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The Death of Tomorrow’s
World Daily
Telegraph
15th
January 2003
The perfect example of family
viewing once used to be found on Thursday evenings -
Tomorrow's World followed by Top of the Pops. Then disaster
struck. Tomorrow’s World was shifted to Wednesday evening,
Johnny Dankworth’s classic theme tune was replaced, Judith
Hann retired and now the whole series has been
ditched.
As somebody who loves science, who
adores television and who worked on Tomorrow's World for five
years, I want to point out the implications behind one of the
most idiotic decisions ever made by a BBC1 controller.
Tomorrow's World offered the BBC a unique way to fulfil its
public broadcast remit. It was a weekly prime-time show, so it
a reached broader, more mainstream audience than any other
science programme, and for many people it was their only
regular dose of science. When the impact of science on society
is greater than ever before, it seems bizarre to ditch the
only genuinely popular programme that attempts to explain
science.
Tomorrow's World also created
figureheads for science. I grew up in an era when boffins on
TV were household names, and my heroes were James Burke,
Magnus Pyke and Patrick Moore. In the last decade, the BBC has
created just two specialist science presenters, the brilliant
Kate Humble and the even more brilliant Adam Hart-Davis. But
now their main vehicle has been killed off.
Instead, we have Best Inventions
presented by an ex-Blue Peter presenter Katy Hill and ex-Raw
Sex drummer Rowland Rivron, who are perfectly respectable
presenters but whose passion for science seems to be on a par
with the average hippy dippy crystal healer.
There are also some less obvious
consequences of junking Tomorrow's World. The programme was an
ideas generator, pioneering concepts such as mass experiments
(Megalab and Live Lab) and producing items that regularly
developed into full length documentaries.
The programme was also a training
ground. Making a short film is relatively easy, but making a
good one was one of the toughest jobs in TV. Making a five
minute film was also a stepping stone towards full length
documentary film-making. I and dozens of other people learnt
our trade this way.
I assume that the decision to kill
Tomorrow’s World was down to the controller of BBC1,
Lorraine Heggessey, although she seemed strangely silent
over the matter. The main reason given by the BBC was the fall
in viewing figures. But what else do you expect for a
programme that was left languishing in the schedules? Until
recently, the BBC was happy to champion Tomorrow's World as
the world's favourite science programme. Suddenly, it has
become a ratings flop. If this is the case, then invest money
and talent to make the series more stimulating. Use the BBC
publicity machine to generate interest and place it sensibly
in the schedule rather than make it do battle with the ITV
soaps.
But, claims the BBC, the Tomorrow’s
World brand will live on in TV specials and science will
still be prime time TV - only labelled differently. The
science might remain, but it is obvious that the content will
change to include mainly pop science and creature features,
which means less physics and engineering. I worship Lord
Winston and Rolf Harris, but medicine and sick pets are not
where science begins and ends.
I love the BBC and everything that
it is supposed to stand for. Horizon continues to make
excellent documentaries and new programme like BBC2's Rough
Science are innovative. However, killing off Tomorrow's World
is cowardly and defeatist. It appears that the controller
of BBC1 does not think that her factual department has the
talent to make science sexy enough for mainstream viewing. The
producers probably disagree.
Oh, and what ever happened to Top
of the Pops? There was a time when it was on the verge of
being axed. The ratings had slumped and some argued
that music should not be on BBC1 primetime. But then
somebody had the idea of investing in the programme. The team
was revitalised, the scheduling was changed, the publicity
push went into overdrive, and Top of the Pops became a ratings
success in a Friday night slot that seems made for it and a
Saturday morning spin-off.
The music is loud, the singers have
long hair, the lyrics seem a bit rude and I do not recognise
any of the tunes. That is irrelevant. The point is this -
flagging programmes can be saved. But only if you care about
them. The BBC clearly did not care about Tomorrow’s
World.
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