StreamingTrailers DVD VOD Kids (2005) - saison 12 Bande-annonce VO "Revolution of the Daleks" 11 060 vues - Il y a 1 an. 1:00 . Doctor Who (2005) - saison 12 Bande-annonce (2) VO. 5 510 vues
Il y a bien longtemps, loin très loin à Chelterham en 2019. Flashback sur les évènements qui ont eu lieu au GCHQ Centre d’interception des télécommunications étrangères, quand la Docteur et ses amis ont vaincu le Dalek éclaireur. 367 minutes plus tard, une organisation gouvernementale, récupère les restes du Dalek, les charge dans un camion qui se rend à l’entrepôt 23 destiné à ce genre de situation. En chemin, le chauffeur s’arrête pour prendre un thé mais sa boisson est empoisonnée et le camion et son chargement sont volés. Quelques temps après, Jack Robertson et Leo Ruggazzi rencontrent Jo Patterson, ministre de la Technologie. Ils lui montrent une simulation où des manifestants sont maîtrisés par une nouvelle force de protection qui sont en fait des Daleks avec un nouveau design équipé de canon à eau, de gaz lacrymogène et de dissuasion sonique. Dans son labo, Leo explique qu’il a développé ce projet alliant la robotique à une intelligence artificielle grâce à Robertson. Patterson demande à parler à ce dernier, elle veut que le projet se réalise dans sa juridiction et Robertson lui fait miroiter qu’en plus de créer des emplois, elle passera pour une visionnaire et pourrait diriger bientôt son parti. Toutefois, elle s’inquiète que l’origine de cette technologie soit découverte. Robertson lui assure que personne ne saura qu’elle lui a permis de récupérer ce spécimen et quand elle lui demande les délais de réalisation du projet, il l’estime à un an. 79 millions d’années lumières de la Terre, la Docteur est emprisonnée depuis longtemps, elle compte les jours. Toujours le même rituel, le repas, la promenade où elle voit d’autres prisonniers, un Ange pleureur, des Oods, un Pting. Elle leur parle essayant de faire de l’humour, puis de retour dans sa cellule, elle se raconte des histoires comme celle d’Harry Potter. Elle entend frapper au mur, elle se précipite et demande qui est là, sans réponse, elle s’encourage à rester forte pour les personnes qui l’attendent. Graham et Ryan vont rejoindre Yaz dans le Tardis qui les a ramenés sur Terre, elle cherche un moyen de retrouver la Docteur. Ils lui disent d’arrêter, qu’elle ne s’en est peut-être pas sortie et qu’elle leur a dit de vivre leur vie. Graham lui montre une vidéo trouvée sur internet, montrant le projet de drone de sécurité, elle reconnait le Dalek et voit Jack Robertson. Ils décident de s’en occuper car c’est ce que la Docteur aurait fait. Robertson rencontre Patterson qui va devenir Premier ministre. Elle veut accélérer le projet et le développer au niveau national. Elle force la main à Robertson en le menaçant des services fiscaux. Alors que Robertson rejoint Leo, il est interpellé par Graham, Ryan et Yaz, il les prend pour des voleurs mais finit par les reconnaitre. Ils lui parlent du Dalek, il dit ne pas comprendre et quand ils insistent en disant qu’ils ne le laisseront pas faire ses gardes du corps interviennent. N’ayant pas réussi, la Tribu décide de trouver un autre moyen d’en savoir plus. Pendant ce temps, la Docteur toujours emprisonnée, continue ses activités quotidiennes, lors de sa promenade, elle se moque d’un Silence, puis se retrouve face à Jack Harkness qui lui montre une bulle portail désinhibante par fixation temporelle qui permet de fixer le temps et franchir les murs. Il déclenche la balle qu’il requalifie d’évasion et ils courent jusqu’à sa cellule. En chemin, Jack raconte qu’il a commis des infractions pour être emprisonné là où la rumeur disait qu’elle était et qu’il a mis 19 ans pour être dans la cellule voisine de la sienne. Ils y récupèrent le manipulateur de vortex qu’il y a caché et s’échappent. Après que Robertson ait rassuré Leo sur la rapidité de la mise en place du projet, l’ingénieur lui parle d’une forme organique trouvée dans le spécimen original, il a réussi à le cloner et affirme que c’est intelligent. Robertson lui ordonne de le détruire, Leo s’apprête à l’incinérer quand le Dalek prend possession de lui. Jack et la Docteur apparaissent dans le Tardis, qu’elle est contente de retrouver, et discute avec Jack tout en le relançant. Elle confirme à Jack qu’elle a tout arrangé quand il lui parle du cyberman solitaire. Il demande qui l’a emprisonnée, elle lui explique que c’est les Judoons et qu’ils ont trouvé 7000 délits à rajouter à sa peine, ce qui amuse Jack pensant qu’ils auraient pu en trouver plus. Elle conclut qu’elle était en prison à cause de qui elle est, juste au moment où elle ne l’est plus vraiment et que ces quelques décennies ont été difficiles. Le Tardis s’active et elle lui demande de retrouver sa famille. Graham, Yaz et Ryan font le point sur ce qu’ils ont découvert sur le Dalek détruit dont les restes ont été visiblement récupérés par Robertson sans trop comprendre comment. En pleine discussion avec Ryan, Yaz s’interrompt car elle entend le Tardis qui arrive. La Docteur en sort en disant qu’elle était en prison dans l’espace et Jack sort à son tour pour préciser qu’il l’a fait sortir, tout en taquinant Graham. Yaz s’énerve après la Docteur car ça fait dix mois qu’ils s’inquiétaient et cette dernière s’excuse, elle pensait être revenue peu de temps après leur retour. Jack demande ce qu’il y a de nouveau du Terre et Graham évoque le Dalek laissant Jack et la Docteur sans voix. Leo se rend à Osaka au Japon et découvre le projet du Dalek qui le contrôle. Avec le Tardis, la Docteur cherche de l’ADN Dalek sur Terre pendant que Jack raconte à la tribu comment il est devenu immortel. Elle détecte quelque chose à Osaka dans un centre appartenant à Robertson, Jack propose d’y aller et Yaz décide d’aller avec lui. La Docteur, Ryan et Graham vont voir Robertson. Le Tardis atterrit dans les locaux de Robertson, qui leur montre que ses drones sont des armures vides. La Docteur est étonnée mais Graham insiste en parlant d’Osaka mais Robertson n’est pas au courant. A Osaka, Yaz et Jack arrive sur un site de fermes verticales. Jack discute avec Yaz de sa colère contre la Docteur, elle explique qu’elle a eu peur de ne plus la voir. Il raconte qu’il a vécu plein de choses extraordinaires avec le Docteur mais qu’un jour, il a disparu. Il ne savait pas s’il était en vie, s’il allait le revoir. Yaz dit que c’est dur, qu’elle aurait préféré ne pas savoir mais Jack lui explique qu’ils font partis des chanceux à voyager avec le Docteur mais qu’un jour ça se termine, choix du Docteur ou des compagnons, et lui conseille de profiter de l’instant. Ils pénètrent dans le bâtiment et découvrent une ferme d’élevage de Daleks. Pendant que la première ministre présente les nouveaux drones de sécurité à la presse, la Docteur, Ryan et Graham embarque Robertson dans le Tardis pour aller à Osaka, en chemin elle lui explique la dangerosité des Daleks. Alors que Yaz essaie de comprendre comment sont nourris les Daleks, Jack préfère poser des explosifs. Un Dalek l’attaque, Yaz vient à son aide mais est attaquée aussi. Ils parviennent à s’en débarrasser pendant que la Première ministre, termine sa présentation indiquant que les drones seront partout. Dans le Tardis, la Docteur discute avec Ryan, s’excuse pour les dix mois d’absence, précise qu’ils lui ont manqué, mais que visiblement ça s’est bien passé pour eux. Ryan explique qu’il a continué sa vie, revu son père, ses amis. Il lui demande ce qui est arrivé à Gallifrey, ce que lui voulait le Maître. Elle essaie d’éluder la question mais il insiste et elle lui explique qu’elle n’est pas qui elle croyait, qu’on lui a caché des choses de sa vie. Il demande comment elle va et elle avoue qu’elle ne sait plus qui elle est, il lui dit qu’elle reste le Docteur, que la nouveauté peut faire peur mais que quand le problème Dalek sera réglé, elle devra chercher la vérité et qu’après ça ira mieux. Elle le remercie d’être son ami et lui, la remercie d’être la sienne. Le Tardis atterrit dans la ferme d’Osaka. Jack est heureux d’entendre le son du Tardis. Alors qu’ils découvrent l’élevage, Robertson s’interroge sur ces créatures, la Docteur lui dit que c’est ce qui se trouve à l’intérieur des Daleks et se demande qui a construit cet endroit. Leo apparaît. La Docteur tente de lui parler, disant qu’il a joué avec quelque chose de dangereux mais qu’elle va l’aider. Le Dalek qui le contrôle répond que ce sont de faux espoirs et explique que c’est son œuvre, qu’il a tout créé en se servant de l’entreprise de Robertson pour financer les matériaux, les ouvriers pour construire le bâtiment et le matériel de clonage pour créer une armée à son image. Quand Yaz demande où sont les ouvriers, le Dalek répond qu’ils sont devenus de la nourriture. Robertson pense à l’image de son entreprise, mais la Docteur est tracassée par autre chose, Yaz dit que l’éclairage a changé depuis leur arrivée, la Docteur confirme sans comprendre. Elle évoque le départ des Daleks mais le Dalek explique que la Terre va devenir leur base pour conquérir cette partie de l’univers. La Docteur s’énerve un peu et dit que squatter un labo japonais est différent d’assujettir les humains surtout sans corps et qu’ils ne peuvent pas utiliser ceux qu’a construit Robertson. Leo sourit, la Docteur s’inquiète quand il dit qu’il a modifié les carapaces. Elle veut rallumer les lumières car ce sont des ultraviolets et se souvient que c’est ce qui a permis au Dalek éclaireur de se rassembler. Leo ordonne l’activation et les clones sont téléportés dans leurs armures et commencent à tuer les humains. Ils tuent la Première ministre et revendiquent la propriété de la Terre en annonçant la destruction de l’humanité. La Docteur demande à Robertson combien il en a fabriqué, des milliers, elle tente de raisonner le Dalek qui contrôle Leo alors qu’il veut le tuer, mais Leo meurt en s’excusant. La Docteur est désolée, mais ça la fait réagir, pas d’armes, pas le temps de penser, ce temps passé à se demander qui elle était, elle est le Docteur qui arrête les Daleks et tout le monde rejoint le Tardis. Une fois dans le Tardis, elle explique qu’elle n’a qu’une option mais que ça peut mal tourner. Jack comprend à quoi elle pense et s’y oppose. Elle lui demande s’il a une autre idée, et comme il n’a rien à proposer. Ces Daleks sont construits à partir du Dalek éclaireur et que c’est la solution. La Docteur envoie un message à travers le vortex temporel. Sur un vaisseau Dalek, le message est reçu et ils se dirigent vers la Terre. La Docteur explique que c’est un commando Dalek, Jack confirme qu’ils sont plus brutaux, Graham s’inquiète qu’ils tuent plus d’humains, Yaz ne comprend pas qu’elle appelle des Daleks pour en combattre d’autres. La Docteur précise qu’ils ne savent pas que le message vient d’elle, qu’il ne faut pas qu’ils le sachent. Graham demande comment ils se débarrasseront de ces Daleks s’ils parviennent à détruire ceux de Robertson. Elle dit que ce sera à eux de jouer. Les nouveaux Daleks tuent les humains et soudain le vaisseau commando Dalek apparaît, ils détectent l’ADN Dalek mutant et ordonne la destruction des impurs. Les deux factions Daleks s’affrontent, la Docteur explique à Robertson que les Daleks sont obsédés par la pureté de leur gêne, mais ce dernier voit juste le gâchis de ses machines. La Docteur lui dit de rejoindre le Tardis, mais il refuse, il veut tenter sa chances avec les Daleks. Elle le prévient qu’ils vont le tuer mais il en fait à tête, les rejoint, affirmant être leur allié. Les Daleks refusent mais il insiste pour les aider à conquérir la Terre. Les Daleks demandent s’il est prêt à trahir et il demande à voir leur chef. Dans le Tardis, la Docteur dit que la phase 1 a fonctionné, les Daleks