About Gheorgheniviews
Gheorgheniviews is a blog containing material which I have contributed to the Approved Guide portion of H2G2, the web's guide to life, the universe, and everything. If you enjoy collecting odd factoids - and often wonder how those factoids fit into the general scheme of things - why not surf over to http:///www.bbc.co.uk/h2g2 and cruise around the net's premier user-generated site?
Showing posts with label German television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label German television. Show all posts
Monday, 31 January 2011
'Dark Shadows' - the TV Series
In the second half of the 1960s, several US television programmes became cultural phenomena - Star Trek and Rowan And Martin's Laugh-In immediately come to mind. Many of these programmes had an international impact. However one such one series, Dark Shadows, remained largely a US-based phenomenon, with an almost exclusively teen audience. This Gothic soap opera sent high school students in droves running from the bus to the living room every afternoon, and catapulted its hero, the reluctant vampire Barnabas Collins, to iconographic status as an unusual (and, some would say unlikely) heart-throb.
The series - the world's first daytime soap to handle themes such as vampires, werewolves, witches' curses, and time travel - was broadcast between June 27, 1966 and April 2, 1971 and ran for half an hour every weekday; two feature films were also made during the show's run. But, as with the original Star Trek, the story doesn't end with the show's cancellation. 34 years after Barnabas bit his last victim, Dark Shadows books are still being written, trivia exchanged, DVDs sold, and conventions attended.
In 2001, Dark Shadows was honoured with a special retrospective at the American Museum of Television and Radio, a tribute to the longevity of the series' cultural impact.
Friday, 28 January 2011
Bernd das Brot - German Icon
It is midnight in 21st-Century Germany (GMT + 1). A late-shift worker comes home, grabs a beer1, and settles in to see what's on television. Channel-surfing, he stumbles upon KI.KA, the non-commercial children's channel, now in its after-hours recorded loop.
After the opening credit, the shift worker is greeted by an ungainly puppet, a sarcastic loaf of bread who informs him in a downbeat baritone that life is hell and that this programme is, well 'rubbish'2 - that he, the talking loaf of bread, is tired of television and wants to leave, and that he, the worker, should have better things to do and should turn off the set. 'Go home! Go to bed!' The worker laughs uproariously, and the curmudgeonly children's character has won over another adult fan.
Thus spreads the cult of Bernd das Brot, the subversive entertainer who only performs at breadknife-point ('read this, or we'll have you for lunch!'), whose dour humour belligerently asserts the right of everyone in Germany - child or adult - to be grumpy.
Who is this award-winning troublemaker? Why has he won so many fans in the heart of Europe? Why was he kidnapped? Did he really develop Stockholm Syndrome while in captivity?
After the opening credit, the shift worker is greeted by an ungainly puppet, a sarcastic loaf of bread who informs him in a downbeat baritone that life is hell and that this programme is, well 'rubbish'2 - that he, the talking loaf of bread, is tired of television and wants to leave, and that he, the worker, should have better things to do and should turn off the set. 'Go home! Go to bed!' The worker laughs uproariously, and the curmudgeonly children's character has won over another adult fan.
Thus spreads the cult of Bernd das Brot, the subversive entertainer who only performs at breadknife-point ('read this, or we'll have you for lunch!'), whose dour humour belligerently asserts the right of everyone in Germany - child or adult - to be grumpy.
Who is this award-winning troublemaker? Why has he won so many fans in the heart of Europe? Why was he kidnapped? Did he really develop Stockholm Syndrome while in captivity?
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