Question of the week: what would you do with BBC3 and BBC4?

So, the BBC has announced within the last week what it wants to do with BBC3 and BBC4. BBC4 is going to cut drama, keep comedy and become more a feeder channel for BBC2, which is now just going to show repeats during the day. BBC3 is going to transfer a third of its drama budget to BBC1. Everyone’s going to have a reduced acquisitions budget.

Good thing? Bad thing? Will you watch BBC3 or BBC4 at all any more? Maybe, maybe not.

So let’s play fantasy TV controller and ask:

If you were in charge of the BBC and could move budgets around as you like, what would you do with BBC3 and BBC4? What would you have more of? What would you have less of? Would even get rid of them in favour of giving more money to BBC1 and BBC2

Wednesday’s “Avengers assemble” news

Film

Radio

  • David Tennant to play Robert Louis Stevenson in Stevenson in Love

Theatre

British TV

US TV

Web TV

  • More Mid Morning Matters with Alan Partridge [subscription required]

Tuesday’s “wondering why” news

Film

Comics

British TV

US TV

What did you watch last week (w/e October 7)?

Time for "What did you watch last week?", my chance to tell you what I watched last week that I haven’t already reviewed and your chance to recommend things to everyone else (and me) in case we’ve missed them.

My recommendations for maximum viewing pleasure this week: Archer, Dexter, The Daily Show, Modern Family, Happy Endings and Community.

Things you might enjoy but that I’m not necessarily recommending: Being Erica, Strike Back: Project Dawn, and Ringer.

Since last week, we’ve had a few cancellations, so I’ve delayed watching the remaining episodes of The Playboy Club and How To Be A Gentleman because there’s not much point.

We’ve also had another attack of "second episode-itis", in which a number of new TV shows with almost acceptable first episodes had second episodes too dreadful to carry on watching. The culprits were:

  • Pan Am: despite the lovingly recreated New York of the 60s, the complete absence of interesting plot or characters meant I was practically catatonic within the first 10 minutes.
  • Terra Nova: has mysteriously turned into Star Trek: The Any Series That Had Brannon Braga as a Showrunner. While better than the first episode, it was still deathly dull with a plethora of Wesley Crushers in desperate need of being eaten by dinosaurs and a great big chunk of technobabble being used to save the day. It did give us a visual nod to The Birds, but that’s as interesting as it got. If you’re a teenage boy, you’ll probably love it. Everyone else, stay clear.

Shamefully, Suburgatory, the big new comedy surprise, had a very poor second episode, totally lacking in the satirical bite and laughs of the first episode. It’s on the watch list now. Up All Night‘s fourth episode was dreadful so I’ve crossed that off the viewing list.

A few thoughts on some of the regulars:

  • Community: in the last two weeks, might actually have passed over from being funny into the realm of "too weird and too dark". Worrying.
  • Modern Family: Starting to feel a little tired, now. It needs to start being original again, rather than retreading old ground.
  • Being Erica: If you were expecting any big changes of format with the first episode of the new season, now that Erica’s become a doctor, think again. It’s gone back to the first season formula. Oh well. But let’s see if episode two perks it up.
  • Strike Back: Seriously, is there something in the contract that stipulates there should be one topless woman per episode?

Still in my viewing pile: last night’s Dexter, episode two of Being Erica, the third episode of Prime Suspect, the first episode of the very NSFW American Horror Story, and episode two of Homeland.

I didn’t watch any movies this week, I’m afraid.

But what have you been watching?

"What did you watch last week?" is your chance to recommend to friends and fellow blog readers the TV and films that they might be missing or should avoid – and for me to do mini-reviews of everything I’ve watched. Since we live in the fabulous world of Internet catch-up services like the iPlayer and Hulu, why not tell your fellow readers what you’ve seen so they can see the good stuff they might have missed?

News

Monday’s “How Not To Be A Gentleman” news

Dallas reunion NYPD Blue reunion

Film

  • Trailer for Steven Soderbergh’s Haywire with Gina Carano, Michael Douglas et al
  • Tim Roth to star in Broken and The Liability
  • Trailer for The Raven with John Cusack
  • Prison Break‘s Dominic Purcell to play Satan in Paradise Lost

British TV

  • 5.2m watch Hidden
  • BBC HD to become BBC2 HD?
  • 100 jobs and programmes to go at BBC Wales
  • BBC imports budget to be cut
  • BBC4 to be more a BBC2 feeder channel in future

US TV

  • Perfect CouplesHayes MacArthur to guest on Happy Endings
  • How To Be a Gentleman cancelled
  • Billy Dee Williams to guest on Man Up!
  • ABC developing version of Five’s Suburban Shootout
  • Rhea Perlman to guest on Kirstie Alley’s comedy pilot
  • USA orders pilot from White Collar‘s Jeff Eastin
  • ABC buys Jerry Bruckheimer’s Secret Lives of Husbands and Wives
  • Trailer for Showtime’s House of Lies
  • Thursday ratings: Charlie’s Angels drops again, Grey’s Anatomy hits series low, Prime Suspect steady
  • Friday ratings: A Gifted Man steady, Fringe up, Nikita down
  • Two more seasons for The Simpsons
  • NBC picks up Roseanne Barr’s Downwardly Mobile