Archive for the ‘Television’ Category

Pinewood

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

It’s 8 AM, and I’m on a train to… Uxbridge? Oh. Somewhere in Buckinghamshire. I’m going to Pinewood Studios. How exciting! This is a reasonably late start for production, I know, but I’m still a bit bleary.

I’m working as a production runner on the third series of The IT Crowd. Having never been to Pinewood before it’s become something of a myth in my brain, populated with celebrities suckling on peeled grapes in their house-sized trailers while the teamsters smoke cigarettes outside enormous corrugated soundstage doors and buggies maniacally zoom directors from office to set.

I’m not far off.

Well. I am. But it’s a nebulous sprawl of a place, that’s a fact, and everyone still seems to be buzzing from having the latest 007 production in residence. Currently the big man on campus is Prince Of Persia and a lot of the supporting artists I talk to have worked on that as well.

I get through to lunch, and realize I’m having a blast. Pinewood is FUN, I think to myself, grinning like a lunatic as I sprint across a car-park trying not to slosh any of the six coffees I’m juggling over my skinny wrists. Then I stop grinning, because I look like a lunatic. But still. I don’t know if I really expected to have fun!
Because:
a) The last time I was on a multi-camera TV set was as an actor, and the runners never really looked like they were enjoying themselves too much, all frazzled eyes as they frantically checked their pockets for the last receipt they might have forgotten to get and furiously scribbled down dinner orders.

b) Most of us have been there, and while obviously as much an integral part of the structure as any other on-set job, I think it’s fair to say that being a runner is, well, a bit mindless.
Sometimes mindless is nice, and thankfully one is manic enough not to worry about it, or even to concoct this blog, which is scribbled on the long train back from Uxbridge after an even longer day (14 hours? I think?). Hence the scatter-brain. Here’s to sleep, and here’s to next time.

Alex

Podcast now available: “How To Make The Most From your Brilliant TV Idea”

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Back in May we ran a great TV event designed to help you protect your TV ideas.

It was held at 01 Zero-one in conjunction with Own-It and the speakers were Robert Lands, Head of IP Media, Finers Stephens Innocent LLP and Sarah Edwards, Head of Entertainment Development, Talkback Thames. The compere was yours truly.

It was a fantastic event, full of lively discussion and debate! The podcast is now available in two parts – here and here.

Please take a listen and let me know your thoughts, opinions, etc. We’d love to do similar events in the future but we need YOUR feedback

Cheers

Tom S

Losing Touch With Reality

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

A casual Monday or so back I was happily fulfilling that nauseating north-west London stereotype by flicking apathetically through the pages of the media section of The Guardian, when I leafed upon an article that asked respectable television honchos whether The Apprentice should continue after its current season. The jury was hung – two yes, two no. My response was immediately: who cares? (more…)

Documentarians Unite!

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

There’s something mysterious about the word documentary. Often, when people hear it, a little lever is pulled in their brain – the big red one that goes from “on” to “off”. Even an ostensible film fanatic will often start to droop his eyelids at the mention of Errol Morris or Nick Broomfield. The only one to elicit any response is Michael Moore but the man is so hugely divisive that one can’t help but have an opinion, though, hey, at least he re-popularised the form.

This, I have decided, with a Charlie-Brooker-esque gruffness, is an outrage. From whence did this stereotype emerge? Who, what or when is responsible for defaming this intricate, subtle, and varied art? Perhaps it’s television’s fault. We so associate documentary as a televisual form (read: the news) that perhaps it’s no surprise the mode in which we consume television is the same position assumed when people begin discussing documentary: neck loose, torso slouched, seas of flab rolling over a taut belt, legs thrust out at curious angles and a hand creeping subliminally towards the no-no bits. (more…)

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