Thursday, 18 October 2018
1119 Empire of the Censors
First viewed : 28 May 1995
This was a two-part documentary series on the history of censorship of film and video in Britain with clips from infamous censor-bait such as Ken Russell's The Devils ( above ).
Tuesday, 9 October 2018
1118 The Politician's Wife
First viewed : 16 May 1995
This dark three-part drama on Channel Four was written by Paula Milne. It starred Juliet Stevenson as Flora Matlock, the wife of a Tory minister who schemes to avenge herself on her philandering husband Duncan ( Trevor Eve) and also her father ( Frederick Treves ) who's been covering up his affair with a researcher ( Minnie Driver ). The series pushed the boat out with its sex scenes including Duncan sodomising Flora and Flora masturbating in the lingerie he's bought for his mistress. The series concluded with Flora successfully supplanting Duncan as an MP with him being packed off to obscurity in Brussels.
Milne's follow-up series, though with none of the same characters, The Politician's Husband was shown on BBC Two in 2013.
Monday, 8 October 2018
1117 The Governor
First viewed : 14 May 1995
This series was the brainchild of Prime Suspect creator Lynda La Plante and had a similar theme of a woman in power battling against male prejudice. Beanpole actress Janet McTeer played Helen Hewitt, the new governor of a men's prison where a riot has just occurred, following which a notorious sex offender is discovered dead in his cell. Derek Martin played her resistant deputy who is covering up the connivance of some of the officers in the man's death.
The pilot episode began with explosive scenes from the riot and there was plenty more blood and violence to come. Both Mum and I felt it was a bit over the top and didn't continue with the series which ran for two seasons ( 12 episodes overall ).
Sunday, 7 October 2018
1116 Glam Rock Top 10
First viewed : 8 May 1995
This was the first - by some distance- of Channel Four's Top Ten nostalgia shows that I enjoyed greatly. It was presented in deliberately over-the-top Smashie and Nicey style by Tony Blackburn and Alan Freeman. The ranking was based on success in the UK singles chart by acts the producers considered to be glam. There were a couple of contentious issues there. One was the inclusion of the Bay City Rollers, a bubblegum pop act that were contemporaneous with glam rock but not usually considered to be part of it. The second was the exclusion of David Bowie and Roxy Music, mentioned as being influences on glam but regarded as too significant to be lumped in with the likes of Mud and Alvin Stardust.
Each act was awarded a short film, narrated by Dani Behr and combining archive and contemporary footage with interviews with the survivors. The most memorable of these was the feature on The Sweet. For casual viewers, the appearance of the decrepit Brian Connolly, shaking and slurring his words, came as a considerable shock , especially when compared to the likes of Alice Cooper or Noddy Holder who'd looked after themselves. The latter made me laugh when he said he'd left Slade to do something different followed by footage of him spinning glam rock singles for a local radio show. That's not exactly a leap in the dark, Nod !
Saturday, 6 October 2018
1115 Without Walls
First viewed : Uncertain
Without Walls was a Channel 4 documentary strand covering the arts in a loose sense and confusingly was usually split into two unconnected sub-strands of half an hour each. One of these sub-strands went under the heading of J'accuse and allowed a media personality to sound off about their pet hate. It's one of these that I first recall watching
J'accuse : Manchester United ( 4 April 1995 )
This one had Spurs-supporting journalist and author Hunter Davies sounding off about the over-commercialisation of football with the attack focused on the most successful club at exploiting its brand, Manchester United. I suspect one of my regular readers might beg to differ but Davies put a well-argued case together with some juicy examples including a coach journey with a bunch of glory-hunters from North Devon who brushed off his question about why they weren't supporting Exeter City that day as ridiculous. Unsurprisingly, the club's damage limitation exercise following the then-recent Cantona incident was covered.
Also unsurprisingly, the programme itself came under fierce attack. I read one review ( which I think must have been in the Sunday Telegraph ) from a presumably United-supporting critic which attacked Davies in such coarse, childish terms it read like he must be one of Newman and Baddiel's history professors. I think the opening sentence was something like "It's amazing when someone with truly unpleasant facial features chooses to put themselves in front of the TV cameras".
Nearly a quarter of a century on, the truth of Davies's critique of football at the top level - not just relating to United of course - is so self-evident that it seems amazing that there was ever a time when someone had to point it out.
