Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Teasers and spoilers

I am no great sports fan. Certainly I like to watch Formula One when I get a chance, and maybe occasionally tennis, athletics and other bits and pieces but I'm not into football and indeed most team games. This means I find it slightly amusing when you get announcements on television like:

"Look away now if you don't want to see the result of the Chelsea versus Arsenal game that will be on Match of the Day after the news"

Yes, I find it amusing and I don't entirely understand it, but I do respect the interest of others in not knowing the score. So what's the problem? It's that broadcasters don't seem to realise that the same enjoyment of suspense can exist for types of programme other than sport.

An obvious recent example (though I would suggest a minor one in many ways) was the way that Peter Capaldi was unveiled as the new Doctor Who with great pomp in August, when his first episode will not air until Christmas. While it could easily be argued that this didn't deserve a programme of its own (which incidentally I didn't watch), and in the (distant) past the first one would know of a new actor in the role would be when the character "regenerated", I don't think the name of the actor is really that important to the series, but rather how he takes on the part and we won't really know that until he is well under-way. The real suspense in this case is in the new episodes, not the actor himself.

No, there are much more serious crimes of spoiling going on every day, whether it's for drama series or for documentaries.

Thursday, 6 June 2013

Middle-lane hogging

Taffic on the M1 (linked from the BBC News Magazine)
Today I came across a BBC article Motorway middle-lane hoggers to face on-the-spot fines. It turns out that the proposed fines are not just about middle-lane hogging but about a number of frequently practiced, and arguably "minor" careless driving offences. Predictably though the reader comments mostly focused on the subject in the title. I was even moved to add my own contribution to the comments; something I rarely do.

I have just found another BBC article: Who, what, why: What's wrong with middle-lane hogging? which, in talking to a number of experts and pundits, aims to discover why middle-lane hogging is a bad thing. I think the article is generally reasonable but I don't think it managed to uncover all of the issues.

Wednesday, 5 June 2013

Getting the ball rolling

I didn't want to start this blog off with a bland "well here I am, starting a blog", and neither did I want to start off with something really controversial, so here are some photos I took recently in Bristol. Yes, I'm an amateur photographer with occasional ambition to sell work.

Four Bristol street scenes



Two from the Bristol 10K, 2013