ont détruit les autres Daleks. Reste à s’occuper du vaisseau Dalek, elle demande à Jack s’il veut passer à l’abordage, il demande s’il peut le faire sauter, elle approuve et lui conclut que c’est son genre de plan. Il précise qu’il a un problème avec les Daleks depuis sa première mort. Ryan et Graham décident de l’accompagner pour l’aider. Jack demande au Docteur si elle est d’accord avec ça ? Elle leur dit de ne rien faire exploser avant d’être sûr que toutes les créations de Robertson soient détruites et après avoir quitté le vaisseau précise Yaz. Ryan la rassure et Jack les téléporte sur le vaisseau Dalek. Sur place, Jack leur explique le plan, leur souhaite bonne chance et ils se séparent. Ryan et Graham commence de poser les explosifs et Graham affirme que c’est leur spécialité, qu’ils l’ont déjà fait et qu’aucune soucoupe alien ne leur résiste. Jack pose des explosifs de son côté quand une alerte retentit, des formes de vie non Dalek ont été détecté. Il se cache des Daleks puis retourne poser les explosifs quand il entend Robertson. Pour prouver sa bonne foi, il leur dit que c’est un piège, que le message a été envoyé par le Docteur. Les Daleks confirment que c’est leur ennemi. Robertson propose de les aider à la trouver s’il le laisse en vie. Jack se demande si c’est une blague, quand un Dalek de Robertson se matérialise sur le vaisseau et tente d’expliquer qu’il est un survivant, venu en éclaireur, qui a tout fait pour la cause des Daleks. Ces derniers disent qu’il est impur, le Dalek dit qu’il peut être purifié en modifiant son ADN, mais les Daleks le détruisent en indiquant que c’est leur façon de purifier. Ryan et Graham rejoignent Jack en disant que les charges sont posées qu’ils peuvent y aller mais Jack contacte la Docteur pour lui dire qu’il a une bonne et une mauvaise nouvelle. La bonne c’est que le dernier Dalek de Robertson est détruit. La Docteur demande si elle peut ignorer la mauvaise, mais Jack lui explique que la mauvaise est que Robertson l’a dénoncé aux Daleks et qu’ils savent qu’elle est là. Elle confirme qu’elle savait que ça ne lui plairait pas. Yaz lui demande ce qu’elles doivent faire, la Docteur pense que même en détruisant leur vaisseau, les Daleks seront dans le ciel à la chercher. Yaz dit qu’elle peut leur échapper mais la Docteur a une idée, elle réfléchit et programme le Tardis. La Docteur demande à Yaz de lui faire confiance ajoutant qu’elle ne l’a jamais laissé tomber. La Docteur comprend que Yaz n’est pas confiante et lui dit qu’elle ne disparaîtra plus. Yaz répond que ça arrivera forcément un jour. Le Tardis arrive à destination, Yaz demande où elles sont. La Docteur lui demande de venir surveiller le compte à rebours sur la console. Elle prévient à Jack de se tenir prêt à évacuer et tout faire sauter, que Yaz lui dira quand. Jack s’inquiète des autres Daleks et elle répond qu’elle s’en occupe en courant vers la porte du Tardis. Robertson est en mauvaise posture, il espère s’échapper aux Dalek qui ont détecté le Docteur et son Tardis et se préparent à l’exterminer. Ryan attrape Robertson et l’empêche de parler, Graham lui demande une raison pour lui sauver la vie. Il répond l’argent, Jack dit qu’ils devraient le laisser là mais les Daleks les repèrent et leur tirent dessus. Dans le ciel, les Daleks encerclent le Tardis et la Docteur ouvre la porte pour leur parler, elle les nargue disant qu’elle a envoyé un message et qu’ils sont venus comme de gentils toutous et les remercie du coup de main. Les Daleks n’apprécient pas et s’énervent. Elle leur demande ce qu’ils vont faire alors qu’elle est dans son Tardis. Ils lancent l’attaque contre le Tardis et la Docteur se précipitent à l’intérieur suivi par les Daleks. Dans le vaisseau Dalek, Jack, Ryan, Graham et Robertson tentent d’échapper aux Daleks, Jack dit qu’il faut partir et Robertson se plaint du sauvetage. Alors qu’ils sont encerclés, Ryan demande si c’est le moment, Jack leur dit de s’accrocher tandis que Yaz leur confirme. Alors que les Daleks leur demandent de s’identifier, Jack se présente avant d’appuyer sur le bouton et de les téléporter. Le vaisseau Dalek explose. Les Daleks qui se trouvent dans le Tardis cherche la Docteur, elle apparaît en hologramme, disant qu’ils se sont fait avoir avec le vieux truc du bonneteau car ce n’est pas son Tardis, elle en avait un de rab dont le circuit caméléon a imité le sien. Les Daleks disent qu’ils la trouveront grâce à ce Tardis mais elle explique qu’il est programmé pour se replier sur lui-même et s’envoyer dans le vide ce qui le détruira et eux avec. Elle les remercie pour leur aide et leur dit au revoir. Ils répondent qu’elle ne leur échappera pas et elle répond que si, comme à chaque fois. Le Tardis se disloque et disparait avec les Daleks. Dans le vrai Tardis, Jack, Graham, Ryan et Robertson se matérialisent, Jack demande s’ils ont réussi. Yaz confirme que oui et Jack la prend dans ses bras, pendant que la Docteur dit à Robertson qu’il va devoir s’expliquer. Il répond qu’il a agi comme appât et la Docteur n’en revient pas. Aux infos, une journaliste parle de celui qu’on surnomme le sauveur de l’humanité, qui a résisté à l’envahisseur. Jack Robertson lui accorde un entretien et explique qu’il a fait ce que n’importe quelle personne aurait fait. Graham éteint la télé et demande à Ryan s’il arrive à croire que Robertson passe pour un héros. Graham se lève du canapé disant qu’ils doivent rejoindre la Doc. Ryan reste pensif et fini par le suivre. Le Tardis est en bas de l’immeuble de Yaz. Ryan et Graham entre dans le Tardis et voit que la Docteur parle à Jack par téléphone tout en bricolant le Tardis. Jack raconte au Docteur que Gwen l’embrasse et qu’elle a détruit un dalek, il ajoute qu’il va rester un peu papoter avec elle et qu’il appellera la Docteur. Cette dernière lui dit de transmettre ses amitiés à Gwen avant de lui dire au revoir. Voyant la Fam réunit, la Docteur leur propose d’aller voir la Galaxie Meringuée. Graham approuve, elle leur demande s’ils sont prêts à partir, Graham et Yaz le sont mais Ryan dit qu’il va rester, la Docteur est surprise. Il dit qu’il veut être là pour ses amis et pour protéger la Terre. Il explique au Docteur qu’avant de la connaître il ne savait pas quoi faire de sa vie mais que maintenant il sait. Graham et Yaz reste sans voix. La Docteur dit qu’elle est restée trop longtemps absente. Ryan sourit et demande s’ils peuvent se faire un câlin. Elle le serre dans ses bras puis demande à Graham et Yaz ce qu’ils veulent faire. Yaz veut continuer, elle n’est pas encore prête à la laisser ce que Ryan comprend. La Docteur est contente et Ryan trouve qu’elle se réjouit vite de son départ et elle répond qu’elle a deux cœurs, un heureux et un triste. Ryan demande à Yaz de l’empêcher de se mettre dans les ennuis, elle répond que ça va être difficile et le désigne responsable de la planète pendant son absence avant de le serrer à son tour dans ses bras. La Docteur demande à Graham, il a l’air embêté, Ryan lui dit qu’il peut les accompagner, qu’il est grand. Graham répond qu’il y a tant de choses à voir et à explorer, mais qu’il ne peut pas passer à côté de Ryan, que continuer sans lui c’est plus pareil, qu’il est sa famille. Il ajoute que la Docteur leur avait dit qu’ils reviendraient changés mais que ce n’est pas ce qu’il s’imaginait. Il ajoute qu’il est prêt à être chez lui avec son petit-fils. La Docteur lui sourit, Ryan fait la grimace, et dit qu’il espérait avoir la maison pour lui tout seul. Graham se moque de lui. Yaz est triste et Graham la serre dans ses bras en lui disant qu’ils se reverront, qu’il compte sur elle pour rendre l’humanité fière. Elle répond qu’il va lui manquer. Puis Graham serre la Docteur dans ses bras en la remerciant. Il appelle Ryan pour partir mais la Docteur les attrape tous les trois pour faire un câlin collectif où elle dit au revoir à sa famille. Alors que Ryan et Graham s’apprête à partir, elle leur offre à chacun un papier psychique en disant qu’ils pourraient en avoir besoin. Avant de quitter le Tardis avec Ryan, Graham dit au Docteur, qu’il se trompait, il y a des aliens à Sheffield. Yaz et la Docteur restent bouleversées par leur départ. La Docteur dit qu’elle pourrait remonter le temps et revenir une heure après leur retour sur Terre pour changer l’histoire, passer plus de temps ensemble mais Yaz lui explique que c’est normal d’être triste. A la campagne, Graham aide Ryan à faire du vélo. Ryan fait quelques mètres avant de tomber. Graham se précipite pour voir s’il ne s’est pas fait mal et affirme qu’il est allé plus loin que la dernière fois. Ryan n’est pas convaincu mais parle de trucs vu sur internet, des choses étranges en Finlande, une attaque de trolls. Graham ajoute qu’il a aussi vu une carrière fermée en Corée où le gravier prend vie. Ils sortent leurs papiers psychiques en disant qu’avec ça, ils pourront allés partout. Graham demande ce qu’ils attendent, Ryan dit qu’il n’a pas fini avec le vélo, Graham dit qu’il va être couvert de bleus. Ryan répond qu’il est Ryan Sinclair et qu’avec ses amis, ils ont tout vu, des araignées géantes, un univers conscient, ils ont combattu des Cybermen, Skithra, Morax, le terrible Pting, et que c’est pas un vélo qui va l’impressionner. Il demande confirmation à Graham en l’appelant Papy et ce dernier l’encourage à remonter en selle. Ryan enfourche son vélo, Graham le soutient. Face à l’horizon éclairé, ils voient Grace qui leur sourit, Graham dit que tout va bien et Ryan confirme malgré une larme qu’il justifie par le soleil qui l’a éblouie. Graham lui dit encore quelques essais et on va sauver le monde ». Ryan se lance sous les encouragements de Graham. Par ShanInXYZ
TheDalek, now unlinked from Lyn, has rebuilt itself again from memory - but it's still no match for the Doctor Subscribe to Doctor Who for more exclusive
Sortie originale 1 January 2021 Épisode précédent S12E10 - The Timeless Children Numéro S12E11 Pays Royaume-Uni Genres Aventure, Drame, Science-fiction S Revolution of the Daleks 2K membres Pendant que le Docteur est enfermée dans une prison extraterrestre de haute sécurité dans l'espace, ses amis Graham O'Brien, Ryan Sinclair et Yasmin Khan découvrent l'existence d'un plan mettant en jeu les Daleks, et doivent réussir à le combattre, aidés par le Capitaine Jack Harkness. 3 séries décalées avec des héroïnes à découvrir sur BrutX La plateforme BrutX s’est lancée récemment et si on connait la marque pour ses sujets de société, sont bel et bien présentes des fictions. BetaSeries vous suggère quatre séries exclusives sur la que le titre rend curieux. Qu’est-ce donc que Creamerie ? Un magasin de glace ? Que nenni ! Creamerie fait référence à une ferme laitière. Dans le monde de la série, en seulement 30 jours, une peste virale a éradiqué 99% des hommes sur Terre. Seul 1% a été préservé quelque part, mais personne ne sait trop où. Oui, ça vous rappelle Y the Last Man dans le concept, mais évidemment, cela n’a rien à voir dans le traitement. Est apparu Wellness, un mouvement où les femmes sont décisionnaires. Huit ans plus tard, nos trois héroïnes revoient un homme pour la première fois dans leur ferme laitière…Lire l'intégralité de l'article Prochain épisode S13E01 - The Halloween Apocalypse Contenu réservé aux membres Si vous êtes un amateur de séries, vous savez à quel point il est difficile de rester à jour simplement dans ses épisodes. Entre les semaines de vacances et les séries qui reprennent sans prévenir, c'est parfois un enfer. Grâce à BetaSeries, vous pouvez enfin gérer vos séries de A à Z De la gestion de votre planning et de vos films, en passant par la découverte de nouvelles séries... Tout cela entouré de la communauté BetaSeries ainsi que de vos amis, directement sur le site !