My Generation : The Troggs ( 4 April 1995 )
Davies's polemic was followed by an uncontroversial biography of The Troggs in the My Generation sub- strand which looked at bands from the sixties. It featured interviews with all the ex-members including singer Reg Presley, suddenly wealthy from the royalties on Wet Wet Wet's cover of Love Is All Around and just in the nick of time as we're on the brink of the download era here ( one of the other episodes in the J'accuse series was Janet Street-Porter's denunciation of the internet before most of us were even aware of it ).
Friday, 5 October 2018
1114 Bookmark
First viewed : Uncertain
This documentary series ran on Saturday nights on BBC Two between 1983 and 1999 and focused on stories from the world of literature. It was not a magazine programme and concentrated on one author at a time. It was often tied in with a film adaptation shown on the same weekend.
The first one I definitely recall is :
Charlotte Bronte Unmasked ( 1 April 1995 )
The Brontes have always been of interest to me, partly because I enjoyed studying Wuthering Heights for my A Levels and partly because Bronte Country wasn't far away from where I lived and I often went walking there. This programme looked at two recent developments in the story , the possible identification of a photograph as Charlotte Bronte, the only one of the sisters to have made it into the photographic era and a controversial new biography of the sisters by Juliet Barker ( who lived even closer to me and had a common acquaintance ).
The photograph has been conclusively identified as being Charlotte's friend Ellen Nussey to the disappointment of the zealots in the Bronte Society, some of whom were interviewed in the programme. I recall some delusional old bat talking about how the spirit of Charlotte directed her own musings, When Barker said " I think we're all a little scared of the Bronte Society !" , you could see what she meant. Mind you, some of her own theories are highly questionable; there's not a shred of evidence for her claim that Charlotte destroyed a second novel by Emily after her death.
Thursday, 4 October 2018
1113 You've Been Framed
First viewed : Uncertain
Like Mr Bean , this started in 1990 and I've no idea when I first caught it. You've Been Framed was basically It'll Be Alright on the Night with the crucial difference that the content was supplied by the viewing public, empowered by the camcorder boom, rather than the ITV archivists. In that respect the show was genuinely groundbreaking. Jeremy Beadle was the first host, followed by Emmerdale actress Lisa Reilly, Jonathan Wilkes and since 2004, a voiceover by Harry Hill.
It was pretty lowbrow stuff, lots of pet antics and babies falling over, but it would be hard for anyone to avoid finding something amusing. There was also an increasing suspicion that some of it was staged, the mishap being well signposted.
You might have thought that YouTube would have put it to bed by now but it's still going strong and we're now onto series 30.
Wednesday, 3 October 2018
1112 Mr Bean
First viewed : Uncertain
I really have no idea when I first saw an episode of Rowan Atkinson's near-silent comedy vehicle which first broadcast in 1990. This is partly explained by the very sporadic sequence in which it was broadcast with the fourteen episodes spread out over five years between 1990 and 1995. A fifteenth was made in 1995 but not broadcast until the noughties for reasons which are not readily apparent. Frequent guest star appearances as Bean, two films ( the second worth watching for the gorgeous Emma des Caunes alone ) and an animated series have built on the original series.
Atkinson's Bean is a socially inept manchild who goes to strange and disproportionate lengths to solve everyday problems or frustrations. Apart from a few appearances by an ultra-frumpy girlfriend, there are no other regular characters though plenty of familiar comedy faces playing confused bystanders such as Angus Deayton and Nick Hancock.
I think I've probably seen most of the episodes now because my son really enjoys them.
Tuesday, 2 October 2018
1111 Band of Gold
First viewed : 12 March 1995
This rather daring Sunday night drama series on ITV concerned the adventures of four prostitutes in the red light area of Bradford. The series threw a major curveball at you in the first episode when the apparent main character Gina ( Ruth Gemmell ), a young mother whoring to throw off a nasty loan shark, is murdered. Thereafter it concentrated on her volatile friend Carol ( Cathy Tyson ), hard-faced Rose ( Geraldine James ), intellectually challenged Anita ( Barbara Dickson, something of a revelation in an acting role ) and young tearaway Tracy ( Samantha Morton in her breakthrough role ).
As written by Kay Mellor, the script firmly sided with the women, with all the male characters being corrupt, hypocritical, cowardly or venal. The nearest thing to a sympathetic male was Curly ( Richard Moore ), a middle-aged man with a stocking fetish; in the final episode of the series it looked as if he was being set up to be hero but finished up looking ineffectual.
