Locate TV goes into public beta

The PR woman has been belting on at me for ages to give this a mention, and seeing as today, it’s now available to the public rather than just we brave beta testers, I thought I’d finally relent and talk about Locate TV.

It’s supposed to be like Google for tele, movies and actors. You type in the name of a film, TV show or actor, and it tells you what the actor’s been in, when the next showing of the programme or movie is online or on television (you can tell it where you live and what TV services you have access to) or whether it’s available on DVD. You can then embed a little widget in your blog that gives other people access to the equivalent information for their region, etc.

At the moment, it has two problems, apart from a not inconsiderable slowness, IMHO:

  1. The widgets are fugly. Ugh.
  2. It doesn’t do a good job of aggregating data into an easily consumable format – true of Google as well, I suppose, but not helpful when you have to keep going back and forth between search results to make sure you’ve covered all eventualities.

If you do a search for Doctor Who, for example, it gives you 30 results. The first three are

Doctor Who (2005) – TV Series

NEXT ON: Saturday 6th October 12:00pm – UKTV Gold

Time-travelling adventures, following the exploits of the Doctor, aided by his trusty sidekick

Doctor Who – TV Series

Sci-fi adventures with the eccentric Time Lord

Doctor Who – TV Series

A mysterious traveler can visit any point in space and time.

Could have done with them stuck together, I reckon, although the spelling of traveler in the third one suggests an American source, even though it just lists DVDs.

So still a bit wobbly, but could be useful with a bit more smartness in the aggregation logic and a better web designer.

Click to see LocateTV results for Airwolf. Always up to date, always relevant to you.

UPDATE: Stu tells me that a similar – and possibly better – service is available from Bleb. Thanks Stu!

Twenty five years of Channel 4: How did it end?

Stayed up last night to watch the More4 documentary celebrating 25 years of Channel 4. It was a bit patchy, and surprisingly didn’t really cover why Channel 4 was set up in the first place – or how – but it wasn’t bad.

But due to the pressing need for sleep and since Bastard was busily recording House of Flying Daggers on Film4, I didn’t see the last half hour. Did anyone else? And was it in any way uncomplimentary to the current bosses about Celebrity Big Brother, complete lack of anything halfway decent on in terms of drama, documentaries, etc?

Monday’s “what headline am I going to come up with today?” news

Film

British TV

US TV

UK TV

The Peter Serafinowicz Show: online from Monday

The Peter Serafinowicz Show

Just got an email from The Peter Serafinowicz Show‘s PR.

Episode 1 of The Peter Serafinowicz Show is being premiered on myspace, on the Thursdays are Funny profile page www.myspace.com/bbc2comedy from Monday 1st October. It will be shown online in three parts, but with a few sketches held back so as not to spoil the show on Thursday!

The myspace profile has some Vivienne Vyle clips also as well as a few extra Peter Serafinowicz clips.

So there you go. Tune in to the show online from tomorrow, because it looks more than a little bit promising.

Eerie Sapphire and Steel-y picture, hey?

US TV

Review: Numb3rs 4.1

Numb3rs

In the US: Fridays, 10pm et/pt, CBS

In the UK: One of the ITVs at a point determined by some stochastic process

Characters re-cast: 0

Major characters gotten rid of: -1

Major new characters: 0

Format change percentage: 0%

Beards grown: 2

What a difference a decent director and script make. As I have remarked before, Numb3rs is often quite a formulaic show. When it’s good, it’s very good; but most of the time, it’s just average – not utterly dumb, just mundane and unsurprising.

This season opener carries on directly, in terms of plot rather than chronologically, from the third season’s finale, in which Dylon Bruno’s hardcore ex-army FBI agent was revealed to be an agent for the Chinese. It was surprisingly surprising for Numb3rs, not least because it was written by the usually rubbish Ken Sanzel.

Although it soon becomes clear that yes, a magic reset button will probably reverse that one innovation the show has produced, the episode does have two even more surprising surprises: firstly, Ken Sanzel can write really good scripts – he’s even getting the hang of this maths thing to the extent that it’s actually relevant, rather than slammed in with a crowbar; secondly, exec producer Tony Scott, who’s been sitting on his hands doing not much to earn that title for three seasons, has finally gotten off his backside to direct this episode, the first time he’s directed an episode of a television show.

In true Tony Scott style, he’s brought along one of his favourite actors, Val Kilmer, who’s busily resurrecting his acting career after a long time in the wilderness. Before even a minute’s gone by, it’s clear that whatever you think of Scott as a film director with his somewhat bombastic style, as a television director he’s really first rate. Taken together, the script and direction turn this Numb3rs episode in something pretty good.

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