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"Now on
4, you could learn a thing or two down Sesame Street." Edition
number 3794 kicks off the day on C4; The Street remains, as always,
a keen advocate of teamwork ("we can play together with co-operation")
above all else. Whilst undeniably placing importance on numeracy and literacy
- "Sesame Street was brought to you today by the letter 'L'
and the number 13" - its social message is strongest. Sesame Street
features innumerable sequences of its residents in song or working together,
and includes within that happy neighbourhood different cultures and races
coexisting in harmony. Won't you tell me how to get, how to get to Sesame
Street?
"A
slice of life now on The Big Breakfast." With Johnny Vaughan
and Liza Tarbuck presenting, this show is as self-confident as ever. Of
course, The Breakfast is actually only about Vaughan with the other
components installed simply as a foil to his wit. His style is to continually
parody the conventions of TV presentation, and yet this in itself has
become as risible a practice as the hammy ticks he's roasting - an easy
opt out for a lazy and unimaginative presenter. Vaughan's eyes flutter
between the camera (us) and the production crew who applaud and ape the
anchor's every quip.
The regular news bulletins within The
Breakfast are read by Phil Gayle. Top story this morning: "Robbie's
knockout challenge gets the knock back from Liam". This is about
a supposed fight between Liam Gallagher and Robbie Williams, a fight Gallagher
refuses to step up for. Omnipresent is the insistent thud of background
music. At the end of the bulletin we cut back to Vaughan and Tarbuck,
with Gayle still visible on a monitor. "How are you today, Philip?"
asks Vaughan, consciously breaking down the conventional divide between
the implacable newsreader from the rest of us. And then: "On this
day in 1818 false teeth were patented."
Soon we're introduced to Robert Campbell
and Phil Souter - beneficiaries of the previous night's Advertising Awards.
We're in subversion mode again as the onscreen captions flash up with
bogus info-bites about each guest "Robert Campbell - loves a nice
break" and "Peter Souter - makes it all ad up". Vaughan
makes no apology for reading from cue cards throughout this encounter,
and at one point he forgets a point he intended to raise: "I'll remember
later in the interview because I won't listen to your answers. Never do."
It's post-modern and ironic into the first break: "Do you know what?"
(Vaughan says that a lot), "We love adverts."
After those adverts Gail Porter interviews
Australian band Sister 2 Sister. It's here that one sees the weakness
of The Breakfast's ironic style in sharp relief. Porter has neither
the sufficient wit or bolster to carry it off as she lumpenly parodies
a skill she has yet to master. We cross to "The Millennium Gnome"
for an exclusive film behind the scenes of Oasis's tour. The Millennium
Gnome? Having gauged the public's poor opinion of the Dome, this is The
Breakfast at its most subversive - throwing metaphorical tomatoes
at a safe and established Aunt Sally. Because that Dome, it's rubbish,
isn't it?
The morning skips on in this knockabout
fashion. Vaughan interviews a WWF female wrestler, Richard Bacon ("Am
I on?") is stoically Alan Partridge-like in his live OB sections;
there's little that fixes itself in the memory - bar a couple of comments
that duck under the guard: Vaughan referring to the tabloid's treatment
of an errant Coronation Street star: "He's earned himself
the title 'troubled', just as Richard Bacon is 'disgraced'." And
later, in an interview with Paul McKenna Tarbuck touches directly on a
past court case wherein the stage-hypnotist was sued by one of his subjects
for apparent resultant mental trauma. "Is there anyone you regret
hypnotising?" she asks. "No," says McKenna as though recanting
a press release, "there's no one I regret hypnotising."
The Big Breakfast is the Filthy,
Rich and Catflap of morning TV. It's confident, (relatively) bad mannered
and endlessly in mockery of showbusiness and television convention. And
like Catflap it's not as good as it should be, but - well - there's
nothing else on.
As though consciously
trying to provide a bridge, a segue between the garish Breakfast
and the sedate and worthwhile schools' programming, C4 runs US import
Bewitched: TV at its most gentle with the perfect tribulations
of sitcom Samantha and Darren. Today, Darren is playing golf with his
boss and a potential new client.
Channel 4 very firmly brands its schools
programmes, making this strand of programming an entity independent from
the rest of the day's output. Art in the National
Gallery, aimed at 14-16 year olds, is entitled "Portraits - with
Richard Stemp".
"In the still of night wide awake
faces gaze out from the darkness like ghosts from the past." Over
the next 20 minutes Stemp co-opts us on a fascinating journey into the
meaning behind various portrait paintings - by meaning, that's not to
say we are taken on a journey of conjecture, pondering the artistic "message"
behind each piece; rather we are invited to look at these works as pathologists
to try and ascertain information about the people depicted, their lives,
their purpose. "The Arnolfini Portrait" by Jan Van Eyck (1434)
is rung of detail, but this doesn't detract from the work's appeal; it
deepens it. Stemp highlights the apparent wealth of the couple portrayed,
"she wears a gold necklace ... their clothes are trimmed with fur
... oranges [portrayed on a nearby table] were a rare and expensive fruit."