The series, at least in the first season, had minimal nudity; the sex scenes being presented in a very matter of fact fashion. It was an odd mixture of fairly humorous working class drama along the lines of Making Out or Common As Muck and lurid melodrama with multiple murders in every season.
I watched the first season through but for some reason didn't pick it up again , It concluded in 1997 after three seasons.
Monday, 1 October 2018
1110 Later...with Jools Holland
First viewed : Uncertain
This long-running music show began in 1992 but I can't be sure I saw any of it before early 1995. After the demise of The Tube and Juke Box Jury, Jools Holland found a permanent niche as host of the live music programme featuring half a dozen different musical acts. The programme is produced by ex-Record Mirror journalist Mark Cooper.
I tuned in off and on during the nineties depending on who was on. I enjoyed the opening sequence where Holland introduces the acts in turn and they're all eyeing each other up. The most memorable show for me was when Chris Isaak was on and Holland showed him a clip of his idols The Shadows in action. Isaak had never seen any footage of the group and was visibly taken aback by that silly shoe shuffle - "I thought they were a lot cooler".
Like The Tube before it, Later ... gradually came to reflect Holland's own musical conservatism and it was always obvious which acts he favoured whether they let him join in on the old boogie-woogie piano or not. I understand he has cut down on that in recent series. I very occasionally dip into it nowadays.
Saturday, 29 September 2018
1109 Crusades
First viewed : 7 January 1995
Ex-Python Terry Jones had been juggling careers as a film director and a medieval historian for some years and this was his first opportunity to combine the two. Crusades was a four part documentary series looking at the religious wars of the eleventh and twelfth centuries presented with as much humour as the subject matter allowed.
Jones made a number of subsequent series on similar lines up to 2008 but sadly health issues man there's unlikely to be any more.
Friday, 28 September 2018
1108 Cold Comfort Farm
First viewed : 1 January 1995
This was an expensive BBC adaptation of Stella Gibbons' satirical novel of rural life set in a near-future as envisaged in the thirties. It had a stellar cast including Ian McKellen, Stephen Fry, Rufus Sewell, Joanna Lumley and in her first starring role, Kate Beckinsale as the young heroine Flora Poste. I came to it with the feeling that Cold Comfort Farm was a joke that I wasn't quite in on and it's strange that interest in it has survived while the rural novels it mocked have long since fallen into obscurity. Some of that bafflement remained after watching the adaptation.
I was also disconcerted by the strong likeness of Maria Miles who played Elfine Starkadder to a girlfriend I'd recently lost. Miles was cast in a few TV parts around this time then disappeared from the screen for over a decade and there's little information about her on imdb..
Thursday, 27 September 2018
1107 The X-Files
First viewed : Uncertain
I'm not going to dwell too long on this one as I only saw two or three episodes and couldn't get into it. It first started in 1994 but I don't think I tuned in until after reading a feature in Q which would make it 1995. The series made household names of David Duchovny and pale redhead Gillian Anderson as FBI agents investigating cases with possible paranormal explanations. As I say I didn't watch it much and one of the episodes I saw didn't feature much of the central pair at all, concentrating on a trio of geeky conspiracy theorists who I understand were The Lone Gunmen who later got a spin-off series of their own.
I think my problem with it was that you knew in advance that there would be no real closure to the storyline and that would perpetually frustrate me.
The series was revived after a fourteen year break in 2016.
Wednesday, 26 September 2018
1106 The Belles
First viewed : 3 January 1995
This was a documentary about the pre-eminent women's football team at the time, the Doncaster Belles. I remember my friend chastising me for watching it, suggesting I was only interested in the locker room scenes which was not true at all ( well maybe a little bit ). The documentary helped to inspire a popular drama series which we'll come to in due course.
Since then of course, the Belles have been elbowed out of the big time as the big money clubs , the likes of Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City have bought their way into the women's game.
Tuesday, 25 September 2018
1105 Kavanagh QC
First viewed : 3 January 1995
John Thaw bounced back from the debacle of A Year in Provence with this popular legal drama series in which he played a ( usually ) defence barrister. The episodes were 90 minutes in length with production values similar to Morse.
I watched the first season with a reasonable amount of interest but it never really caught fire for me. There were too many dull scenes with his wife ( Lisa Harrow ) and the plots seemed a little mechanical, with over-use of "twist" endings which often left Kavanagh looking a bit of a mug. You ended up not taking anything at face value while waiting for the big revelation.
