Admit it. You’re excited now, aren’t you? Trouble is, the first episode is on this Sunday and clashes with the second part of Prime Suspect. Fortunately, there’s a repeat on BBC3.
But you’re still excited, aren’t you?
Not content with scaring us last Christmas with a whole load of ghost stories, BBC4 has decided Halloween could do with some subtle chills as well. So they’ve adapted Dennis Wheatley’s The Haunting of Toby Jugg as The Haunted Airman, ready to give us all the shudders on All Hallow’s Eve.
It is, however, worth noting that Julian Sands is going to be in it, so maybe it won’t be that terrifying after all. Except in other ways.
Take a trip to the web site to view some video clips, if you will.
Someone at Slate theorised a while ago that television causes increased likelihood of getting autism. He’s at it again, but this time he has ‘proof’. Some people at Cornell and Purdue think there’s a relationship, too.
The trouble is, these people aren’t doctors but are economists at various management schools. For the scientifically inclined, here’s a link to their paper (PDF), which obfuscates things a whole lot less than the Slate article. It’s worth noting the paper hasn’t been sent to any peer-reviewed journals, but I’ll leave others to find the other, highly amusing boo-boos in their actual work.
I would point out though that:
Runaway, aka “The Fugitive and his family” has been bumbling along for three weeks or so now: time for third-episode verdict. I’m going to stamp it with an almighty “average”.
It’s improved slightly since the distinctly unimpressive first episode, but it’s still failing to come up with any interesting story thread, unlike Vanished (for all that show’s silliness), and the characters aren’t desperately involving either. Oh no, little Jimmy is going to have to flunk the Spelling Bee or else his photo will be taken and they’ll be caught! How awful.
I’m predicting a slow, lingering death for this one, unless someone puts it out of its misery. Don’t get caught up in it.
I haven’t watched the second episode of Robin Hood yet. In that, I’m not alone, according to the ratings: the Hood has lost 1.5 million viewers since its first episode, dropping from 8.2 million to 6.7 million.
Now, I didn’t hate the first episode, and I thought kids would probably enjoy it. Others disagreed. However, I do think it worth pointing out that a drop like that really isn’t unprecedented, with both good shows and bad, and happens with most shows between their first and second episodes. In fact, it happened between the first and second episodes of the first new series of Doctor Who: that started with 9.9 million viewers in week one and had 7.3 million viewers for the second episode. Yet no one declares that a massive flop.
So, given it’s already been picked up at Mipcom by a huge number of countries, I wouldn’t write off Robin yet, no matter how pants it may (or may not) be.
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