ickledot is an ickle company
working and living in West Yorkshire. In Brontë
country, you might say. ickledot does graphic
design, digital imaging, writing and other
interesting stuff.
All those involved in public life, whether it be
sport, politics or the media, also have a private
existence, like being on duty or off duty. Andrew
Sachs was most definitely the latter. It’s a bit
like the guy who punched Houdini when he wasn’t
ready.
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Ross, Brand Etc,
Again
29/10/08 08:40
Like many others, I've been giving this issue
quite a bit of thought over the last few days.
Firstly I ask myself, do I have a right to
have a view or comment? Along with the vast
majority of the other 10 000 or so complainants,
I did not listen to the original broadcast. It
clearly was not aimed at me or my age group (50+)
and I would have neither known or cared about it
without all this furore.
As many have said already, what gives me the
right is the fact that I pay my licence fee.
While I've always believed the £100 or so I
shell out each year is a bargain, it is not an
insignificant figure. For the most part I
feel proud to contribute to what I believe is one
of this country's greatest institutions.
Still, I was not intending to put my oar in until
I heard yesterday afternoon's edition of Running Away on
Radio 4. Under other circumstances it
would have been just another of those
inoffensive afternoon offerings that reflect
the lighter side of life. In this
programme presenter Tim Samuels takes a
'famous guest' to one of their favourite
places, gleaning aspects of their life story
along the way. Yesterday it just
happened to be Andrew Sachs.
I was expecting a series of anecdotes from his
acting and comedy career. Not the case.
It turns out that Andrew Sachs, the
forgotten figure in all of this, was born in
Germany, and the early years of his life had him
caught up in the rise of the Nazis. His
family only just managed to escape capture and
for a time his father was arrested.
And while listening to these revelations, I felt
the anger rising. Ross and Brand obviously
had no idea they were dealing with a character
who is far more than just an old sit-com
comedian; someone who has seen and endured far
more in life than they could ever imagine.
We who came after owe Andrew and his
generation so much and any form of belittlement
like this is most upsetting.
I understand the BBC is required to cater for all
ages and tastes, and this includes the young.
But somewhere in the mix there has to be an
element of the sort of respect which reflects the
fact that older generations were once young and
edgy themselves. But then the times
themselves had an edge; one which offered
challenges far greater than in today's cosetted
society.
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Why We Blog
28/10/08 09:23
Another recommendation from Hugh MacLeod
(I’ve linked to his twitters, even though this
video argues it might not be such a good
idea). As someone with an audience of
practically zero, ickledot finds this video
particularly reassuring.
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Jonathan Ross et
al
28/10/08 07:30
Hearing of this latest embarrassment caused by
BBC staff, I was reminded of another episode
featured on a recent edition of Radio 4's
Feedback. Apparently, BBC 6 Music's George Lamb
was rude in a similar manner in a shortened
interview
with the Kinks' Ray Davies.
It might be worth investigating whether this
behaviour is part of a trend in radio humour, a
bit like what the Office did for the sitcom.
Surely programmes with such large audiences
don't engage in such antics without planning.
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Geese Have Gone
20/10/08 16:22
For all interested parties, just to let you
know that our five geese have gone! They’ve not
been seen since last Thursday. Strange that no
one saw them go and they certainly did not leave
a note.
It was great to have them for a second year on
our mill pond and we all hope they return in
2009.
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Schools Kill
Creativity
17/10/08 08:32
As mentioned elsewhere, in a previous life I was
involved in education in a formal sense, as a
teacher. This brilliant presentation highlights
some of the reasons why now I am not. Thanks go
to Hugh MacLeod for the
link.
Watched the first episode of this
series on Sunday night. Stephen Fry is a
most entertaining and agreeable travel
companion and his journey through the New
England states was both enjoyable and
informative. My one teeny tiny gripe is that
each activity, interview or other item along
the way was so short. I know the modern
trend in all TV from dramas to documentaries
is to keep things moving along at a rate,
assuming an audience with the attention span
of a gnat. But when the content is so
interesting and the pictures so great, I
would have liked him to dwell a little
longer on each exploit. The interview with
Sting in New York, for example, was so short
it was hardly worth bothering.
Knowing that Stephen is such a technophile (he’s
doing some great twitters
on his current trip to Kenya), I was
expecting to see a page on the BBC site with
clips not seen in the broadcast. Haven’t
found anything yet.
A minor criticism. Nothing to get upset about. I
will be watching next Sunday.
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Goose News
05/10/08 15:50
My neighbours and I have a feeling our five
friendly geese should be moving on by now and yet
here they are still. We seem to remember that by
this time last year, the first of their residence
here, they had already gone. They seem to walking
further. I caught them at the front of our
building on Friday, out on the main road which
runs through our village, holding up the traffic.
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Mark Lawson - A New
King of Talk-Shows?
01/10/08 07:18
Overstating things a little, perhaps, but I
find ‘Mark Lawson Talks to …’ on BBC4 a most
refreshing departure from what has become the
standard talk show format. The title says it all
really. Does what it says on the can, as they
say. No fuss, no gimmicks, no audience even -
just two people, in a studio - talking.
Whereas most talk show interviews are considered
long or ‘in-depth’ if they last longer than ten
minutes, Lawson has an hour with
his subject so the conversation can be
allowed to develop. While conversing at such
length may be beyond many of our modern
celebrities, most, if not all of Lawson’s
interviewees have performed well. They
appear relaxed and articulate. The programme
does not fall into the trap of giving people
an opportunity to ‘plug’ their latest
product, and this further adds to the
relaxed atmosphere. Often, as in the case of
Lawson’s latest guest, Melvyn Bragg, the
discussion covers a whole career, whole life
even.
The Bragg interview (repeated Friday October 3rd,
2.45 am! Set the Sky+) was particularly intense
as he described particularly painful periods of
his life - his difficulty in accepting the return
of his father after the war, his teenage
depression, the suicide of his first wife. Echoes
of previous discussion programmes such as the
famous Face to Face (ickledot is
too young to remember the original
broadcasts of this series) perhaps, but here
the interviewee has freedom to reveal their
innermost thought or not.
Mark Lawson has often criticised those who look
upon television of the sixties and seventies as
being a golden era, his implication being that
there are programmes of quality (whatever that
is) around today. His brand of ‘talk-show’ amply
illustrates his point. Hope it sticks around for
a while to come.