There were five seasons and one further episode in 2001 which was all they could manage due to Thaw's illness and subsequent death.
Monday, 24 September 2018
1104 The National Lottery
First viewed : 19 November 1994
I never made a point of watching this and usually caught the end of it before Casualty . I found it all intensely irritating, the whooping and cheering at little plastic balls rolling down a track, the guy trying to outdo John Motson in the pointless statistics stakes ( "eighteenth time in the main draw" etc ), the brain-numbing inserts about good causes, Mystic Meg, the grumpy old black woman who was allowed to be in the audience every week ( or was it a sentence ? ) and, of course, not winning anything.
Eventually, people got bored of the formula and it became incorporated into various game shows with Dale Winton which we'll look at separately if we get there*.
The televised draw in all its guises was scrapped by the BBC at the end of 2016 and returned in a 90 second slot- which is all you need - on ITV earlier this year.
* There is a definite cut-off in mind for this blog but I'm not saying what it is yet.
Tuesday, 18 September 2018
1103 Dispatches
First viewed : Uncertain
Dispatches is a long-running current affairs documentary strand on Channel Four, noted for its frequent use of undercover footage. The first one I recall for certain was on 12 October 1994 and looked at football grounds finding plentiful evidence that clubs were only paying lip service to the Taylor and Popplewell Reports and ignoring many of their recommendations. I remember footage of a steward at Sheffield Wednesday sitting knitting instead of watching the crowd.
Monday, 17 September 2018
1102 Revelations
First viewed : Uncertain
This campy late night soap was made by Granada but only two other ITV regions picked it up. It went into the old Families slot after News at Ten on a Thursday and had a similar look. It concentrated on one family, that of an Anglican vicar played by Paul Shelley. The show ran for two years and would be completely forgotten now were it not an early effort by top screenwriter Russell T Davies. I watched bits of it here and there but never really got into it.
Sunday, 16 September 2018
1101 Equinox
First viewed : Uncertain
Equinox was Channel Four's answer to the BBC's science strand Horizon. The first episode I recall watching for certain was :
The Mystery of Anastasia ( 5.10.1994 )
This was a one hour special looking at the claim of a German woman Anna Anderson who had spent decades trying to prove that she was the Grand Duchess Anastasia and had survived the execution of the Romanov family during the Russian Civil War. Anderson had died in America in 1984 and been quickly cremated but a local hospital had preserved part of her intestinal tissue after an operation in 1979 and this provided DNA for testing. The tests were commissioned by descendants of Dr Botkin, the Tsar's physician who accepted her as Anastasia and opposed by an organisation of European aristocratic emigres.. The programme led up to the ultimate revelation by covering Anderson's history including previous tests and testimony from interested parties.
Ironically, the results dismayed the Botkins and vindicated the Romanov descendants. Anderson's DNA profile did not match any Romanov but did support her identification as Franziska Schankowska, a Polish munitions worker, a claim first made by an investigation by Anastasia's uncle back in 1927. Further tests since then, and of course, the discovery of the real Anastasia's remains in 2007, have supported this conclusion.
Saturday, 15 September 2018
1100 Common As Muck
First viewed : Uncertain
This comedy drama series was a cross between Boys From The Blackstuff and Auf Wiedersehn Pet. It centred on a group of binmen led by Nev ( Edward Woodward ) and was written by William Ivory, a former binman himself whose inside knowledge of local government was evident. It was filmed around Oldham and Manchester.
The casting was interesting as it featured a number of comedians ( Roy Hudd, June Whitfield, Paul Shane, Alexei Sayle ) in straight parts. It also had Lesley Sharp in a rare unsympathetic role.
I only watched it sporadically but a couple of blokes in the office where I worked were very keen on it. I had two main problems with it. One is that the comic element was both crude - one episode involved fixing a greyhound race by wanking the favourite - and superficial, a layer of fairy dust on a very sour piece of work. The other is that you were supposed to sympathise with these characters against the evil machinations of their management and the "foreign element" i.e. private contractors looking to take over the service and yet they were just as corrupt, doing foreigners and sneaking off to the pub at any opportunity. No thought for their obligations to the council tax payers who ultimately paid them.
There were two seasons in 1994 and 1997. The second followed the mens' fortunes after being made redundant.
