Tag: Winston Churchill

  • Discovery explores a virtual world next year

    Discovery explores a virtual world next year

    MUMBAI: The Discovery Channel is looking to push the boundaries with shows that combine knowledge with entertainment. One of its major initiatives for the first quarter of 2005 is Virtual World.

    Speaking to Indiantelevision.com on the initiative Discovery programming VP Pankaj Saxena said, “Virtual History allows viewers to watch virtual footage of historical events where no actual film exists — events that had been documented solely through verbal and written accounts, artifacts, and still photograph.

    “One episode will examine The Bomb Plot Day. It recreates the 24 hours of 20 July 1944 from the point of view of the four war leaders: Winston Churchill, Franklin D Roosevelt, Josef Stalin and Adolf Hitler. There will also be a Making Of special that looks at how the filmmakers achieved the look, feel and texture of the show.”

    On that day, Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg planned to kill Hitler during a meeting with a two pound explosive hidden in his briefcase. Stauffenberg leaves the room to “make a phone call.” Completely unaware of Stauffenberg’s plans, Colonel Brandt moves the briefcase out of his way — and away from Hitler. Brandt’s small act will change the course of history. It will save the Fuhrer’s life but cost him his own.

    Another show is titled Machine Gun. In this three part series history is viewed down the barrel of a gun. Social, technological and personal stories are woven together into a modern history as influenced by this weapon which had such dramatic effect in shaping the world over the past 150 tears. It is at once a story about one of the world’s deadliest inventions and a vehicle for a larger historical story – that of human power and aspiration.

    Those with a passion for vehicles can check out Ultimate Cars. Each episode will celebrate cars of a chosen category from sports cars to convertibles, from Italys glamorous Supercars to the power machines of Japan.

    A more personal show that anyone can connect with is called Human Instinct. Our instincts are long out of date – shaped for a lost, primitive world. That is why each of us can be driven to do extraordinary things, without knowing why. Only now can science begin to explain the power of these hidden forces.

    Professor Robert Winston tells the story of these urges within every one of us – the instincts to survive, have sex and compete and the story of how human instincts have helped propel us out of the animal world. This ambitious four-part series uses computer graphics, experiments and secret filming and hears the personal stories of individuals who have experienced overpowering urges to help us understand Human Instinct.
     

  • Gandhi voted into top 10 greatest S. Africans of all time

    Gandhi voted into top 10 greatest S. Africans of all time

    MUMBAI: The South African version of the BBC television format The Greats has resulted in Mahatma Gandhi being listed as one of the ten greatest South Africans of all time.

    In Great South Africans, based on the BBC’s Great Britons, public service broadcaster SABC 3 asked the South African public to vote for the country’s greatest men and women. Many South Africans voted for Mahatma Ghandi, thus making him one of the top ten.

    The vote is now on to decide which one out of the list will be most deserving of a place in history next to Nelson Mandela. In a surprise departure from the original BBC format, Nelson Mandela was declared the Greatest South African of all and the public is now being asked to vote for a winner from the other nine Great South Africans. The BBC’s Great Britons led to Winston Churchill being voted the Greatest Briton.

    The format of the show was licensed to SABC 3 by BBC Worldwide, the commercial consumer arm of the BBC. BBC Worldwide head of Africa, South Asia and Middle East Monisha Shah commented, “One of the most interesting aspects of the format of The Greats is that it provides so many topics for nation wide discussion: ‘What is greatness?’ ‘What qualifies one – in this case – as a Great South African?’ It is a tribute to Mahatma Gandhi’s lasting legacy that South Africa considers him one of its own. We look forward to licensing a similar programme about Great Indians which will generate similar interest in India’s icons, past and present.”

    Over the next nine weeks, celebrity ‘champions’ will try to convince the public why their candidate should win, in 30-minute documentaries on SABC 3. Author and journalist Brenda Kali, herself a member of the Indian community in South Africa, will be Mahatma Gandhi’s advocate.

    The top ten Great South Africans as voted for by the South African public includes: Dr Christiaan Barnard, F W De Klerk, Mahatma Gandhi, Nkosi Johnson; Winnie Madikizela Mandela; Nelson Mandela; Thabo Mbeki; Gary Player; Jan Smuts and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

    BBC Worldwide has also licensed the format of The Greats to Germany, where more than three million votes were cast and statesman Konrad Adenauer was voted ‘Best German’, to Finland and The Netherlands where the top ten is due to be announced shortly, and to Portugal, Canada, and Czech Republic and Russia, while negotiations are underway with broadcasters in many more countries around the world.

