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Here’s the sets of Friends recreated in East London for #FriendsFest

Another TV-related art exhibition opening this week is FriendsFest, which is being organised by Comedy Central UK to celebrate – oh kill me now – the 21st anniversary of the first episode of Friends airing. It sold out within 13 minutes of tickets going on sale and it’s closing on Sunday, so there’s no point my telling you how to get there, etc, but I’ll just let you know what you’re missing out on.

They’ve recreated the sets. They even built a fully moving, life-like Gunther.

In the kitchen of Monica's apartment

Central Perk

Gunther in Central Perk

Gunther looking quizzical

[via]

US TV

Review: The Bastard Executioner 1×1-1×2 (US: FX)

In the US: Tuesdays, 10pm, FX

The ‘Renaissance Fair’ is a curious US phenomenon, the origin of which is unclear. A popular holiday-weekend form of entertainment all over the country, the Renaissance fair has nothing to do with the Italian Renaissance, offering instead a melange of earlier British medieval history that arrives in the present day via Mark Twain’s A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur’s Court and the Errol Flynn Robin Hood, taking in jesters going ‘hey nonny nonny’, knights in shining armour, dragons and random fairground attractions along the way.

But fair enough. It’s the US. The average European would find it hard to name most US presidents of the 19th century, let alone know the difference between the Roanoake and Jamestown colonies. Let’s not quibble too much over it and we can always take the kids to the Excalibur Hotel in Las Vegas and enjoy a permanent Renaissance Fair if we want.

The problem is when you get something like The Bastard Executioner, Kurt “Sons of Anarchy” Sutter’s latest show on FX. Allegedly set in the early 14th century in Wales during the reign of Edward II (US readers: that’s the wimpy gay one in Braveheart), it sees one man lead a rebellion of the Welsh peasants against the evil English baron who’s oppressing the masses.

And while The Bastard Executioner would very much like to be a rousing, gritty historical drama, it is instead pretty much a Renaissance Fair on TV.

Continue reading “Review: The Bastard Executioner 1×1-1×2 (US: FX)”

UK TV

The TV Times photo exhibition is now open. Literally

Bear with me children and foreigners as we take a quick journey into the weird British past.

Back in the day, we only had three TV channels – four once Channel 4 and S4C arrived in the early 80s. You’d have thought that would make it easy to know what was going to be on television, but it wasn’t. Television was analogue and not digital so there were no EPGs. We had phones, but they weren’t mobile and they certainly didn’t have Internet connections. And while we did still read newspapers in those days, that only had that day’s listings. Next week? No chance.

So when we wanted to know what was on television some point in the near future, we had to buy a listings magazine. You can still find those in newsagents if you look hard. The unusual thing was there was only two: Radio Times and TV Times. Despite the titles, both did TV listings. However, the Radio Times did radio, BBC1 and BBC2, and TV Times did ITV and Channel 4. If you wanted to know what was on all four channels, you had to buy both magazines.

Odd, hey.

Still, with a captive market of tens of millions of viewers and not much television to actually list, both Radio Times and TV Times could not only include halfway decent, intelligent editorial, they also could get the important and famous to appear in their pages – and could pay top photographers to capture their likenesses.

All of this preamble is because TV Times is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year and if you’re in London and happen to be around the Blue Fin building near Blackfriars, from today you’ll be privy to an unusual open air celebration – 60 of the best photographs to have appeared over the years in TV Times are on display around the building. Here’s a few I captured this morning, but you can get a complete listing and audio guide over on the What’s On TV website.

The exhibition is going to be running until 18th October, so you’ve still got plenty of time to catch it.

TV Times @ 60 - The Avengers

TV Times @ 60 - Morecambe and Wise

TV Times @ 60 - Quentin Crisp and Oliver Reed