice period – 'subject to earlier termination for cause' – but, under the terms of the BBC redundancy scheme, he would be entitled to one month's pay for each year of service. On top of this he is entitled to as much as four hundred and eighty grand from BBC Worldwide's deferred bonus scheme for three years – 2013 through 2015 – which are yet to pay out. BBC Worldwide's revenues have more than doubled and profits quadrupled under Smith's leadership. In the year to the end of March a record two hundred and sixteen million smackers was funnelled back to be invested in the PSB arm of the BBC. It is thought that Davie, who lost out to Entwistle over the director general job, could be in line for another role at the BBC. The BBC is known to be keen to keep Davie and he could be a contender for Entwistle's old job as director of BBC Vision. Former BBC Olympics director Roger Mosey is acting BBC Vision director; others tipped for the role include the current BBC1 controller, Danny Cohen. It is thought that Bal Samra – who holds the official title of BBC rights and business affairs/director Vision operations – is in line for a new commercial role that could include some responsibility for BBC Worldwide.

A sixth panellist is to join the line-up of Question Time to 'tweet' their opinions during the BBC's political discussion programme. A new Twitter account has been created, which will be used by the panellist to respond in real-time to the views of the guests on-air. The show has used the social networking site to request suggestions for guests for the programme. Ideas have included broadcaster Stephen Fry and comedian Russell Brand. A tweet from the Extra Guest account this week thanked users for their suggestions, saying that 'certain names have come up a lot more than others.' Question Time, which returns to BBC1 on Thursday, previously featured text messages from viewers using the same publishing system as Ceefax. The BBC's Ceefax service is due to end in October when the last analogue transmitters are decommissioned.

The Coen brothers are developing a TV version of their hit film Fargo for US cable channel FX, according to Deadline Hollywood. Ethan and Joel Coen are executive producers on the project alongside writer Noah Hawley, who previously created The Unusuals and My Generation. The 1996 film noir won two Oscars for best script and best actress. The crime thriller starred Frances McDormand as a policewoman on the trail of two rather incompetent criminals. The plot centred around a bungled blackmail attempt - after William H Macy's character, a slimy car salesman, hatched a plot to kidnap his wife and make his father-in-law pay a ransom. Set in Minnesota, the film was notable for its heavily-pregnant protagonist and superb dialogue. Widely recognised as modern auteurs, The Coen brothers' other films include No Country for Old Men, Miller's Crossing, The Big Lebowski and Brother, Where Art Thou? They won a one million dollar international award last year for 'a creative partnership unique in the history of film-making.' They were given the Dan David Prize - awarded to people who have made 'an outstanding contribution to humanity' - at Tel Aviv University in Israel.

Rolling Stones guitarist Rockin' Ronnie Wood and his ex-wife Jo Wood are auctioning off their shared collection of art and band memorabilia. The couple's divorce was finalised last year after twenty four years of marriage, following their separation in 2008. Tour clothing and a custom-painted Fender Stratocaster depicting a Stones recording session, are among the items going under the hammer on 27 October. Darren Julien of Julien's Auctions said he expected the sale, to be held in Beverley Hills, to do 'very well. They are still very good friends and they just decided it was time to simplify and sell some of their property,' he explained. The Woods separated in 2008 after Ronnie's widely reported relationship with extremely young waitress Ekaterina Ivanova. Part of the proceeds will go to MusiCares, the Grammys charity that offers recovery to people in the music industry. The collection features memorabilia spanning four decades, from the guitarist's work with The Rolling Stones, his earlier association with The Faces and his solo career. Items include worn leather jackets, backstage passes from various Rolling Stones tours, and portraits of Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, and Bob Dylan. Antiques, furniture and art from the Woods' former home in Surrey will also be included in the forthcoming sale. An Erard harp is expected to raise up to five thousand dollars, while a bronze jockey statue by Dame Elisabeth Frink could fetch as much as eighty five thousand bucks. Wood, sixty five, has been focusing on his art career of late and opened an art show in April entitled, Faces, Time and Places in New York. He also fronts programmes on Absolute Radio and the Sky Arts Channel that have him chatting and 'jamming' with fellow musicians.

What, you may wonder dear blog reader, is the biggest issue spouses and partners have over their significant others appearing on Strictly Come Dancing? Embarrassing dancing, awful outfits, or media coverage? However, according to big fat cuddly Fern Britton the biggest issue is fake tan. The Daily Scum Mail reports that Britton, who is set to appear in the next series of the popular BBC show, said that she had her biggest-ever bust up with her husband, TV chef Phil Vickery, over the aroma of the beauty product. 'Being a chef he is very sensitive to smells and can't stand it,' Britton told the Radio Times. 'We didn't speak for four days.' Apparently tanning is essential for Strictly so Phil will likely be sleeping in the spare room until she gets knocked out. Which shouldn't take very long.

An 'asparagus-sized' eel has reportedly been removed from an man's bottom in New Zealand. Better out than in, this blogger would've said. The man is said to have arrived at Auckland City Hospital's A&E last week, reports the New Zealand Herald. The unidentified patient was sent for X-rays, which revealed that an eel was stuck inside him. 'The eel was about the size of a decent sprig of asparagus and the incident is the talk of the place,' an alleged 'source' allegedly stated. 'Doctors and nurses have come across people with strange objects that have got stuck where they shouldn't be before, but an eel has to be a first.' The man was later released from the hospital after the eel was successfully removed from his anus. The Auckland District Health Board confirmed the incident earlier this week. 'We can confirm that an adult male presented at Auckland City Hospital this week with an eel inside him,' a spokesman said, trying hard not to laugh. He added: 'No further comment will be made out of respect for the patient's right to privacy.' And, presumably, that of the eels as well. It is currently unconfirmed how, exactly, the eel became stuck inside the patient. But, we can probably hazard a guess or two. Listen, what goes on in a man's own toilet between himself and a consenting eel is no one else's business.

Meanwhile, a man has been arrested for allegedly performing 'a sexual act' with an abandoned couch in the US. Well, it was, presumably, a very pretty couch. The forty six-year-old resident of Waukesha, Wisconsin was spotted by an off-duty policeman jogging in the Pebble Valley area, reports the Waukesha Patch. Gerard P Streator was charged last week with one count of 'lewd and lascivious behaviour.' Seemingly, the couch got off without so much as a caution. Streator faces up to nine months in jail and a ten thousand dollar fine if convicted. The criminal report states that Streator was 'thrusting his hips as if he was having sex with a person' on the yellow sofa by the side of the road. The officer shouted 'What are you doing?' to Streator, causing him to run off. He was chased by the policeman, but he managed to escape inside an apartment block. Streator's name was found by the officer after he contacted his colleagues. Police returned to the apartment the next day and spoke to the man's wife, but she told them that he had not done anything wrong. The police begged to differ. Police spoke to Streator at his local hotel workplace, but he denied that he was outside during the time of the incident. Streator will appear in court in relation to the incident on 1 October.

And so to yer actual Keith Telly Topping's 45 of the Day, dear blog reader. Which, today, seems rather appropriate.