Friday, 14 September 2018
1099 The Big Trip
First viewed : Uncertain
This show hasn't got much of a digital footprint and I wouldn't have remembered the title without the help of Genome. The series was the last commissioned by Janet Street-Porter during her stint as Head of Youth Programmes . It was made by the Rough Guide team and shown as part of the Def II strand on BBC Two on a Wednesday evening. It followed three groups of friends on their backpacking adventures across the world.
I just remember it for two attractive Irish girls, Suzanne Lavery and Amanda Brady, trekking across the Far East and looking very fetching in shorts.
The series ran for two seasons in 1994 and 1996. peter Hook's spin-off band, Revenge, provided the music.
Thursday, 13 September 2018
1098 Top of the Pops 2
First viewed : 17 September 1994
By this point in time, I'd pretty much fallen out of love with Top of the Pops, partly due to the conveyor belt of amateur-ish presenters, the "exclusive" showings of superstar videos and of course the pretty dire state of the charts, so when they announced a sister programme on BBC2 on a Saturday evening I wasn't very interested.
But as luck would have it, I was down in Hatfield for a big pop quiz event the weekend it was first broadcast and my room-mate put it on. The first item I saw was one of my favourite records , Talk Talk's Today so I was on board from that point.
Initially the programme was highly structured with a few "highlights" from that week's Top of the Pops, a few performances from that date in the past ( hence Talk Talk's appearance ), an interesting video that wasn't likely to chart and a few tips for next week's chart. Johnny Walker, always one of my favourite DJs , was the unseen narrator.
Walker unfortunately left in 1997 and was replaced by Steve Wright, a constant annoyance with his biased and unfunny comments, usually about the way performers were dressed. Does anyone remember him ever winning a Best Dressed Man award ? Thought not. The show moved to a midweek slot and the structure was scrapped in favour of a fairly random selection of archive clips. For some reason, it always seem to end with a country item for Wright to slather over. The programme can take credit for "breaking" the deceased crooner Eva Cassidy this way though her dreary acoustic bleatings left me stone cold too.
The programme disappeared for a couple of years from 2004 when Top of the Pops, in its death agonies, was shunted to BBC 2 on a Sunday night and started to incorporate archive footage.
The Top of the Pops 2 brand revived when the main programme was scrapped but not long afterwards, I acquired broadband and YouTube removed any reason for continuing to tune in.
Wednesday, 12 September 2018
1097 The Moral Maze
First viewed : 10 September 1994
This discussion show was another translation from radio, this time from Radio Four. News reporter Michael Buerk chaired a regular panel to ponder on weighty moral issues. Much of it took the form of cross-examining invited experts who were brave enough to take the chair. The panel had a fairly right wing bias and this was where I first came across pugnacious historian David Starkey and the fearsome Janet Daley for the first time.
The TV version didn't take off and only lasted for six episodes but the programme continues to thrive on radio where it has been running for 28 years now.
Tuesday, 11 September 2018
1096 To Catch A Killer
First viewed : 18 August 1994
This US mini-series chronicled the life and crimes of notorious US serial killer John Wayne Gacy. Gacy was played by America's finest character actor Brian Dennehy who was Emmy-nominated for his performance. I only saw a small part of it.
Monday, 10 September 2018
1095 The Human Animal
First viewed : 17 August 1994
This was a six-part documentary series on human behaviour from a zoological perspective written and presented by biologist Desmond Morris. I only recall watching one episode, the one entitled Biology of Love which tried not to be prurient but did include a fair bit of naked flesh and a sperm's eye view of things.Funnily enough, i did find it quite interesting but also fairly depressing learning there was a biological basis for why no one fancied me.
Sunday, 9 September 2018
1094 Endsleigh League Football Extra
First viewed : 16 August 1994
This was an addition to the night time schedule on ITV on a Monday. It was presented by Gabriel Clarke and covered the three divisions of the Football League left behind by the creation of the Premier League.. There was an in-depth feature on one club and their game , usually someone in the news such as Brighton who were having a torrid time in the mid-nineties and a round up of all the goals in the three divisions. I'm not sure when it ended, probably in 2000 when the Football League's ill-fated deal with ITV Digital was concluded.
As the programme went out late, I usually taped it and watched the next day. This allowed for careful scrutiny of the footage from Dale games to see if yours truly could be picked out. In the picture above, I'm celebrating Dale's goal in a 1-1 draw with Hartlepool at the Victoria Ground in early 1996.
