What do Hugh Laurie, Tim Roth, Joseph Fiennes, Stephen Moyer, Dominic West, Cat Deeley and Marianne Jean-Baptiste all have in common?
They are all British and they all star in american hit TV series all (with the noble exception of Cat Deeley's proud Brummie) with flawless american accents. In fact I suspect that the vast majority of americans do not even know that they are not US natives.
In 1982 Collin Welland on picking up his Best Original Screenplay Oscar for "Chariots of Fire" proclaimed "The British are coming!" at the time we all thought he was a bit over excited, possibly overlunched and definitely talking rot! Now it seems like he was just a little bit ahead of his time.
It is not only british actors finding favour, or should that be favor, in the US, british producers are doing rather well too. Simon Cowell and his associated shows are a phenomenon, but there are plenty of other examples of British originated shows transferring with huge success stateside. "Strictly Come Dancing" for instance has become "Dancing with the Stars" beating all comers and apparently the UK's latest export "Undercover Boss" from channel 4 debuted on CBS with more than 38m viewers – the highest for any US series opener since 1987 and for the whole season has been the sixth-highest rated show of all time.
Who knows how long it can continue but it must be doing an awful lot for the UK television industry which despite constant pleas of poverty and imminent extinction is still one of the world's largest and most successful.
Of course switching from television to politics there was someone else who displayed remarkable prescience: when back in 1981 a boyish leader of the Liberal Party David Steel proclaimed "Go back to your constituencies, and prepare for government!" David Steel's Speech Excerpt
Maybe Sir Clive Sinclair was right and there is hope for the C5 yet?
Broadcast & Digital Media
Social Media, Advertising, Popular Trends, Creativity, Innovation, General Musings and Mumblings, Radio and Anything Else Springing To Mind...
Tuesday, 25 May 2010
Friday, 26 March 2010
Web Junk
I was reading the other day that apparently there are 110,000 bits of space junk orbiting the Earth, which made me wonder just how many bits of 'web junk' are there out there? Online bits and bobs abandonned by their owners never to be revisited.
There must be millions of social network pages for people who have gone and died or less dramatically lost their passwords to, or simply forgotten about. For instance when did you last check your Friends Reunited Page or even your MySpace profile? By the way, if you do revisit either of those sites, you will be gobsmacked at how much they both now look like Facebook, talk about 'closing the stable door' guys?!?
Then there are the yahoo, google etc mail accounts that have been created and abandonned - I think that I personally have around a dozen or so accounts that I've created over the years for various reasons then entirely forgotten about.
Now where is my Compuserve login?
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