  • Scientist Newton is the ‘Greatest Briton’ according to BBC World viewers

    LONDON: Scientist Sir Isaac Newton has been voted the Greatest Briton by viewers of BBC World, following a 10-week series that profiled some of the most eminent British men and women in history, a company release stated yesterday
    The results will be broadcast in Great Britons: The World’s Greatest Briton on BBC World at 7.40 pm this evening and repeated thrice tomorrow, at 2.40 am, 2.40 pm and 11.40 pm.
    The man who calculated the theory of gravity won the poll with 21.4 per cent of votes, beating Sir Winston Churchill, who attracted 17 per cent. Princess Diana of Wales came third, with 13 per cent votes.


    The BBC release said, Tristram Hunt, the historian who presented the Great Britons profile of Newton, said he was delighted that his choice had won. “Newton’s achievements affected all mankind and I think it is a proper reflection of his genius that a global audience has voted him the Greatest Briton. Indeed, it was Newton’s advances in physics — his understanding of gravity and planetary motion — that have sent satellites into space and allowed this series to be beamed round the globe. The world has now repaid the favour.”
    Great Britons was launched in June on BBC World. It followed a highly successful series on BBC Television in the UK, in which viewers selected Sir Winston Churchill as their Greatest Briton. BBC World’s global version kept the original shortlist of 10, which had been chosen through a separate public vote.
    Commissioning editor of Great Britons for BBC World Narendhra Morar said, “One of the reasons for Newton’s victory was that the poll was conducted online and he would appeal to younger, computer-savvy voters. It’s fascinating that our viewers chose a different greatest Briton to the original series, although Churchill still had a strong following and actually came first among BBC World’s ex-pat viewers.”
    The final BBC World result is as follows:
    Name and year    Percentage votes
    Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727)    21.4
    Sir Winston Churchill (1874- 1965)    17
    Princess Diana (1961- ’97)    13
    William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)    12.1
    Charles Darwin (1809 -’82)    10.1
    John Lennon (1940 – ’80)    8
    Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806-’59)    7.9
    Elizabeth I (1533 – 1603)    
    6.1

    Oliver Cromwell (1599 – 1658)    2.2
    Horatio Nelson, Viscount Nelson (1758 – 1805)    2.1

  • BBC World brings in new shows to pep up programming

    BBC World brings in new shows to pep up programming

    MUMBAI: BBC World is souping up its fare for the upcoming season.

    Among India-specific shows that have been lined up for the next quarter (July-September) are new series of the quiz showUniversity Challenge , Business Bizarre, Question Time India and Wheels.

    The Beeb has new additions to its global programme line up as well, while reviving a few old shows. Offerings include documentaries, lifestyle entertainment shows, factual programming from the natural kingdom to the corridors of power, and architectural marvels from modern as well as ancient civilizations.

    University Challenge (Thursdays), is presented by Siddhartha Basu (of Mastermind India fame) and is the Indian variant of the succesful UK quiz show.

    Business Bizarre (Sundays from 6 July) returns as a 13-episode series. Question Time India (Fridays from 4 july), Face to Face (Saturdays till 30 August) and Wheels (Saturdays from 6 September presumably replacing Face to Face) are all part of the fresh menu that is being served up by the Beeb.

    Jumpstarting the whole change process as far as the global shows are concerned is the return of the award-winning series Horizon, to be aired on 26 July. A mix of stories ranging from the exhilarating and groundbreaking to the downright sensational will be profiled on the show. In its new format, it will analyse new developments in science, medicine and technology. Horizon promises to saturate the growing global thirst for strong science programmes.

    Holidays in the Axis of Evil , slotted to premiere on 12 July, takes its cue from US President George W Bush’s much-publicised labeling of six countries as ‘axis of evil’, a year ago. In a three-part travelogue, reporter Ben Anderson, armed with a hidden camera and a tourist map, visits all six listed ‘rogue’ states and tries to find the reality of life in the countries labeled as one of the most repressive regimes in the world.

    Profiles returns with further authored portraits of interesting international personalities and key decision-makers, from guest presenters. The list includes the Pope’s enforcer Cardinal Ratzinger, the creator of the medical foundation for the care of victims of torture Helen Bamber and evolutionist and author Richard Dawkins.

    The channel also continues on its hunt for the world’s Greatest Briton. The interesting mix includes Horatio Nelson, William Shakespeare, Elizabeth I, Sir Isaac Newton, Winston Churchill and John Lennon amidst last season’s contenders Charles Darwin, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, Diana, Princess of Wales and Oliver Cromwell. As these contenders battle it out for the top spot as BBC World’s international 21st century role model, the channel will be taking account of the public opinion on its website. Click Online’s presenter Stephen Cole will reveal the result of the poll in a specially commissioned eleventh programme.