Saturday, 8 September 2018
1093 True Stories : Dead Lucky
First viewed : 4 August 1994
This was a Channel Four documentary marking the 20th anniversary of the disappearance of Lord Lucan. The aristocrat's vanishing act after the death of his children's nanny is a source of endless speculation and there have been quite a few documentaries and to be honest I'm not 100 % sure I saw this one but it's highly probable.
Friday, 7 September 2018
1092 Wycliffe
First viewed : 24 July 1994
I'm surprised this didn't begin a little earlier. Wycliffe was a detective series on ITV, set in Cornwall and based on a series of novels by W J Burley. Apart from a pilot episode broadcast in 1993, I was in on this from the start.
Wycliffe, a calm thoughtful detective was played by Jack Shepherd, possibly due to his performance as John Stalker in Stalker a few years earlier. His regular cohorts were bluff Falklands vet DI Doug Kersey ( Jimmy Yuill ) who relied on intuition and the cooler, more analytical DI Lucy Lane ( the lovely Helen Masters ). As with other popular series, the source novels were eventually exhausted and original scripts had to be produced. The storylines were usually resolved within one episode. The production values were high with the series making use of the Cornish landscape in much the way Bergerac used Jersey.
I think I saw all the first series and watched it fairly regularly after that. After the fourth season there was a Christmas special with the chief villain played by Leslie Grantham using both his expressions.It ended with Wycliffe killing him but being shot in the process.
There was a short fifth season but I'm not sure I watched beyond the first episode. The series ended in 1998 when Shepherd quit in protest at Yuill not being allowed to return after a bout of meningitis.
The bits I recall are :
- A girl getting shot whilst bonking with Bill Nighy
- Local actress Susan Penhaligon appearing and suddenly looking much older
- A storyline where a local family descended from the Normans has murdered a black man who impregnated the simple-minded heir.
- One where Nigel Terry tries to take the rap for a murder actually committed by his son
- The team are helped by a criminal psychologist played by John Shrapnel. Wycliffe and Lane are very open to his expertise but Kersey is rightly suspicious
Wednesday, 5 September 2018
1091 Police Rescue
First viewed : Summer 1994
This Australian cop show about a rescue unit filled the post-Nine O Clock News gap on a Friday night. I caught some of it occasionally but I'm struggling to remember anything more about it. It ran from 1989 to 1996 in Australia.
Tuesday, 4 September 2018
1090 Room 101
First viewed : 11 July 1994
This long-running comedy show also began life on the old Radio Five. The format was very simple, a celebrity, usually a comedian but always someone loquacious, came in to talk about the things they hated most. Presenter Nick Hancock decided whether or not there was a good case for consigning the nomination to Room 101, named after the notorious torture room in Orwell's 1984. Hancock, never a favourite of mine, left after three seasons and was succeeded by Paul Merton who hosted it until it originally ended in 2007. In 2012, it returned with Frank Skinner as host and a revamped three celebrity format. It was announced just a few weeks ago that the programme was to be axed once again.
I dropped off somewhere around the millennium though I have occasionally tuned in since. The bits I recall are :
- Maureen Lipman tediously choosing one of her own sixties films. This isn't meant to be This Is Your Life, love
- Spike Millington ripping into Chris Evans ,"He's so untalented. All he can do is small talk"
- Ricky Gervais on Comic Relief "Dawn French and Robbie Coltrane telling me there's a world food shortage. Oh I wonder why that is ?" Note of course that Mr Gervais is not exactly a svelte figure himself.
- Danny Baker nominating pub food because he doesn't like families around when he's boozing with his mates
Monday, 3 September 2018
1089 The Simpson Trial
First viewed : June 1994
Skategate became yesterday's news from the moment Nicole Simpson, the white trophy wife of former American "football" star and ropey actor O J Simpson , and another man were found dead outside her home. Despite a history of spousal abuse, Simpson was not arrested on the spot and, five days later, took part in the slowest police chase in history, an event broadcast live to a worldwide TV audience. After Simpson was talked down from suicide, the most famous murder trial in history began. As the judge allowed TV cameras into the courtroom, the trial became a media bonanza making stars of everyone involved.
In 1994 I saw part of the preliminary hearings where Simpson's daughter from a previous marriage gave some sullen answers to a set of routine questions, a passage reported the next day under the heading "Daughter Blocks For O.J.". When I returned to Philadelphia the following year, it was still going on and didn't conclude until that October.