DoctorWho: un teaser pour la saison 13 Le 19/10/2021 à 17h26 par Amelie Brillet. Jodie Whittaker entre dans sa dernière saison de Doctor Who (2005); et elle ne va pas avoir droit à des adieux paisibles. 0 Commentaire(s)
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Swashbuckleyour seatbelts for a new special! Facing terrifying forces, how do lost treasure, pirate queen Madam Ching, the Doctor and the Sea Devils fit into a threat to the whole world? Sci-Fi
Découvrez tout ce que vous devez savoir sur Doctor Who Saison 13 ! La date de sortie, l’histoire saison 13 de Doctor Who est une certitude. Mais quand la série sera-t-elle diffusée, et que se passera-t-il dans la troisième saison de Jodie Whittaker en tant que Doctor ? La finale de la saison 12 de Doctor Who, The Timeless Children », a réécrit toute l’histoire de la série télévisée de la BBC. Jodie Whittaker n’est plus la treizième Docteur. Elle n’a plus aucune idée du nombre de ses incarnations est clair que le présentateur Chris Chibnall a une vision globale. Son thème Timeless Child » a été mis en place dans Doctor Who saison 11, épisode 2. Les exécutions sont cependant mitigées et les chiffres d’audience sont en baisse. Malgré cela, Doctor Who reste la série de science-fiction phare. Il est clair que Doctor Who n’est pas en danger d’ faut espérer que la saison 13 de Doctor Who abordera certains des problèmes de la saison 12. Avec un certain nombre de scénarios étonnamment précipités et une mauvaise signalisation des rebondissements du troisième acte. Chibnall vient de transformer la mythologie de Doctor Who. Ce qui signifie avec une bonne écriture que cette saison pourrait être particulièrement production de la saison 13 de Doctor Who devrait commencer à l’automne 2020, peut-être en septembre. L’ère Chibnall est réputée pour sa grande qualité de production. Les années des monstres en papier bulle ont disparu, remplacées par des images de synthèse de haute qualité. Eet la production devrait donc durer environ 10 mois. Cela signifie que la date de sortie de la saison 13 de Doctor Who devrait être pour l’automne 2021, peut-être dans le même créneau que la saison 11 d’ Of The Daleks arrivera entre la Saison 12 et 13 de Doctor WhoLa saison 13 de Doctor Who sera précédée d’une émission spéciale unique, Revolution of the Daleks ». Elle reprendra sans doute le dramatique cliffhanger de la fin de la saison 12 de Doctor Who. La BBC appelle cette émission Holiday Special ». Refusant de confirmer si elle sera diffusée le jour de Noël ou le jour de l’An. Chibnall lui-même a laissé entendre que la programmation n’est pas encore va être l’histoire de la prochaine saison ?La saison 12 de Doctor Who s’achève de façon dramatique, avec le Docteur emprisonné par les Judoon pour des crimes dont elle ne se souvient même pas. Sa famille a été ramenée à son époque via un TARDIS qui lui est propre. Et ils croient que le Docteur est mort. Le gros de l’affaire sera sans doute traité dans le Spécial des Fêtes. Mais certaines répercussions pourraient se répercuter sur la saison 13 de Doctor révélations de The Timeless Children » auront certainement un effet durable sur les mythes de la série. Ajoutant beaucoup plus de mystère au Docteur. Elle sait maintenant que toute son histoire est un mensonge et qu’elle n’est pas du tout un Seigneur du Temps. Il est possible que cela conduise le Docteur à essayer de redécouvrir son propre peuple, qui n’a jamais été vu auparavant. En attendant, il est possible que d’autres rencontres avec des incarnations passées oubliées aient lieu. Y compris, espérons-le, celle du Docteur Ruth de Jo différence de casting ?La saison 13 de Doctor Who verra le retour de Jodie Whittaker en tant que Docteur. Il n’y a pas lieu de se demander si ses compagnons – Graham de Bradley Walsh, Yaz de Mandip Gill et Ryan de Tosin Cole reviendront également. Ils ont été renvoyés dans leur temps libre, ce qui signifie qu’ils pourraient décider d’y rester. Ryan et Yaz en particulier ont eu des conversations dans lesquelles ils ont envisagé la vie après le Docteur. Ce qui pourrait préfigurer leur départ dans le Spécial l’explication de la fin de la saison 12 de Doctor Who timeless child, seigneur du temps, la division etc. Regardersur HBO Max 2K membres Pendant que le Docteur est enfermée dans une prison extraterrestre de haute sécurité dans l'espace, ses amis Graham O'Brien, Ryan Sinclair et ajouter aux favorisretirer des favoris/ Retrouvez les saisons 11 et 12 en version multilingue. Le Docteur, un extraterrestre originaire de la planète Gallifrey, voyage dans le temps et l'espace à bord du Tardis. Soucieux de l'avenir de l'humanité, il lutte contre les Daleks, les Anges pleureurs, les Cybermen, les Oods et toutes sortes de créatures spatiales malfaisantes suivez ce programme Découvrez la série britanique Doctor Who en streaming sur !Créée par Sydney Newman et Donald Wilson et diffusée depuis le 23 novembre 1963 sur BBC One, la série de science-fiction raconte les aventures du Docteur, qui voyage à travers l'espace et le temps à bord d'un vaisseau spatial, le Tardis Time And Relative Dimension In Space, qu'on trouve aussi traduit en version française par Temps à relativité dimensionnelle inter-spatiale ». Soucieux de l'avenir de l'humanité, il lutte contre les Daleks, les Anges pleureurs, les Cybermen, les Oods et toutes sortes de créatures spatiales malfaisantes. Lorsqu'il est blessé ou trop vieux, son corps se régénère et le Docteur reprend vie et le combat sous une autre apparence. Après une interruption entre 1989 et 2005, la série de science-fiction britannique a fêté ses 50 ans en 2013. Pour incarner ce héros âgé de 900 ans, capable de se régénérer, différents acteurs se sont succédé après William Hartnell — le premier à avoir endossé le rôle-titre —, chacun apportant sa touche personnelle tout en gardant l’essence même du personnage dont Christopher Eccleston, David Tennant, Matt Smith, Peter Capaldi et Jodie Whittaker, première femme dans le rôle à l'occasion de la saison par un nouveau showrunner, Chris Chibnall créateur de Broadchurch, découvrez pour la première fois un nouveau Docteur sous les traits d'une femme Jodie Whittaker. Cette saison 11 marque l’arrivée de trois nouveaux compagnons Yasmin Mandip Gill, Ryan Tosin Cole et Graham Bradley Walsh. Casting saison 11 & 12Jodie Whittaker Treizième DocteurBradley Walsh Graham O'BrienMandip Gill Yasmin KhanTosin Cole Ryan SinclairSacha Dhawan Le MaîtreJo Martin Ruth ClaytonJohn Barrowman Jack Harkness Patrick O'Kane Ashad
DoctorWho The Eight 005 War Of The Daleks. Skip to main content. Due to a planned power outage on Friday, 1/14, between 8am-1pm PST, some services may be impacted. A line
1 January 2021 154 membres How Can You Fight A Dalek Without The Doctor? The Doctor is locked away in a high-security alien prison. Isolated, alone, with no hope of escape. Far away, on Earth, her best friends, Yaz, Ryan and Graham have to pick up their lives without her. But it’s not easy. Old habits die hard. Especially when they discover a disturbing plan forming. A plan which involves a Dalek. How can you fight a Dalek, without the Doctor? Options Fiche TheMovieDB
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News Bandes-annonces Photos Critiques Durée 135 mn Année de production 2018 Pays de production France Genre Retransmission Couleur Couleur Synopsis En l'an 1789, Jeanne et son frère Jérôme quittent Marseille pour Paris afin de soutenir la Révolution qui est en marche à la capitale. Sur leur chemin vers la liberté, ils rencontrent également l'amour. Très peu de ballets rendent autant justice à l'énergie et au talent débordants de la compagnie moscovite que Les Flammes de Paris». La version du chorégraphe russe Alexeï Ratmansky retourne aux sources de la création de ce ballet révolutionnaire, avec une virtuosité et une puissance figurées par quelques-uns des plus époustouflants pas du ballet... Pas d'offres actuellement. Toutes les séances de Les Flammes de Paris Ballet du Bolchoï Connorand I react to the latest New Year's Day special of Doctor Who, enjoy! Apologies for the less than ideal audio, but I'm sure you can understand the le British Network TelevisionThe Doctor, with Captain Jack returning, confronts the DaleksScreen Capture Jodie Whittaker as The Doctor in “Doctor Who”Whovians, with how the twelfth series finale ended, were probably left wondering want would come of The Doctor Jodie Whittaker and her three companions Graham O’Brien Bradley Walsh, Yasmin Khan Mandip…
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Home > Doctor Who > Doctor Who 90% Average Tomatometer Avg Tomatometer 67% Average Audience Score Avg Audience Score Series Info An eccentric yet compassionate extraterrestrial Time Lord zips through time and space to solve problems and battle injustice across the universe, traveling via the TARDIS Time and Relative Dimensions in Space, which is his old and occasionally unreliable spaceship that resembles a blue police phone box but changes its appearance depending on its surroundings and is much, much larger inside than outside. Buy Seasons 1-13 Buy Seasons 1-13 Subscription Seasons 1-13 Buy Seasons 1-13 Star Trek The Next Generation Doctor Who Videos Doctor Who Photos Seasons Cast & Crew Series Details News & Interviews for Doctor Who
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DoctorWho Temporada 12 especial año nuevo "Revolution of the Daleks" (subtítulos en español) parte (1/2)
As for BBC Three it is a million miles better than most of the shite on cable. There are dozens of channels which I never watch - absolute rubbish full of endless ads. 0 TV is going through a period of huge change. What does any enterprise need to weather and indeed thrive in a period of such change? They need a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response. Now is the worst time to start tinkering with those foundations. They don't have "a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response." They have a pittance to spend when compared to their new competitors. I've mentioned it before but Amazon are spending roughly as much on the first season of their Lord of the Rings series as the BBC spends on drama in an entire year. British broadcasters have never faced such well funded competition before, and unlike in the past those mostly US competitors can access the UK market directly. Netflix and other streamers have massively bigger budgets, but way more watch the BBC. Looks to me like the BBC is a model of efficiency we should be celebrating then! Except a nobody actually fully knows for certain Netflix viewership as they never release it and b there is an absolutely huge demographic split. Oldies continue to watch linear tv, but middle aged and younger people don't at anywhere near the same amount. Media is having the same revolution as the globalisation of every other industry over the past 20-30 years, and many seem to want to try and repeat the mistake of those industries holding onto this yes but we are the best mantra, no need to change. There is a common fallacy in political thinking. It goes like this... Something needs to change. This is something. So we should do BBC and Channel 4 are well aware that the broader industry is changing and changing rapidly. The BBC and Channel 4 are Dorries thinks that privatising Channel 4 is the change that is needed. Dorries didn't even know how Channel 4 was funded some months ago. Why should I believe that Dorries now knows better what change is needed than the people in Channel 4 and the wider industry, who largely don't think this is the change that is needed?I don't think Government automatically knows best. I think there are plenty of contexts where Government should step back and let enterprises get on with the job. My original comment was exactly this.....I linked to an article was saying yes aware of the elephant in the room, but there is never any suggestion of how to adapt. Its instant we can't change this way because yadda yadda yadda. Ok, and so how do you suggest changing, and there is tumbleweed. How are BBC or CH4 adapting? BBC Three coming back, genius. 4k / HDR still in "beta" for years and the system failed on iPlayer for Euro final. Sky / BT / Netflix have had 4k for years now. Channel 4 isn't going to turn it into Netflix. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? Channel 4 one.....Waffle waffle buzz word waffle....no mention 4k, no mention HDR, "Using a more viewer-centric approach to inform activity and decisions across Channel 4".."Rolling out personalisation features on All 4, including smarter recommendations"Fk me, they are like 10 years behind the rest of the normal world is that if their "future goals" for 2025. Just more evidence their tech is just garbage. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? AGAIN.....nobody is answering my question.....any suggestion of change is met we no we can't do that / that would be bad....so what are the proposals. You linked to their plans, and its a joke. Buzz word salad and the some vague realisation that Machine learning exists and that perhaps in 3 years time they might have a basic recommendation service, which Netflix, Spotify etc etc etc have had from their inception and which the likes of TikTok absolutely smash. This is not so forgive us all if there's more focus on the political aspects. The change that has been proposed by Dorries is to sell Channel 4, to take it out of public ownership, to dismantle Thatcher's Dorries's change solve the challenges you tell us about? those very significant challenges still exist is an important point, but they are somewhat tangential. That is just trying to side step the issue. There is zero evidence the BBC or CH4 have an real idea how to adapt to this changed world. I posted a link earlier showing how way more people watch the BBC than Netflix. Channel 4 was tied with Netflix, IIRC, despite spending far less. So, the world has changed and the BBC and Channel 4 are doing more than say "changed world" above. You are probably going to reply talking about trajectory and future changes to come. You probably should've said "changING world".If you want to talk about the future, explain how a privatised Channel 4 or BBC would adapt better. ITV is privatised and is doing a terrible job of adapting! And we circle right back around to my initial point. Those who want to fight against this privatisation need to propose a coherent plan for the future, and the key problem is they never do. It is classic Sir Humphrey, we can't do that reply, look at what we did 30 years ago. So either the government will get its way or they will U-Turn, the CH4 supporters will celebrate initially and I bet they don't adapt. Donald Trump once suggested injecting bleach to cure COVID-19. Sometimes ideas suggest by politicians are stupid and it's fine to say they're wrong, without Today, yes, but their entire business model is being destroyed. Anyone who knows anything understands that what is true today might not be the same in the they embrace the future, or they die. That their erstwhile "defenders" of the status quo want to defend it as being able to make money via commercials today isn't a really good endorsement for it adapting for the future. The problem is neither the Beeb or C4 see this or accept this. They just want to cling on to the past model irrespective of how the market is changing. But this is industry is notorious for it. Be it home taping, VHS video, Napster. Any technological change or innovation is resisted. Even the migration from black and white to colour TV was a problem. This is just nonsense. The BBC and C4 are very aware of how the industry is changing. Neither is proposing doing nothing. Both have embraced technological change and innovation. What they are opposing is a specific change in how they are funded. Given no-one in this thread can explain why these changes in funding model would solve any of the global challenges in broadcasting, I sympathise with their a political ideology called conservatism that recognises the value of established institutions and suggests we should be wary of tinkering with the fundamentals. It often champions this country's success stories. It used to have a lot of MPs in Parliament. I wonder where they all went? You literally linked to these plans and CH4 "technological innovation" is basically have a recommendation system that has been standard in every other walk of life for 5 years. Totally clueless. iPlayer tech is crap, 4oD tech is crap, what's the plan to hire people to compete. Where's my 4K, where's my proper HDR. Disney literally paid several billion dollars to buy BAMTech, so they had the tech required for their Disney+ streaming service, in order to ensure they had the tech to compete. The weird thing is that the web iPlayer actually has proper 1080p and it gets pushed as far as the CDNs! - they just don't expose access to it it via the web interface. iPlayer via Virgin cable has UHD for a fair few shows now. By "fair few" you mean hardly any... I’ve seen quite a few in UHD through Virgin cable. They tend to do them in UHD when the show suits it I think. That is exactly my link. That is tiny list in 2022. It isn't about when it suits, it is as much who made it The Tourist was made with HBO. HBO will insist on 4k. 9/11 Inside the President's War Room was made in conjunction with Apple+. 