    Next in the line is a new, three-part series Bitter Harvest , which starts on 9 August. Telling the inside story of biotechnology, the show will give insights on the revolution it has wrought in the food industry. Besides, three programmes examining some of the major technological advances and scientific discoveries that have helped shape our modern world – the hidden mechanics of global economics to advances in artificial intelligence- will be premiering as The Virtual World on 16 August.

    With a special three part series set to launch on 12 September- Great Spaces Season, the channel will examine stunning architecture around the world, both ancient and modern. The debutante series Heritage ,on the other hand, will explore some of the UNESCO World Heritage Sites and the challenges they face. The 13 programme series will document our disappearing world, from Kathmandu’s temples and the Medina at Essaouira in Morocco, to vanishing cultures and peoples. The locations will include World Heritages Sites and other key cultural and historic places that are unique and face a variety of threats such as war, tourism, population pressures, changing climate and development.

    Yet another show, Dreamspaces will premiere on BBC World on 18 September. The 12-part travelogue will profile the best in modern architectural and contemporary design. Presented by renowned architect David Adjaye, ex-lead singer of the band Elastica Justine Frischman and architect and presenter, Charlie Luxton, each edition features topical issues concerning design and architecture. The show promises to offer a reflective look at some of the greatest modem architects and a visit to cities packed with amazing structures of design and ingenuity.

    Throughout the series the team travel to New York, Helsinki, Puerto Rico, Chicago, Romania, Brazil Israel and many more international destinations, looking at various aspects of design and architecture, and their relationship with contemporary living.

    Last on the list of new launches is a six-series, Andrew Graham-Dixon anchored, 50 minute show offering a view of the Renaissance that will debut on 6 September.

  • BBC World to showcase special on Great Britons

    MUMBAI: Churchill, Shakespeare, Princess Di! Who was the greatest Brit of them all? Well, Indian viewers will get to find out later in the year when BBC World showcases its ten one hour episode show Great Britons.
    The charismatic World War II British premier Winston Churchill came out on top. The decision was made last November. The beeb conducted a UK poll which attracted over a million votes. Churchill gained 447,423 votes, beating his nearest rival, engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, by more than 56,000 votes.
    The Top 100 names were revealed in August, followed by a vote for the greatest of the Top Ten in October. Besides Churchill on BBC World viewers can expect to see profiles of Diana, Princess of Wales; Charles Darwin; William Shakespeare; John Lennon; Elizabeth I; Sir Isaac Newton; Viscount Horatio Nelson; and Oliver Cromwell. Prior to announcing the top ten the beeb had announced its top 100. Football icon David Beckham came in at number 33.
    The BBC’s definition of a Great Briton was “anyone who was born in the British Isles, including Ireland, or who has lived in the British Isles, including Ireland, and has played a significant part in the life of the British Isles”.
    Beckham apparently threw his weight behind Churchill saying, “He was a giant of a leader at a time when Britain needed hope and inspiration.” Brits voted through telephone or email. While Diana had a reasonable shot for a while disclosures about her private life after the infamous trial of butler Paul Burrell hurt her chances.
    It can’t have helped that the host of game show The Weakest Link Anne Robinson who also hosted a show on BBC 2 which was based on the poll results was extremely vocal about the fact that voting for Diana even in the top ten was absurd. In October Robinson had been quoted in The Telegraph saying, “”To regard her as a great Briton seems to be absurd. It’s interesting how easily she manipulated public opinion.”
    As far as the top 100 was concerned it is worth noting that only 22 people are still alive. Film stars are conspicuous by their absence and the only television presenter is David Attenborough. Poetry was also given the short shrift as noted by the absence of Keats, Yeats, Wordsworth and Byron. Other notable absentees from the top 100 included Laurence Olivier, Emily Bronte. Writers represented include JK Rowling and JR Tolkien.
    The vote break up was as follows

    Name Number of votes (per cent)
    Churchill 456,498 (28.1)
    Brunel 398,526 (24.6)
    Diana 225,584 (13.9)
    Darwin 112,496 (6.9)
    Shakespeare 109,919 (6.8)
    Newton 84,628 (5.2)
    Elizabeth I 71,928 (4.4)
    Lennon 68,445 (4.2)
    Nelson 49,171 (3)
    Cromwell 45,053 (2.8)