We all know what happened. Simpson's lawyer played the race card and got the majority black jury to acquit him. The following year, a civil trial with a lower burden of proof awarded massive damages to the victims' families and in 2007 a broke Simpson took part in an armed robbery which meant he finally went to jail. He came out on parole last year.
Sunday, 2 September 2018
1088 US Wimbledon coverage
First viewed : 3 July 1994
This is only in here because I caught a snatch of it in my hotel room in Boston. It was actually just after the Men's Final had finished with Pete Sampras defeating Goran Ivanisevic, What I remember it for is John McEnroe's appearance with the commentary team. He was nothing like the urbane, assured pundit we see now. He looked like he'd just taken a line of cocaine and was bouncing up and down in his seat, this after a match widely criticised as a sterile big-serving duel. When Sampras arrived in the commentary box he too seemed disconcerted by the Mac's hyper-activity.
Saturday, 1 September 2018
1087 Late Night with Letterman
First viewed : June 1994
As mentioned in the previous post I had a holiday in the U.S. in the summer of 1994. I didn't watch a great deal of television and wouldn't be able to name many of the shows that I did see. I do recall seeing some of this US institution with the toothy comedian and chat show host. I wasn't impressed finding the host rather repellent and not getting many of the references to baseball players and such. My hostess seemed to like it though.
Friday, 31 August 2018
1086 World Cup 1994
First viewed : 17 June 1994
With no UK teams qualifying, this isn't a particularly well-remembered tournament here but it had its moments.
The Republic of Ireland did qualify ( thanks to a late equaliser from future Dale midfielder Alan McLoughlin ) under Jack Charlton. Over the Christmas period I had made a throwaway remark to my American pen-pal that I might go over and watch them. Her unexpected response that I could stay with her made it a possibility. In the event, my accountancy exams meant that I had to stay in the UK while Ireland played their group matches but I went over for a holiday anyway. I think I was in the air when Eire played Norway in the final group game.
At least, I was going to be in the country to soak up the atmosphere. Except there wasn't any. OK, I was staying in Philadelphia which wasn't a venue for any matches but I expected a little more interest in the tournament. I saw a little of Brazil vs Cameroons in a bar at O'Hare Airport but that was it as far as seeing any games while I was over there. Romania's sensational win over Argentina was relegated to the end of a news bulletin with only one of the goals being shown. When I went up to Boston, the station was decorated with flags of the participants and I was able to buy a World Cup programme but that was it.
Ireland did quite well, the highlight coming in the first game when they beat Italy in New York with a goal from Ray Houghton. In the second game, they lost 2-1 to Mexico, the highlight being substitute John Aldridge's torrent of abuse at the fourth official for delaying his entrance. He did go on to score the consolation goal. They got through to the knockout stage by drawing 0-0 with Norway which. given the tactical preferences of the respective managers, must have been a footballing feast. In the round of 16 they were fairly easily disposed of by Holland 2-0.
The other highlights were :
- Roger Milla's goal for Cameroons at the age of 42. Shame it was the consolation in a 6-1 thrashing
- Diana Ross missing her penalty in the opening ceremony, a feat mirrored in the Final penalty shoot by Italy's superstar Dino Baggio. Served him right for that ponytail
- Germany going out to Bulgaria in the Quarter-Finals
- Maradona being sent home after one game after, probably deliberately, failing a drugs test
and a lowlight, the Colombian defender Escobar, being assassinated after scoring an own goal.
Thursday, 30 August 2018
1085 Fair Game
First viewed : 11 June 1994
I remember discussing this one -off drama with a friend while on a walk the following day and summing up its appeal thus :"football, walking and a decent bird in the buff, what more could you want ?"
Fair Game was a comedy drama about a love triangle set against the backdrop of the 1970 World Cup and the concurrent general election. Carl ( Jonathan Kerridge ) is persuaded by his girlfriend Ellie ( Lena Headey ) to walk the Coast To Coast Walk wth her though he'd much rather stay at home and watch the football. Their footsteps are dogged by a flash Italian Marco ( Massimo Bellinzoni ) who has designs on Ellie ( and who wouldn't ? ). Any keen walker would immediately spot the glaring anomaly in the plot , namely that Wainwright didn't publish the Coast to Coast Walk until 1973. I'm also pretty sure that the location for Carl and Ellie's nude frolic in the pool was Janet's Foss near Malham, about 30 miles south of the route.