0 The destruction of Russian war equipment continues..."Ukraine 2 days ago, the Operational Command "East" of the Ukrainian Army posted video that claimed to show "over 40" Russian vehicles destroyed by Ukrainian Artillery fire on a Russian rear base. We did not publish it, as we couldn't verify the claim or the target. However...It actually turns out that this claim was legitimate, with at least 35 vehicles totally destroyed or damaged; mostly supply or fuel trucks, but with BMP/T-72 variant also. This is a serious blow." Both Ukrainian intel and targeting very sharp there. They don't tend to get into the detail understandably, but one area one assumes the West is able to have an oversized impact would be worth intel. They also don't have to spend all their time protecting Kyiv now, so can get to grips with how to really hurt the Russians in the south and east. 0 TV is going through a period of huge change. What does any enterprise need to weather and indeed thrive in a period of such change? They need a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response. Now is the worst time to start tinkering with those foundations. They don't have "a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response." They have a pittance to spend when compared to their new competitors. I've mentioned it before but Amazon are spending roughly as much on the first season of their Lord of the Rings series as the BBC spends on drama in an entire year. British broadcasters have never faced such well funded competition before, and unlike in the past those mostly US competitors can access the UK market directly. Netflix and other streamers have massively bigger budgets, but way more watch the BBC. Looks to me like the BBC is a model of efficiency we should be celebrating then! Except a nobody actually fully knows for certain Netflix viewership as they never release it and b there is an absolutely huge demographic split. Oldies continue to watch linear tv, but middle aged and younger people don't at anywhere near the same amount. Media is having the same revolution as the globalisation of every other industry over the past 20-30 years, and many seem to want to try and repeat the mistake of those industries holding onto this yes but we are the best mantra, no need to change. There is a common fallacy in political thinking. It goes like this... Something needs to change. This is something. So we should do BBC and Channel 4 are well aware that the broader industry is changing and changing rapidly. The BBC and Channel 4 are Dorries thinks that privatising Channel 4 is the change that is needed. Dorries didn't even know how Channel 4 was funded some months ago. Why should I believe that Dorries now knows better what change is needed than the people in Channel 4 and the wider industry, who largely don't think this is the change that is needed?I don't think Government automatically knows best. I think there are plenty of contexts where Government should step back and let enterprises get on with the job. My original comment was exactly this.....I linked to an article was saying yes aware of the elephant in the room, but there is never any suggestion of how to adapt. Its instant we can't change this way because yadda yadda yadda. Ok, and so how do you suggest changing, and there is tumbleweed. How are BBC or CH4 adapting? BBC Three coming back, genius. 4k / HDR still in "beta" for years and the system failed on iPlayer for Euro final. Sky / BT / Netflix have had 4k for years now. Channel 4 isn't going to turn it into Netflix. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? Channel 4 one.....Waffle waffle buzz word waffle....no mention 4k, no mention HDR, "Using a more viewer-centric approach to inform activity and decisions across Channel 4".."Rolling out personalisation features on All 4, including smarter recommendations"Fk me, they are like 10 years behind the rest of the normal world is that if their "future goals" for 2025. Just more evidence their tech is just garbage. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? AGAIN.....nobody is answering my question.....any suggestion of change is met we no we can't do that / that would be bad....so what are the proposals. You linked to their plans, and its a joke. Buzz word salad and the some vague realisation that Machine learning exists and that perhaps in 3 years time they might have a basic recommendation service, which Netflix, Spotify etc etc etc have had from their inception and which the likes of TikTok absolutely smash. This is not so forgive us all if there's more focus on the political aspects. The change that has been proposed by Dorries is to sell Channel 4, to take it out of public ownership, to dismantle Thatcher's Dorries's change solve the challenges you tell us about? those very significant challenges still exist is an important point, but they are somewhat tangential. That is just trying to side step the issue. There is zero evidence the BBC or CH4 have an real idea how to adapt to this changed world. I posted a link earlier showing how way more people watch the BBC than Netflix. Channel 4 was tied with Netflix, IIRC, despite spending far less. So, the world has changed and the BBC and Channel 4 are doing more than say "changed world" above. You are probably going to reply talking about trajectory and future changes to come. You probably should've said "changING world".If you want to talk about the future, explain how a privatised Channel 4 or BBC would adapt better. ITV is privatised and is doing a terrible job of adapting! And we circle right back around to my initial point. Those who want to fight against this privatisation need to propose a coherent plan for the future, and the key problem is they never do. It is classic Sir Humphrey, we can't do that reply, look at what we did 30 years ago. So either the government will get its way or they will U-Turn, the CH4 supporters will celebrate initially and I bet they don't adapt. Donald Trump once suggested injecting bleach to cure COVID-19. Sometimes ideas suggest by politicians are stupid and it's fine to say they're wrong, without Today, yes, but their entire business model is being destroyed. Anyone who knows anything understands that what is true today might not be the same in the they embrace the future, or they die. That their erstwhile "defenders" of the status quo want to defend it as being able to make money via commercials today isn't a really good endorsement for it adapting for the future. The problem is neither the Beeb or C4 see this or accept this. They just want to cling on to the past model irrespective of how the market is changing. But this is industry is notorious for it. Be it home taping, VHS video, Napster. Any technological change or innovation is resisted. Even the migration from black and white to colour TV was a problem. This is just nonsense. The BBC and C4 are very aware of how the industry is changing. Neither is proposing doing nothing. Both have embraced technological change and innovation. What they are opposing is a specific change in how they are funded. Given no-one in this thread can explain why these changes in funding model would solve any of the global challenges in broadcasting, I sympathise with their a political ideology called conservatism that recognises the value of established institutions and suggests we should be wary of tinkering with the fundamentals. It often champions this country's success stories. It used to have a lot of MPs in Parliament. I wonder where they all went? You literally linked to these plans and CH4 "technological innovation" is basically have a recommendation system that has been standard in every other walk of life for 5 years. Totally clueless. iPlayer tech is crap, 4oD tech is crap, what's the plan to hire people to compete. Where's my 4K, where's my proper HDR. Disney literally paid several billion dollars to buy BAMTech, so they had the tech required for their Disney+ streaming service, in order to ensure they had the tech to compete. Sorry but for most people and indeed most content 4k and proper HDR aren't worth the very significant additional because most people really wouldn't care and except for sport and for Premium Drama 4K and proper HDR just isn't required. Er, what “significant extra costs” UHD TVs are standard nowadays. 1080p tv's are very much in the minority now and normally the small sized ones. I won't be surprised if all the major brands just stop selling any shortly. I don't believe the big brands like Samsung, LG, Sony, even make them, they are just a cheap Chinese one from somebody like TCL they stick a brand label on. Indeed. eek was completely wrong about that. 0 Anyway! It's Local Elections Nominations Day! Hoop Hoop!In Havering, we have Havering Residents Association vs Hornchurch & Upminster Independents in one ward, and Havering Residents Association vs Indepdendent Harold Hill Resisdents association in another, and Harold Wood Residents vs Havering Residents Harold Wood in a politics are just bonkers. 4 Anyway! It's Local Elections Nominations Day! Hoop Hoop!In Havering, we have Havering Residents Association vs Hornchurch & Upminster Independents in one ward, and Havering Residents Association vs Indepdendent Harold Hill Resisdents association in another, and Harold Wood Residents vs Havering Residents Harold Wood in a politics are just bonkers. Splitters! 1 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? 1 As for BBC Three it is a million miles better than most of the shite on cable. There are dozens of channels which I never watch - absolute rubbish full of endless ads. The crap cable / satellite channels are dead men walking too. Sky should be as worried as anybody about how the world of media is problem is BBC Three isn't better in the minds of the target demographic than the array of other options...that's why the yuff aren't watching BBC Three. The people saying well I think BBC Three is alright, you aren't the demographic, its teenagers through to mid 20s, and they ain't watching when it was on iPlayer and they ain't watching now its back on linear tv. 1 Anyway! It's Local Elections Nominations Day! Hoop Hoop!In Havering, we have Havering Residents Association vs Hornchurch & Upminster Independents in one ward, and Havering Residents Association vs Indepdendent Harold Hill Resisdents association in another, and Harold Wood Residents vs Havering Residents Harold Wood in a politics are just bonkers. I think we're done and dusted in Aberdeenshire with nominations. The council has published the candidate list and it's not as exciting as all that Havering stuff. 0 TV is going through a period of huge change. What does any enterprise need to weather and indeed thrive in a period of such change? They need a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response. Now is the worst time to start tinkering with those foundations. They don't have "a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response." They have a pittance to spend when compared to their new competitors. I've mentioned it before but Amazon are spending roughly as much on the first season of their Lord of the Rings series as the BBC spends on drama in an entire year. British broadcasters have never faced such well funded competition before, and unlike in the past those mostly US competitors can access the UK market directly. Netflix and other streamers have massively bigger budgets, but way more watch the BBC. Looks to me like the BBC is a model of efficiency we should be celebrating then! Except a nobody actually fully knows for certain Netflix viewership as they never release it and b there is an absolutely huge demographic split. Oldies continue to watch linear tv, but middle aged and younger people don't at anywhere near the same amount. Media is having the same revolution as the globalisation of every other industry over the past 20-30 years, and many seem to want to try and repeat the mistake of those industries holding onto this yes but we are the best mantra, no need to change. There is a common fallacy in political thinking. It goes like this... Something needs to change. This is something. So we should do BBC and Channel 4 are well aware that the broader industry is changing and changing rapidly. The BBC and Channel 4 are Dorries thinks that privatising Channel 4 is the change that is needed. Dorries didn't even know how Channel 4 was funded some months ago. Why should I believe that Dorries now knows better what change is needed than the people in Channel 4 and the wider industry, who largely don't think this is the change that is needed?I don't think Government automatically knows best. I think there are plenty of contexts where Government should step back and let enterprises get on with the job. My original comment was exactly this.....I linked to an article was saying yes aware of the elephant in the room, but there is never any suggestion of how to adapt. Its instant we can't change this way because yadda yadda yadda. Ok, and so how do you suggest changing, and there is tumbleweed. How are BBC or CH4 adapting? BBC Three coming back, genius. 4k / HDR still in "beta" for years and the system failed on iPlayer for Euro final. Sky / BT / Netflix have had 4k for years now. Channel 4 isn't going to turn it into Netflix. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? Channel 4 one.....Waffle waffle buzz word waffle....no mention 4k, no mention HDR, "Using a more viewer-centric approach to inform activity and decisions across Channel 4".."Rolling out personalisation features on All 4, including smarter recommendations"Fk me, they are like 10 years behind the rest of the normal world is that if their "future goals" for 2025. Just more evidence their tech is just garbage. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? AGAIN.....nobody is answering my question.....any suggestion of change is met we no we can't do that / that would be bad....so what are the proposals. You linked to their plans, and its a joke. Buzz word salad and the some vague realisation that Machine learning exists and that perhaps in 3 years time they might have a basic recommendation service, which Netflix, Spotify etc etc etc have had from their inception and which the likes of TikTok absolutely smash. This is not so forgive us all if there's more focus on the political aspects. The change that has been proposed by Dorries is to sell Channel 4, to take it out of public ownership, to dismantle Thatcher's Dorries's change solve the challenges you tell us about? those very significant challenges still exist is an important point, but they are somewhat tangential. That is just trying to side step the issue. There is zero evidence the BBC or CH4 have an real idea how to adapt to this changed world. I posted a link earlier showing how way more people watch the BBC than Netflix. Channel 4 was tied with Netflix, IIRC, despite spending far less. So, the world has changed and the BBC and Channel 4 are doing more than say "changed world" above. You are probably going to reply talking about trajectory and future changes to come. You probably should've said "changING world".If you want to talk about the future, explain how a privatised Channel 4 or BBC would adapt better. ITV is privatised and is doing a terrible job of adapting! And we circle right back around to my initial point. Those who want to fight against this privatisation need to propose a coherent plan for the future, and the key problem is they never do. It is classic Sir Humphrey, we can't do that reply, look at what we did 30 years ago. So either the government will get its way or they will U-Turn, the CH4 supporters will celebrate initially and I bet they don't adapt. Donald Trump once suggested injecting bleach to cure COVID-19. Sometimes ideas suggest by politicians are stupid and it's fine to say they're wrong, without Today, yes, but their entire business model is being destroyed. Anyone who knows anything understands that what is true today might not be the same in the they embrace the future, or they die. That their erstwhile "defenders" of the status quo want to defend it as being able to make money via commercials today isn't a really good endorsement for it adapting for the future. The problem is neither the Beeb or C4 see this or accept this. They just want to cling on to the past model irrespective of how the market is changing. But this is industry is notorious for it. Be it home taping, VHS video, Napster. Any technological change or innovation is resisted. Even the migration from black and white to colour TV was a problem. This is just nonsense. The BBC and C4 are very aware of how the industry is changing. Neither is proposing doing nothing. Both have embraced technological change and innovation. What they are opposing is a specific change in how they are funded. Given no-one in this thread can explain why these changes in funding model would solve any of the global challenges in broadcasting, I sympathise with their a political ideology called conservatism that recognises the value of established institutions and suggests we should be wary of tinkering with the fundamentals. It often champions this country's success stories. It used to have a lot of MPs in Parliament. I wonder where they all went? You literally linked to these plans and CH4 "technological innovation" is basically have a recommendation system that has been standard in every other walk of life for 5 years. Totally clueless. iPlayer tech is crap, 4oD tech is crap, what's the plan to hire people to compete. Where's my 4K, where's my proper HDR. Disney literally paid several billion dollars to buy BAMTech, so they had the tech required for their Disney+ streaming service, in order to ensure they had the tech to compete. The weird thing is that the web iPlayer actually has proper 1080p and it gets pushed as far as the CDNs! - they just don't expose access to it it via the web interface. iPlayer via Virgin cable has UHD for a fair few shows now. By "fair few" you mean hardly any... I’ve seen quite a few in UHD through Virgin cable. They tend to do them in UHD when the show suits it I think. That is exactly my link. That is tiny list in 2022. It isn't about when it suits, it is as much who made it The Tourist was made with HBO. HBO will insist on 4k. 9/11 Inside the President's War Room was made in conjunction with Apple+. It’s not tiny unless you watch far too much telly! It would take me years to get through all those! I’ve seen some of them but not that many. 0 It's striking how much support Boris Johnson is getting for his comments on trans issues from people who are not his natural supporters. This one is typicalannettepaceyOh god oh no someone I loathe just made a really good point. Still could never bring myself to vote for the bastard but this is what happens when Labour turn their backs on women and leave an open goal labourlosingwomen No, I've been told by PB experts that saying women have cocks won't hurt Labour. I think ultimately their hatred of Boris / Brexit will still have these people don their Polly Trademarked nose pegs and vote against Boris. Yes but people who say things like that aren't the target - it's the floaters who will play safe. 0 The destruction of Russian war equipment continues..."Ukraine 2 days ago, the Operational Command "East" of the Ukrainian Army posted video that claimed to show "over 40" Russian vehicles destroyed by Ukrainian Artillery fire on a Russian rear base. We did not publish it, as we couldn't verify the claim or the target. However...It actually turns out that this claim was legitimate, with at least 35 vehicles totally destroyed or damaged; mostly supply or fuel trucks, but with BMP/T-72 variant also. This is a serious blow." Both Ukrainian intel and targeting very sharp there. They don't tend to get into the detail understandably, but one area one assumes the West is able to have an oversized impact would be worth What's significant about an operation like this one is that it implies a fairly tight integration of intelligence gathered, target identified, communicated to units in the field that can act, target hit under individual step requires a certain level of competence, but combining them all together is that much more difficult, and therefore impressive. 0 TV is going through a period of huge change. What does any enterprise need to weather and indeed thrive in a period of such change? They need a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response. Now is the worst time to start tinkering with those foundations. They don't have "a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response." They have a pittance to spend when compared to their new competitors. I've mentioned it before but Amazon are spending roughly as much on the first season of their Lord of the Rings series as the BBC spends on drama in an entire year. British broadcasters have never faced such well funded competition before, and unlike in the past those mostly US competitors can access the UK market directly. Netflix and other streamers have massively bigger budgets, but way more watch the BBC. Looks to me like the BBC is a model of efficiency we should be celebrating then! Except a nobody actually fully knows for certain Netflix viewership as they never release it and b there is an absolutely huge demographic split. Oldies continue to watch linear tv, but middle aged and younger people don't at anywhere near the same amount. Media is having the same revolution as the globalisation of every other industry over the past 20-30 years, and many seem to want to try and repeat the mistake of those industries holding onto this yes but we are the best mantra, no need to change. There is a common fallacy in political thinking. It goes like this... Something needs to change. This is something. So we should do BBC and Channel 4 are well aware that the broader industry is changing and changing rapidly. The BBC and Channel 4 are Dorries thinks that privatising Channel 4 is the change that is needed. Dorries didn't even know how Channel 4 was funded some months ago. Why should I believe that Dorries now knows better what change is needed than the people in Channel 4 and the wider industry, who largely don't think this is the change that is needed?I don't think Government automatically knows best. I think there are plenty of contexts where Government should step back and let enterprises get on with the job. My original comment was exactly this.....I linked to an article was saying yes aware of the elephant in the room, but there is never any suggestion of how to adapt. Its instant we can't change this way because yadda yadda yadda. Ok, and so how do you suggest changing, and there is tumbleweed. How are BBC or CH4 adapting? BBC Three coming back, genius. 4k / HDR still in "beta" for years and the system failed on iPlayer for Euro final. Sky / BT / Netflix have had 4k for years now. Channel 4 isn't going to turn it into Netflix. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? Channel 4 one.....Waffle waffle buzz word waffle....no mention 4k, no mention HDR, "Using a more viewer-centric approach to inform activity and decisions across Channel 4".."Rolling out personalisation features on All 4, including smarter recommendations"Fk me, they are like 10 years behind the rest of the normal world is that if their "future goals" for 2025. Just more evidence their tech is just garbage. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? AGAIN.....nobody is answering my question.....any suggestion of change is met we no we can't do that / that would be bad....so what are the proposals. You linked to their plans, and its a joke. Buzz word salad and the some vague realisation that Machine learning exists and that perhaps in 3 years time they might have a basic recommendation service, which Netflix, Spotify etc etc etc have had from their inception and which the likes of TikTok absolutely smash. This is not so forgive us all if there's more focus on the political aspects. The change that has been proposed by Dorries is to sell Channel 4, to take it out of public ownership, to dismantle Thatcher's Dorries's change solve the challenges you tell us about? those very significant challenges still exist is an important point, but they are somewhat tangential. That is just trying to side step the issue. There is zero evidence the BBC or CH4 have an real idea how to adapt to this changed world. I posted a link earlier showing how way more people watch the BBC than Netflix. Channel 4 was tied with Netflix, IIRC, despite spending far less. So, the world has changed and the BBC and Channel 4 are doing more than say "changed world" above. You are probably going to reply talking about trajectory and future changes to come. You probably should've said "changING world".If you want to talk about the future, explain how a privatised Channel 4 or BBC would adapt better. ITV is privatised and is doing a terrible job of adapting! And we circle right back around to my initial point. Those who want to fight against this privatisation need to propose a coherent plan for the future, and the key problem is they never do. It is classic Sir Humphrey, we can't do that reply, look at what we did 30 years ago. So either the government will get its way or they will U-Turn, the CH4 supporters will celebrate initially and I bet they don't adapt. Donald Trump once suggested injecting bleach to cure COVID-19. Sometimes ideas suggest by politicians are stupid and it's fine to say they're wrong, without Today, yes, but their entire business model is being destroyed. Anyone who knows anything understands that what is true today might not be the same in the they embrace the future, or they die. That their erstwhile "defenders" of the status quo want to defend it as being able to make money via commercials today isn't a really good endorsement for it adapting for the future. The problem is neither the Beeb or C4 see this or accept this. They just want to cling on to the past model irrespective of how the market is changing. But this is industry is notorious for it. Be it home taping, VHS video, Napster. Any technological change or innovation is resisted. Even the migration from black and white to colour TV was a problem. This is just nonsense. The BBC and C4 are very aware of how the industry is changing. Neither is proposing doing nothing. Both have embraced technological change and innovation. What they are opposing is a specific change in how they are funded. Given no-one in this thread can explain why these changes in funding model would solve any of the global challenges in broadcasting, I sympathise with their a political ideology called conservatism that recognises the value of established institutions and suggests we should be wary of tinkering with the fundamentals. It often champions this country's success stories. It used to have a lot of MPs in Parliament. I wonder where they all went? You literally linked to these plans and CH4 "technological innovation" is basically have a recommendation system that has been standard in every other walk of life for 5 years. Totally clueless. iPlayer tech is crap, 4oD tech is crap, what's the plan to hire people to compete. Where's my 4K, where's my proper HDR. Disney literally paid several billion dollars to buy BAMTech, so they had the tech required for their Disney+ streaming service, in order to ensure they had the tech to compete. The weird thing is that the web iPlayer actually has proper 1080p and it gets pushed as far as the CDNs! - they just don't expose access to it it via the web interface. iPlayer via Virgin cable has UHD for a fair few shows now. By "fair few" you mean hardly any... I’ve seen quite a few in UHD through Virgin cable. They tend to do them in UHD when the show suits it I List9/11 Inside the President's War RoomAttenborough's Life in ColourAttenborough's Wonder of SongBlue Planet IIChloeDoctor Who Revolution of the DaleksDynastiesThe Earthshot Prize Repairing Our PlanetThe Girl BeforeThe Green PlanetHis Dark MaterialsLife and Death in the WarehouseMoodPeaky Blinders, Series 6 A Perfect PlanetThe Pursuit of LoveThe ResponderRidley RoadSeven Worlds, One PlanetShowtrialThe TouristThe TrickA Very British ScandalVigilWonders of the Celtic DeepAs part of our trial, we also provided live streams in Ultra HD for both the UEFA Men's Euro 2020 and Wimbledon 2021. A lot of those shows have come around in the last few months which shows that the BBC are getting into gear with UHD now. Netflix might have the most UHD shows, but a not insignificant amount of them are documentaries which consist of interviews and archive footage. Someone sitting in a chair talking to a camera in UHD doesn't have the "wow" factor and wouldn't look much different in 1080p but still counts towards their UHD might not be the greatest video player, but it's not that way because the government owns it. ITV isn't government owned but the ITV Hub is absolute crap. 1 Nobody on here has made the case for Channel 4’s has the $1bn is neither here nor I see the BBC bashers are out in force. Based on my sample of New York parents at the school gate, the BBC has a very good reputation, albeit niche. Probably on the same level as HBO who are also struggling against the giants, but continue to make fantastic content. It's post like this that demonstrate why the BBC and Channel 4 are basically doomed. Merely observing reality broadcast TV has already lost the young is "BBC bashing". No amount of good will in New York will save them, as those New Yorkers contribute essentially nothing to the BBC and Channel 4 like the BBC a lot, mainly radio and the website, but you have to have your head in the sand to think it has a future as it is. I’m very interested in ideas for how the BBC could change, but the dominant tone on here is by people who dismiss the notion of public service or state owned broadcasting I just ignore them as to my mind bad faith my post was intended as a rebuttal to the idea that the BBC has no brand, nothing more. My core argument is always the licence fee is in the modern world a totally unenforceable and b totally outdated idea I have to pay a licence to watch telly, even if I don't watch the 4 BBC channels I only want to watch Sky Sports. The debate is then how do you replace the licence fee. There are a range of options. Agree with personally think the BBC TV should split into two; the legacy analogue channels, and a digital first player. The legacy analogue channel should focus on the basics, ie BBC1 and 2. The digital first player arm let’s call it BBC Digital should strike a deal to partner with HBO+. Together they would have an astonishing library of content and could compete legitimately in the US and perhaps other places. In the UK, BBC Digital would be available for a streaming fee equal to the current license fee, which should otherwise be scrapped. 