A group of 15 year old art students make their own attempts at investigating
"The Ambassadors" by Han Holbein (1533), and their discovery
of a skull hidden in the picture makes this approach seem wholly worthwhile
and rewarding. This is fine television which should surely inspire its
target audience to take the subject further. "If only they could
speak," says Stemp in reference to the paintings. They do.
Geographical
Eye Over Britain almost sounds like as Chris Morris spoof; but there
are no laughs to be found here. This programme carries it's mandate to
educate like a clubfoot; here's dreariness for you "Snowdonia - The
Future of Upland Farmers". It's treatment of an important topic ("but
there's not a future of farming for everyone") is so lacklustre that
by the end the audience surely wishes that the Snowdonian farmers had
never taken to the uplands in the first place. An awfully dull production.
Middle English,
aimed at 11-14 year olds, while constantly in metamorphosis like many
schools' programmes, has remained consistently entertaining and effective
and today's edition, "The Write Stuff" contributed by arch-youth
TV exponent Rapido, shows the good form is running truer than ever. Hosted
by Sean Hughes, this is great fun. "If we all went around spelling
things willy-nilly," muses Hughes, "we'd be ... Americans."
This has the required amount of irreverence to make its intended audience
feel as though the programme is bypassing the teacher and speaking directly
to them. Hughes invites us all to have a good laugh at Dan Quayle spelling
"potatoe", before a quick insert entitled "Super Spellers"
which features an American grammar rodeo and a young contestant triumphantly
spelling "chiaroscurist". This is clever mixing here, playing
the Super Speller off against the vice-president actually frames the swot
favourably and makes good spelling a hallmark of credibility. A convincing
inversion of the playground rules.
There is some analysis on the evolution
of the English language taking in advertising ("Beanz Meanz Heinz"),
TV Hits magazine (and its ever present "phoaar"s) and internet
chat rooms; all making the continuing development of the English language
dynamic and relevant to today. Special mention should also go to John
Hegley whose wordplay sequences, "Hegley Does Spelling" successfully
combine funny and informative. A million miles away from Richard Stilgoe.
Hughes holds up caption cards for the end credits, making various asides
about each ("Mummy's boys!") and then it's the Rapido frog -
"Phoarr!" it says.
Scientific
Eye investigates different means of generating electrical power. Presenter
Michael Norris, with combat trousers and T-shirt over his sweatshirt,
is carefully groomed to appeal to the target early-teen audience. Though
a little too much cod-yoof speak - Norris on wind turbines: "I think
they look cool" - generally the content is good, rightly correlating
monolithic power stations with electrical items found in the home. Commentator
Claire Anderson rounds the programme off with the $64,000 question, "So
where would you want your electricity to come from in the future?"
Putting the agenda to the audience like this leaves them with the onus
to take the matter further themselves.
Channel 4 serves
the five to six year olds with The Number Crew. Today's episode
sees the ship-bound crew getting up to all sorts of number-related antics;
and as you might expect, exclusively puppets, bar token human Matthew
Lyons, populate this programme. Commendably, the Crew contains a representation
of the disabled and ethnic sectors of society which is still altogether
rare on British TV.
French Express
and The Spanish Programme will have to remain an enigma, both being
broadcast in their respective languages. The former, it seems is a social
science programme (obviously disgruntled men laying debris on a rail track
and then setting light to it) while the latter is some sort of soap opera.
Tres bien!
Between these
two insoluble artefacts there's Schools at Work and History
in Action. The former shows GCSE students from Westborough High School,
Dewsbury preparing and then delivering a travelling science show for local
primary school pupils. Refreshingly, there is no commentary here; an easy,
forgettable five minutes bar one of the students demonstrating a canny
handle on his audience when he quips that rockets could use anything for
propulsion "even school dinners".
The 1926 General
Strike is the subject of History in Action. Presenter John Mulholland
tells the story of those dark days, with illustrative material drawn exclusively
from contemporary press reports making this something of a What The
Paper's Said 1926 (even down to the provincial accents employed by
the voice artistes Delia Corrie, David Mahlowe and Peter Wheeler). Significantly,
Mulholland seems unconcerned with portraying source material as impeccable,
spending the whole programme actively questioning the press coverage of
events. "GREATEST STRIKE IN HISTORY" and "THE PISTOL AT
THE NATION'S HEAD" scream the headlines. "I'd say the papers
are doing a bit of scare-mongering, whipping up public opinion against
the strikers" says Mulholland, later going further to question "Could
it be that the government want to turn people against the strikers?"
Like Art in the National Gallery, this is arming the audience with
another set of tools with which they might investigate history. Here we
are taught not simply to take facts as a given, but to consider possible
motivations behind and therefore corruptions of apparently straight reportage.
A good lesson.
As The Spanish Programme closes
we're at the end of schools' programmes on C4. This has been a commendable
raft of programming, real public service broadcasting notably bereft of
commercial breaks.
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