Despite that, it was an entertaining story which pushed a lot of my buttons. I enjoyed Carl's visit to the common room at one of the youth hostels and his hasty retreat when he finds everyone singing Little Boxes in there. Carl has a triple disappointment to contend with in losing his girl, in part due to erectile dysfunction, England's defeat to West Germany and Heath's victory in the election.
There was some padding. I didn't find Marco's back story very interesting and Prunella Scales's geriatric hippy was an irritation.
Unfortunately the liberal use of contemporary hits on the soundtrack has made it difficult to find in full.
Wednesday, 29 August 2018
1084 Cadfael
First viewed : 29 May 1994
This Sunday night ITV drama series was adapted from a series of novels by Ellis Peters. They are historical murder mysteries with Cadfael a former crusader but now a Benedictine monk in the troubled reign of King Stephen. Stephen himself appeared in the first episode in a not very accurate portrayal. Cadfael picked up medical skills in the Holy Land, allowing him to act as both pathologist and detective, a medieval Quincy if you like.
Cadfael was played by Derek Jacobi with Sean Pertwee ( in series one ) then Eoin McCarthy playing the local sheriff. Michael Culver as the conservative prior and Julian Firth as his yes-man Brother Jerome were Cadfael's usual antagonists in the abbey.
The storylines were usually interesting although very obviously the product of a modern mind. Cadfael's liberal humanism was just not credible in a twelfth century setting. When a young couple confess to him that they've been bonking in the church, Cadfael's response is "Oh I'm sure God won't mind !" which was unbelievable.
I watched the first two series with Mum in 1994 and 1995 but didn't return for the latter two series in 1997-98. Not every novel was filmed as the series, filmed in Hungary for want of appropriate locations in the UK, became too expensive to continue.
Tuesday, 28 August 2018
1083 The Windsors
First viewed : 25 May 1994
The royals were soon back on the TV with this four part documentary series made by the same team responsible for The Kennedys.
The first episode covered George V, the second Edward VIII and George VI, the third Quen Elizabeth and Princess Margaret and the fourth, the family's recent travails. Some things were skirted over, the mental illness of Prince John was barely mentioned for instance. A comprehensive round-up of surviving eye witnesses illuminated certain events
It didn't come up with much that was new but was always watchable.
Sunday, 26 August 2018
1082 Inside Story
First viewed : Uncertain
This BBC 1 documentary strand began in 1989 so I'm sure I must have caught some of it earlier than
The Manageress ( 18 May 1994 )
This one had something of a misleading title as the young, photogenic Karren Brady was not the team manager of Birmingham City at all but the managing director of the football club appointed by owner David Sullivan who had previously employed her in his publishing empire. An irresistible subject for a fly-on-the-wall documentary, it showed her getting to grips with a hitherto male-only world at a club noted for underachievement. It also marked the transition from the steady uncharismatic Terry Cooper to the mercurial Barry Fry without a conspicuous change in their fortunes.
Chappaquiddick ( 21 July 1994 )
This was a special documentary to mark the 25th anniversary of the incident which ended the presidential aspirations of Senator Edward Kennedy and quite possibly the whole family.
Narrated by Ian Holm, it took the view that the most likely explanation of the events is that Kennedy wasn't in the car at the time of the accident. He'd already scarpered to avoid being caught in a compromising position and told Mary Jo Kapechne to drive away in his car. He then accepted bad PR advice to protect his political reputation with a dodgy inconsistent story which actually succeeded in ruining it.
Caroline's Story ( 1 June 1995 )
This episode covered the story of a vulnerable young British woman Caroline Beale who'd given birth in a hotel bathroom while on holiday in New York and had the baby's body strapped to her stomach where it was discovered at JFK Airport. She maintained that the baby had been stillborn after dying in her womb when a close friend died of cancer. She'd not told anyone she was pregnant.
A doctor said the baby might have taken a breath so she was accused of murder and sent to Riker's Island. Even the hard cases there could spot that she had mental health problems and looked after her. She eventually had to plead guilty to manslaughter to be allowed home to receive psychiatric help.
Although I sympathised with her plight, I remember watching the camcorder footage of Caroline with her friends and the account of her grief and feeling envy that I didn't have such attractive friends or close emotional bonds with anyone my own age.
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