0 Nobody on here has made the case for Channel 4’s has the $1bn is neither here nor I see the BBC bashers are out in force. Based on my sample of New York parents at the school gate, the BBC has a very good reputation, albeit niche. Probably on the same level as HBO who are also struggling against the giants, but continue to make fantastic content. It's post like this that demonstrate why the BBC and Channel 4 are basically doomed. Merely observing reality broadcast TV has already lost the young is "BBC bashing". No amount of good will in New York will save them, as those New Yorkers contribute essentially nothing to the BBC and Channel 4 like the BBC a lot, mainly radio and the website, but you have to have your head in the sand to think it has a future as it is. I’m very interested in ideas for how the BBC could change, but the dominant tone on here is by people who dismiss the notion of public service or state owned broadcasting I just ignore them as to my mind bad faith my post was intended as a rebuttal to the idea that the BBC has no brand, nothing more. My core argument is always the licence fee is in the modern world a totally unenforceable and b totally outdated idea I have to pay a licence to watch telly, even if I don't watch the 4 BBC channels I only want to watch Sky Sports. The debate is then how do you replace the licence fee. There are a range of options. Here is my recommendation1. Split off the BBC and Channel 4 as non-profit enterprises, freeing them from government interference and maintaining their mission Have a public broadcasting fund paid for by general taxation. Allow the BBC, Channel 4 and any other broadcaster to bid for funds from this pot program by program against public service criteria of educating and informing the public. Have it strongly overseen for impartiality. 3. Have a separate fund for developing new artistic stuff like comedies, drama Allow the BBC to get automatic rights to these pots in a declining share over next 5 years while they Return the World Service and local language services to the Foreign Office, funded by those funds. 0 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. 1 eek Posts 20,327 As for BBC Three it is a million miles better than most of the shite on cable. There are dozens of channels which I never watch - absolute rubbish full of endless ads. The crap cable / satellite channels are dead men walking too. Sky should be as worried as anybody about how the world of media is problem is BBC Three isn't better in the minds of the target demographic than the array of other options...that's why the yuff aren't watching BBC Three. The people saying well I think BBC Three is alright, you aren't the demographic, its teenagers through to mid 20s, and they ain't watching when it was on iPlayer and they ain't watching now its back on linear tv. They are - why do you think Sky Glass exists - and why do you think there are Sky Netflix combo deals that give you Netflix for virtually nowt. 0 As for BBC Three it is a million miles better than most of the shite on cable. There are dozens of channels which I never watch - absolute rubbish full of endless ads. The crap cable / satellite channels are dead men walking too. Sky should be as worried as anybody about how the world of media is problem is BBC Three isn't better in the minds of the target demographic than the array of other options...that's why the yuff aren't watching BBC Three. The people saying well I think BBC Three is alright, you aren't the demographic, its teenagers through to mid 20s, and they ain't watching when it was on iPlayer and they ain't watching now its back on linear tv. They are - why do you think Sky Glass exists - and why do you think there are Sky Netflix combo deals that give you Netflix for virtually nowt. Well yes and they are also investing billions in original programming / production facility at Elstree. They also have the NowTV service for a slightly different segment of the market. They are adapting, unlike some other players ;- The big thing for Sky is the issue of footy rights. That is why a huge number of people have Sky even though it is very expensive. One other issue might well be that HBO Max could come to UK and that is basically the Sky Atlantic channel gone. 0 Looks like I might be right about increasing secularism in Turkey. Yay“The headscarf is slippingNot long ago women in Turkey fought to cover their hair, yet now it seems the headscarf has fallen out of favour. Seventeen years into Erdoganʹs rule, some things are floundering – including the assumption that Turkish society is becoming increasingly conservative. By Christiane Schlotzer” was 2019. I suggest it has accelerated since then 0 And there are huge pictures of Atatürk EVERYWHEREHmmmmm 0 Disney+ is terrible lol 1 The UI is just terrible, it's slow and unreliable. 0 Mobile crematoria in MariupolMayor of Mariupol Vadim Boychenko said today that Russian mobile crematoria have started operating in the to him, tens of thousands of people could have died in Mariupol and the cremation, "covering up the traces of crimes". 0 Anyway! It's Local Elections Nominations Day! Hoop Hoop!In Havering, we have Havering Residents Association vs Hornchurch & Upminster Independents in one ward, and Havering Residents Association vs Indepdendent Harold Hill Resisdents association in another, and Harold Wood Residents vs Havering Residents Harold Wood in a politics are just bonkers. I reckon Harold Wood 'call me Harry' will walk it. 1 It's striking how much support Boris Johnson is getting for his comments on trans issues from people who are not his natural supporters. This one is typicalannettepaceyOh god oh no someone I loathe just made a really good point. Still could never bring myself to vote for the bastard but this is what happens when Labour turn their backs on women and leave an open goal labourlosingwomen No, I've been told by PB experts that saying women have cocks won't hurt Labour. I think ultimately their hatred of Boris / Brexit will still have these people don their Polly Trademarked nose pegs and vote against Boris. Yes but people who say things like that aren't the target - it's the floaters who will play safe. Your approach is just to ignore CoL and the economy in general then? Labour tried that 0 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. For some reason I still get BT Sport for free included in my BT broadband. If that's a mistake, please don't tell BT! 0 Boris "Bucha shots do not look far short of genocide" - I wonder how considered those words are. Rwanda 1994 was all "Don't mention the G word" because if it's there, there is a duty to prevent it on parties to the 1948 convention. 0 What's changed since 2016 then? Other than Labour being handed its arse in a large number of seats, like... Never trust a got to do this from a position of principle. Did we agree that we would put this decision out to the public for a vote? Yes. Did we agree that we would accept the result? Yes. Have we got to accept the result? Yes. So, the first position is a matter of principle. Having done this, having got a result, we've got to accept it. Simply saying Well, it's better for us electorally 'if we do this or do that’ doesn't help. - Sir Keir Starmer, 2017if we need to break the impasse, our options must include campaigning for a public vote – and nobody is ruling out Remain as an option. - Sir Keir Starmer, 2018 I don’t find those statements particularly now a much harder task find two contradictory Boris statements. I dare you! Wow, you really think that having a second vote with the defeated Remain option back on the ballot paper is "accepting" the result? OK then! It's clear that a significant part of the voting public recognises that Brexit was a Bad Idea. And that a decreasing number think it was actually a good one. 1 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. 1 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? I knit, which is an activity well-suited to combining with watching TV I did a lot of sock-knitting during Euro I can't believe it's not 2020, but I don't know where you get the time to watch so much sort of half using our Netflix subscription, and there are the occasional thing that we watch on BBC, but we're partway through a number of series and I can't imagine adding a sports subscription and another streaming terms of sport, I listen to TMS for Test cricket and the County Championship starting again tomorrow! is on free streams available via the ECB or the County websites. What other sport is there? 0 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. Indeed. The naughty streams are absolute rubbish. Watching sport is one of life’s great pleasures. Why ruin it by bringing your own sandwiches to the restaurant? 0 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. I’m not saying you’re wrong, in fact you’re right - but Sherlock was a big hit around the not so much? 2 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. For some reason I still get BT Sport for free included in my BT broadband. If that's a mistake, please don't tell BT! Funny that - I use Virgin Media, and have never subscribed to BT Sport - but at the start of this football season, it suddenly appeared live on my channels and I've had a freebie ever since. 1 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...very well shot, high quality cast, but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... 1 Mobile crematoria in MariupolMayor of Mariupol Vadim Boychenko said today that Russian mobile crematoria have started operating in the to him, tens of thousands of people could have died in Mariupol and the cremation, "covering up the traces of crimes". Just the phrase “mobile crematoria” is chillingly grotesque. Nauseating echoes of the mobile gas chambers of the Holocaust 1 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. For some reason I still get BT Sport for free included in my BT broadband. If that's a mistake, please don't tell BT! I pay £ for BT sport on top of my BT broadband 0 The issue with Channel 4 being publicly owned is… There are far better things for Governments to be doing? Wouldn't you rather that Government indulged in something relatively benign and cost-free like Channel 4, and at a decent arms length, than deciding the Cabinet is full of mini-nuke and fracking experts who need to have their opinions heard? 0 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. Elementary is absolutely fantastic, my favourite TV show after Father Ted. 2 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... Peaky Blinders also turned to shit halfway through season 2 and never recovered 0 Anyway! It's Local Elections Nominations Day! Hoop Hoop!In Havering, we have Havering Residents Association vs Hornchurch & Upminster Independents in one ward, and Havering Residents Association vs Indepdendent Harold Hill Resisdents association in another, and Harold Wood Residents vs Havering Residents Harold Wood in a politics are just bonkers. Damn you, I now have 500 Miles stuck in my head... 2 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... Peaky Blinders also turned to shit halfway through season 2 and never recovered I never got into it. But it is undeniably popular, but no way to leverage a hit in the modern media landscape. 10 years for 36 sodding episodes.....Even George RR Martin creates stuff faster than that. It looks like there will be a 4 year gap between Bodyguard S1 and S2....can you imagine Apple, Netflix, Amazon, HBO, etc doing that to a show that got 11 million viewers. 0 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... Peaky Blinders also turned to shit halfway through season 2 and never recovered Maybe you could try and be on it, you like to make things up as you go along 0 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... Peaky Blinders also turned to shit halfway through season 2 and never recovered I never got into it. But it is undeniably popular, but no way to leverage a hit in the modern media landscape. The first series was absolutely brilliant. The visuals remained great throughout and I loved the mad choice of music But the plots jumped the shark way too early. Shame 0 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? I knit, which is an activity well-suited to combining with watching TV I did a lot of sock-knitting during Euro I can't believe it's not 2020, but I don't know where you get the time to watch so much sort of half using our Netflix subscription, and there are the occasional thing that we watch on BBC, but we're partway through a number of series and I can't imagine adding a sports subscription and another streaming terms of sport, I listen to TMS for Test cricket and the County Championship starting again tomorrow! is on free streams available via the ECB or the County websites. What other sport is there? My point is exactly that I don’t watch that much TV, I cannot believe how anyone could watch so much as some people on PB seem to claim, therefore the Netflix and Prime subscriptions are barely worth is great, and I listen to it, but as a cricket fan presumably you actually want to watch Test match cricket too? I find the idea that purported sports fans refuse to pay a round of drinks a month to watch professional sport absolutely baffling. 0 Conservatives don't seem like CONSERVING national institutions! Names of parties do not while I dont trust their motivation for doing it I'm surprised at the idea channel 4 is an institution. 0 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. I’m not saying you’re wrong, in fact you’re right - but Sherlock was a big hit around the not so much? Wouldn't surprise me if that was rights issues. Elementary was I think shown on Sky. Was Sherlock on BBC Worldwide? 0 Catching up with a Ukrainian family that has arrived in our village through the Homes scheme…. One is a teacher of Ukrainian language and is now remotely teaching kids back in Ukraine, lockdown style, which seems cool… 3 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? I think that's about where I am. Prices are getting close to not worth it when they are still trying to all have their own services. 1 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...very well shot, high quality cast, but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... Thought Peaky Blinders was pretty awful. I managed seven episodes of the hot mess and barely plausible storylines before I binned it. It looks great, the VFX are excellent. But the characters are almost universally unsympathetic, the plots rushed, and the screenplay do people see in it? 0 Anyway! It's Local Elections Nominations Day! Hoop Hoop!In Havering, we have Havering Residents Association vs Hornchurch & Upminster Independents in one ward, and Havering Residents Association vs Indepdendent Harold Hill Resisdents association in another, and Harold Wood Residents vs Havering Residents Harold Wood in a politics are just bonkers. Damn you, I now have 500 Miles stuck in my head... 500 miles? That's a lot of leaflets to the driveways are very very long. 0 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. I’m not saying you’re wrong, in fact you’re right - but Sherlock was a big hit around the not so much? Perhaps not, but ran for 7 years and it is better, not just that theres more of it. The first season in particular - did a far better job showing how a Holnes/Watson dynamic could realistically develop when one is such an arse. 1 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. For some reason I still get BT Sport for free included in my BT broadband. If that's a mistake, please don't tell BT! I pay £ for BT sport on top of my BT broadband You are paying for his ;- 0 Mr Pointer,Last time, I haggled with Virgin, they threw in BT Sport for free. I'd forgotten about it until I checked the sport options one Saturday and discovered Liverpool playing live. I assumed it was for one year only but it seems not. 1 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...very well shot, high quality cast, but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... When you say “people consume content at an incredible rate”, do you mean “I consume content at an incredible rate”? 0 Another warmed-over Trotskyist pimping for Mother-Fucking Russia. 3 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. For some reason I still get BT Sport for free included in my BT broadband. If that's a mistake, please don't tell BT! Funny that - I use Virgin Media, and have never subscribed to BT Sport - but at the start of this football season, it suddenly appeared live on my channels and I've had a freebie ever since. That’s because with certain Virgin packages it’s cheaper to have it than not have in my experience. 0 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...very well shot, high quality cast, but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... When you say “people consume content at an incredible rate”, do you mean “I consume content at an incredible rate”? No. Its a fact. Netflix paid absolutely insane amounts of money to have Friends and Seinfeld in recent years, because they explain people eat up all the original content so quickly they need these shows that people will watch many many times over in order to keep them on the platform between new releases of the blue chip is despite, Netflix making 60 shows in the UK last year alone, with 10,000 people working on them. Sky Productions are planning on doing the same. The demand for content is immense. 0 We have been regularly assured by the Brexit tendency that food security does not matter, and the international market will sort it all interesting to see how this plays out, as it is perhaps sub optimal timing for a significant shakeup in the UK farming sector. 0 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...very well shot, high quality cast, but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... When you say “people consume content at an incredible rate”, do you mean “I consume content at an incredible rate”? No. Its a fact. Netflix paid absolutely insane amounts of money to have Friends and Seinfeld in recent years, because they explain people eat up all the original content so quickly they need these shows that people will watch many many times over in order to keep them on the platform between new releases of the blue chip is despite, Netflix making 60 shows in the UK last year alone, with 10,000 people working on them. Sky Productions are planning on doing the same. The demand for content is immense. Scary. People need to get a bloody life. 0 Just listened to Boris on Sky on transgender and partygate debates..On transgender he said He does not agree children should face conversion therapy as this should be a parental decisionHe said that male transgender women should not compete in women's eventsHe believes women should have safe space in toilets, prisons etcOn partygate He said he will not comment before the police have concluded their investigations at which time he will make a statement on the subject On transgender he seems to have made a sensible statement On partygate is he thinking if he receives a FPN will he confound everyone and decide to give notice to the conservative party to commence the election of his successor at which time he will stand downThis is a betting site and as improbable as it seems it is not impossible On transgender, let us pick apart those viewsHe does not agree children should face conversion therapy as this should be a parental decision- If by 'conversion therapy' he means puberty blockers and/or cross-sex hormones then it's an interesting one. When do you need to use puberty blockers to be effective? In childhood cross-sex hormones are not available until post-16 anyway, afaikHe said that male transgender women should not compete in women's events- Not sure quite what that means - transgender women still with male anatomy? For me, I'd base decisions on whether there is likely to be an advantage beyond normal variation - for many sports of strength/stamina there may well be, certainly for anyone who reached adulthood as a man. But for a birth male who got puberty blockers pre-puberty and cross-sex hormones at 16? Maybe there is still an advantage, I do not believes women should have safe space in toilets, prisons etc- Indeed. What about transgender women? Are they safe in male toilets/prisons etc? I'm not necessarily taking the opposite viewpoint, although it may appear that way. But these are complicated issues that don't have quick soundbite answers. Should a Gillick competent 13 year old female who wants to be a male be denied treatment that would prevent breast growth until they are 16 and already have breasts? On the other hand, is a 13 year old really able to choose treatment that might make them infertile for life?Complicated issues, without easy answers. 6 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...very well shot, high quality cast, but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... When you say “people consume content at an incredible rate”, do you mean “I consume content at an incredible rate”? No. Its a fact. Netflix paid absolutely insane amounts of money to have Friends and Seinfeld in recent years, because they explain people eat up all the original content so quickly they need these shows that people will watch many many times over in order to keep them on the platform between new releases of the blue chip is despite, Netflix making 60 shows in the UK last year alone, with 10,000 people working on them. Sky Productions are planning on doing the same. The demand for content is immense. Scary. People need to get a bloody life. With phones, iPads, all of a sudden you have a device to watch this content anywhere at anytime. So people do so on their commute, in the gym etc. As well as obviously in front of the telly. 0 Nobody on here has made the case for Channel 4’s has the $1bn is neither here nor I see the BBC bashers are out in force. Based on my sample of New York parents at the school gate, the BBC has a very good reputation, albeit niche. Probably on the same level as HBO who are also struggling against the giants, but continue to make fantastic content. It's post like this that demonstrate why the BBC and Channel 4 are basically doomed. Merely observing reality broadcast TV has already lost the young is "BBC bashing". No amount of good will in New York will save them, as those New Yorkers contribute essentially nothing to the BBC and Channel 4 like the BBC a lot, mainly radio and the website, but you have to have your head in the sand to think it has a future as it is. I’m very interested in ideas for how the BBC could change, but the dominant tone on here is by people who dismiss the notion of public service or state owned broadcasting I just ignore them as to my mind bad faith my post was intended as a rebuttal to the idea that the BBC has no brand, nothing more. My core argument is always the licence fee is in the modern world a totally unenforceable and b totally outdated idea I have to pay a licence to watch telly, even if I don't watch the 4 BBC channels I only want to watch Sky Sports. The debate is then how do you replace the licence fee. There are a range of options. Agree with personally think the BBC TV should split into two; the legacy analogue channels, and a digital first player. The legacy analogue channel should focus on the basics, ie BBC1 and 2. The digital first player arm let’s call it BBC Digital should strike a deal to partner with HBO+. Together they would have an astonishing library of content and could compete legitimately in the US and perhaps other places. In the UK, BBC Digital would be available for a streaming fee equal to the current license fee, which should otherwise be scrapped. It's not a bad the analogue channel should also perhaps be free to view worldwide digitally along with bits of 'Digital'. 0 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. For some reason I still get BT Sport for free included in my BT broadband. If that's a mistake, please don't tell BT! Funny that - I use Virgin Media, and have never subscribed to BT Sport - but at the start of this football season, it suddenly appeared live on my channels and I've had a freebie ever since. That’s because with certain Virgin packages it’s cheaper to have it than not have in my experience. Maybe, but I've had Virgin for 16 years, with Sky Sports, but it was only last year that they gave me BT Sports 'free' without telling me - I discovered it by chance. 1 Anyway! It's Local Elections Nominations Day! Hoop Hoop!In Havering, we have Havering Residents Association vs Hornchurch & Upminster Independents in one ward, and Havering Residents Association vs Indepdendent Harold Hill Resisdents association in another, and Harold Wood Residents vs Havering Residents Harold Wood in a politics are just bonkers. Damn you, I now have 500 Miles stuck in my head... No Peoples Front for the Liberation of Harold Wood? 1 TV is going through a period of huge change. What does any enterprise need to weather and indeed thrive in a period of such change? They need a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response. Now is the worst time to start tinkering with those foundations. They don't have "a stable foundation, a secure financial footing, which allows them to innovate and evolve in response." They have a pittance to spend when compared to their new competitors. I've mentioned it before but Amazon are spending roughly as much on the first season of their Lord of the Rings series as the BBC spends on drama in an entire year. British broadcasters have never faced such well funded competition before, and unlike in the past those mostly US competitors can access the UK market directly. Netflix and other streamers have massively bigger budgets, but way more watch the BBC. Looks to me like the BBC is a model of efficiency we should be celebrating then! Except a nobody actually fully knows for certain Netflix viewership as they never release it and b there is an absolutely huge demographic split. Oldies continue to watch linear tv, but middle aged and younger people don't at anywhere near the same amount. Media is having the same revolution as the globalisation of every other industry over the past 20-30 years, and many seem to want to try and repeat the mistake of those industries holding onto this yes but we are the best mantra, no need to change. There is a common fallacy in political thinking. It goes like this... Something needs to change. This is something. So we should do BBC and Channel 4 are well aware that the broader industry is changing and changing rapidly. The BBC and Channel 4 are Dorries thinks that privatising Channel 4 is the change that is needed. Dorries didn't even know how Channel 4 was funded some months ago. Why should I believe that Dorries now knows better what change is needed than the people in Channel 4 and the wider industry, who largely don't think this is the change that is needed?I don't think Government automatically knows best. I think there are plenty of contexts where Government should step back and let enterprises get on with the job. My original comment was exactly this.....I linked to an article was saying yes aware of the elephant in the room, but there is never any suggestion of how to adapt. Its instant we can't change this way because yadda yadda yadda. Ok, and so how do you suggest changing, and there is tumbleweed. How are BBC or CH4 adapting? BBC Three coming back, genius. 4k / HDR still in "beta" for years and the system failed on iPlayer for Euro final. Sky / BT / Netflix have had 4k for years now. Channel 4 isn't going to turn it into Netflix. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? Channel 4 one.....Waffle waffle buzz word waffle....no mention 4k, no mention HDR, "Using a more viewer-centric approach to inform activity and decisions across Channel 4".."Rolling out personalisation features on All 4, including smarter recommendations"Fk me, they are like 10 years behind the rest of the normal world is that if their "future goals" for 2025. Just more evidence their tech is just garbage. How is Nadine Dorries's change going to solve the disappearance of linear TV? AGAIN.....nobody is answering my question.....any suggestion of change is met we no we can't do that / that would be bad....so what are the proposals. You linked to their plans, and its a joke. Buzz word salad and the some vague realisation that Machine learning exists and that perhaps in 3 years time they might have a basic recommendation service, which Netflix, Spotify etc etc etc have had from their inception and which the likes of TikTok absolutely smash. This is not so forgive us all if there's more focus on the political aspects. The change that has been proposed by Dorries is to sell Channel 4, to take it out of public ownership, to dismantle Thatcher's Dorries's change solve the challenges you tell us about? those very significant challenges still exist is an important point, but they are somewhat tangential. That is just trying to side step the issue. There is zero evidence the BBC or CH4 have an real idea how to adapt to this changed world. I posted a link earlier showing how way more people watch the BBC than Netflix. Channel 4 was tied with Netflix, IIRC, despite spending far less. So, the world has changed and the BBC and Channel 4 are doing more than say "changed world" above. You are probably going to reply talking about trajectory and future changes to come. You probably should've said "changING world".If you want to talk about the future, explain how a privatised Channel 4 or BBC would adapt better. ITV is privatised and is doing a terrible job of adapting! And we circle right back around to my initial point. Those who want to fight against this privatisation need to propose a coherent plan for the future, and the key problem is they never do. It is classic Sir Humphrey, we can't do that reply, look at what we did 30 years ago. So either the government will get its way or they will U-Turn, the CH4 supporters will celebrate initially and I bet they don't adapt. Donald Trump once suggested injecting bleach to cure COVID-19. Sometimes ideas suggest by politicians are stupid and it's fine to say they're wrong, without providing a detailed alternate solution to all other problems. Today, yes, but their entire business model is being destroyed. Anyone who knows anything understands that what is true today might not be the same in the they embrace the future, or they die. That their erstwhile "defenders" of the status quo want to defend it as being able to make money via commercials today isn't a really good endorsement for it adapting for the future. The problem is neither the Beeb or C4 see this or accept this. They just want to cling on to the past model irrespective of how the market is changing. But this is industry is notorious for it. Be it home taping, VHS video, Napster. Any technological change or innovation is resisted. Even the migration from black and white to colour TV was a problem. This is just nonsense. The BBC and C4 are very aware of how the industry is changing. Neither is proposing doing nothing. Both have embraced technological change and innovation. What they are opposing is a specific change in how they are funded. Given no-one in this thread can explain why these changes in funding model would solve any of the global challenges in broadcasting, I sympathise with their a political ideology called conservatism that recognises the value of established institutions and suggests we should be wary of tinkering with the fundamentals. It often champions this country's success stories. It used to have a lot of MPs in Parliament. I wonder where they all went? You have to be careful here as it's easy to get things mixed C4 doesn't change it's funding model - it changes it's is a bigger problem as it does need to change it's funding model but how you do that has been an issue for over 20 years and no one has come up with a solution... Ownership and funding are linked though as the funding model that C4 has been relying upon is dying - fast. And so either it evolves under ownership that is ready to adapt to that and generates alternative funding sources - or the owners will be liable for losses or winding it up when the funding dries the state isn't best placed to generate the alternative funding sources - and left to its own devices under its current ownership their plans for the future are embarrassing at best, so an alternative ownership is needed to get the funding in place for the future. The two are intrinsically linked. How can you say it's dying when they are making a profit right now, in the present, in the teeth of Netflix/Amazon. Ah the future, streaming, you say. But you could as easily say that people will get sick of paying a subscription for a streaming service only 3% of which they ever a subscription model and ad-funded are of course commercial models and there may well be room for both in the market so I'm not sure why you say "Commercial TV has failed". And as I noted above, there is probably a large number of people who would put up with adverts in order to get "free" against government ownership of TV companies I am by all means but your strange arguments around "Commercial TV" and the streaming services does your case no good if you conflate as eek notes, ownership and business models. By "commercial" TV I was quite clearly referring to, as I had already pointed out, TV funded by commercials as opposed to owners need to find another business model as C4's is dying. Yes its running a profit today, I don't deny that, but its not going to in five or ten years time if nothing like somebody in 2005 saying that Blockbuster is making a profit from its video stores so it has no reason to consider changing. Basically you have just copied and pasted the Government defence rationale for privatising C4 as proposed is the point? 1 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...very well shot, high quality cast, but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... When you say “people consume content at an incredible rate”, do you mean “I consume content at an incredible rate”? No. Its a fact. Netflix paid absolutely insane amounts of money to have Friends and Seinfeld in recent years, because they explain people eat up all the original content so quickly they need these shows that people will watch many many times over in order to keep them on the platform between new releases of the blue chip is despite, Netflix making 60 shows in the UK last year alone, with 10,000 people working on them. Sky Productions are planning on doing the same. The demand for content is immense. Scary. People need to get a bloody life. With phones, iPads, all of a sudden you have a device to watch this content anywhere at anytime. So people do so on their commute, in the gym etc. As well as obviously in front of the telly. Yeah tried watching on my commute. Awful, trying to watch a drama on a small screen surrounded by businesspeople. These people should try reading a book! 0 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. For some reason I still get BT Sport for free included in my BT broadband. If that's a mistake, please don't tell BT! Funny that - I use Virgin Media, and have never subscribed to BT Sport - but at the start of this football season, it suddenly appeared live on my channels and I've had a freebie ever since. That’s because with certain Virgin packages it’s cheaper to have it than not have in my experience. Maybe, but I've had Virgin for 16 years, with Sky Sports, but it was only last year that they gave me BT Sports 'free' without telling me - I discovered it by chance. Did you upgrade your broadband speed?I mean, you might not have done. These things do seem rather random! 0 George Galloway has been given a special designation by Twitter 11 - Does Alaska's Special Election Create An Opening For Sarah Palin's Comeback? . . For its part, the Alaska Democratic Party is lining up behind Anchorage Assembly member Chris Constant, although other notable Democrats are running, including state Rep. Adam Wool; former state Rep. Mary Sattler Peltola, a Yup’ik Eskimo; and indigenous activist Emil Notti, an 89-year old Koyukon Athabascan who lost to Young in the 1973 special election for this seat. Meanwhile, a handful of independent “nonpartisan” or “undeclared” in Alaska parlance candidates are also running Al Gross, an independent who lost the 2020 Senate race as the Democratic nominee; former Republican state Rep. Andrew Halcro; former Alaska assistant attorney general and garden columnist Jeff Lowenfels; and even a North Pole city councilor who changed his name to Santa Claus. Did we mention there are a lot of candidates?There’s been no public polling of the special primary yet, but we do have one data point on the special general election that includes Palin A Change Research poll funded by 314 Action Fund, which spent heavily to boost Gross’s campaign in 2020, found Palin and Gross running neck and neck at around 35 percent after respondents’ choices were reallocated via ranked-choice voting. To be sure, the poll only included four candidates Palin, Gross, Revak and one other Republican who ultimately chose not to run, but even so, the poll does illustrate how Palin could win in a ranked-choice general election. At the same time, though, it underscores how ranked-choice voting could make for an incredibly close contest, possibly because of Palin’s poor standing among Alaska voters writ last wrinkle in the Alaska race is that the special general election will coincide with the regular primary for the November general election, which means we will find out who won the special election at the same time as we discover which four candidates advanced to the regular general election. Most of the high-profile contenders, including Palin, have filed or say they intend to file for the regular contest they have until June 1 to do so. In other words, most of the major candidates will essentially be campaigning for two elections at once in the coming months. Still, at least a few notable names — Coghill, Halcro and Notti, for instance — only plan to run in the special, so it’s not out of the question that the special election winner will not be among the candidates who advance to the regular general election. . . . 0 To be fair he does have a subsatntial claim on the DumbAss region. 5 If you want Ukraine to be able to recapture territory, then we need to give them tank, artillery long range missiles, as well as the small Ames and hand held missiles we are already giving them. 0 . George Galloway has been given a special designation by Twitter Some with the skill needs to photoshop this, so that Putin's 2nd-favorite tool is wearing a 0 eek Posts 20,327 It's easy to get first call on actors by paying absolute top dollar. Which is what Apple TV have done here. 1 I've recently been watching 'Elementary' on Prime; CBS's take on Sherlock Holmes, with Jonny Lee Miller as Sherlock and Lucy Liu as I compare it with the BBC's awful 'Sherlock', it shows where the BBC often goes wrong. Elementary takes the Sherlock Holmes idea and thoroughly modernises it. They made 154 episodes over nine years, allowing meaningful plot and character development. The BBC's Sherlock is all about the *star*. The plotlines are ludicrous, and they made just 13 episodes in seven years, allowing little plot or character development. Also Jonny Lee Miller is a much better actor than Benedict Cumberbatch. People consume content at an incredible rate now, so if you have a hit you need to leverage that. The BBC are still stuck in the approach of we will make it at our own time, fitting around the stars who are doing us a favour. That's why Peaky Blinders took 10 years to make 36 episodes, Taboo with Tom Hardy, they can't make a 2nd season, McMafia got scraped even before the whole Russia stuff, no Bodyguard 2nd seasons for another few years, etc etc they sign people for several seasons and its one season per year at this time on the I know some like to argue you get the super high amazing quality if you take BBC approach. Personally, I don't buy that, but even if you think so, having this we will get to it, when we get to it, just is setting light to money. Slow Horses on Apple+ is shaping up to be very good and is only 6 episodes for a season...very well shot, high quality cast, but I bet you any money, April 2023 Season 2, April 2024 Season 3.... When you say “people consume content at an incredible rate”, do you mean “I consume content at an incredible rate”? No. Its a fact. Netflix paid absolutely insane amounts of money to have Friends and Seinfeld in recent years, because they explain people eat up all the original content so quickly they need these shows that people will watch many many times over in order to keep them on the platform between new releases of the blue chip is despite, Netflix making 60 shows in the UK last year alone, with 10,000 people working on them. Sky Productions are planning on doing the same. The demand for content is immense. Scary. People need to get a bloody life. Why? People seek out entertainment of different forms, some will go heavier on the tv/streaming than others. 0 Just listened to Boris on Sky on transgender and partygate debates..On transgender he said He does not agree children should face conversion therapy as this should be a parental decisionHe said that male transgender women should not compete in women's eventsHe believes women should have safe space in toilets, prisons etcOn partygate He said he will not comment before the police have concluded their investigations at which time he will make a statement on the subject On transgender he seems to have made a sensible statement On partygate is he thinking if he receives a FPN will he confound everyone and decide to give notice to the conservative party to commence the election of his successor at which time he will stand downThis is a betting site and as improbable as it seems it is not impossible On transgender, let us pick apart those viewsHe does not agree children should face conversion therapy as this should be a parental decision- If by 'conversion therapy' he means puberty blockers and/or cross-sex hormones then it's an interesting one. When do you need to use puberty blockers to be effective? In childhood cross-sex hormones are not available until post-16 anyway, afaikHe said that male transgender women should not compete in women's events- Not sure quite what that means - transgender women still with male anatomy? For me, I'd base decisions on whether there is likely to be an advantage beyond normal variation - for many sports of strength/stamina there may well be, certainly for anyone who reached adulthood as a man. But for a birth male who got puberty blockers pre-puberty and cross-sex hormones at 16? Maybe there is still an advantage, I do not believes women should have safe space in toilets, prisons etc- Indeed. What about transgender women? Are they safe in male toilets/prisons etc? I'm not necessarily taking the opposite viewpoint, although it may appear that way. But these are complicated issues that don't have quick soundbite answers. Should a Gillick competent 13 year old female who wants to be a male be denied treatment that would prevent breast growth until they are 16 and already have breasts? On the other hand, is a 13 year old really able to choose treatment that might make them infertile for life?Complicated issues, without easy answers. I'd agree with all that, and would only add that I'm uncomfortable with the concept of 'parental decision'. I wouldn't trust quite a lot of parents to make an informed decision. And that includes parents who may encourage their youngsters to change gender/sex inappropriately, as well as the other way round. 2 Just listened to Boris on Sky on transgender and partygate debates..On transgender he said He does not agree children should face conversion therapy as this should be a parental decisionHe said that male transgender women should not compete in women's eventsHe believes women should have safe space in toilets, prisons etcOn partygate He said he will not comment before the police have concluded their investigations at which time he will make a statement on the subject On transgender he seems to have made a sensible statement On partygate is he thinking if he receives a FPN will he confound everyone and decide to give notice to the conservative party to commence the election of his successor at which time he will stand downThis is a betting site and as improbable as it seems it is not impossible On transgender, let us pick apart those viewsHe does not agree children should face conversion therapy as this should be a parental decision- If by 'conversion therapy' he means puberty blockers and/or cross-sex hormones then it's an interesting one. When do you need to use puberty blockers to be effective? In childhood cross-sex hormones are not available until post-16 anyway, afaikHe said that male transgender women should not compete in women's events- Not sure quite what that means - transgender women still with male anatomy? For me, I'd base decisions on whether there is likely to be an advantage beyond normal variation - for many sports of strength/stamina there may well be, certainly for anyone who reached adulthood as a man. But for a birth male who got puberty blockers pre-puberty and cross-sex hormones at 16? Maybe there is still an advantage, I do not believes women should have safe space in toilets, prisons etc- Indeed. What about transgender women? Are they safe in male toilets/prisons etc? I'm not necessarily taking the opposite viewpoint, although it may appear that way. But these are complicated issues that don't have quick soundbite answers. Should a Gillick competent 13 year old female who wants to be a male be denied treatment that would prevent breast growth until they are 16 and already have breasts? On the other hand, is a 13 year old really able to choose treatment that might make them infertile for life?Complicated issues, without easy answers. He is also mixing two definitions of 'conversion therapy'.His government is still legislating to ban it ie the coercive practice of attempting to persuade homosexual individuals that they aren't homosexual in respect of homosexuality, at the same time as abandoning their previous promise to do so also in respect of transgender about non-coercive clinical treatment of transgender individuals as "conversion therapy", at the same time as the government has ditched the proposed ban on coercive activities is singularly bad faith argument. 2 The BBC is great. The Ukraine war underlines its value. Arguments about the licence fee are used as a fig leaf by people who object to the BBC for various political reasons. 3 Note how the second thing he brings up is his follower count. People are so second thing to note is that of the things he lists only not working for Russian media would be relevant - being the leader of a party and spending time in parliament wouldn't mean he couldn't be a paid russian shill. Heck, you can be a former leader of a country and do TwitterSupport I am not “Russian State Affiliated media”. I work for NO Russian media. I have 400,000 followers. I’m the leader of a British political party and spent nearly 30 years in the British parliament. If you do not remove this designation I will take legal action 0 Anyway! It's Local Elections Nominations Day! Hoop Hoop!In Havering, we have Havering Residents Association vs Hornchurch & Upminster Independents in one ward, and Havering Residents Association vs Indepdendent Harold Hill Resisdents association in another, and Harold Wood Residents vs Havering Residents Harold Wood in a politics are just bonkers. Damn you, I now have 500 Miles stuck in my head... No Peoples Front for the Liberation of Harold Wood? no, The Harold Wood Liberation Front. Not the Peoples Front for the Liberation of Harold wood. Splitters! 0 We have been regularly assured by the Brexit tendency Boy, they really started running out of titles for the Bourne francise, didn't they? 3 I have binned Apple TV two shows I watch; I have binned Disney+ zero shows; I subscribe to Netflix and Prime which just about justify their fees but it’s close.Beeb is still decent value for best value for money by a country mile are Sky Sports and BT Sport. I watch tons of live sport and they have a lot. I find it baffling that purported sports fans don’t subscribe to them. How do they watch any sport? From experience of visiting friends, they use naughty streams which seem to go down every 3 minutes. We subscribe to Sky and BT here too and the stability and quality of the service is worth every penny compared to the alternative. For some reason I still get BT Sport for free included in my BT broadband. If that's a mistake, please don't tell BT! I pay £ for BT sport on top of my BT broadband You are paying for his ;- Bt sport and Sky sports are the only reason I subscribe to BT and Sky But then in my time I have played football, cricket, golf, tennis, canoeing and sailing and have had a lifetime love of sport 1 The BBC is great. The Ukraine war underlines its value. Arguments about the licence fee are used as a fig leaf by people who object to the BBC for various political reasons. I have no "political" reason for getting rid of the licence fee, I just think it's wrong I can't watch Sky or Channel 4 because I don't want to pay for the BBC. 2 thing that is always striking from these defence pieces about BBC / CH4, is a it is all historic, 30-40 years ago it did x and b they acknowledge the elephant in the room, but never provide any suggestion about what to do about spends £30m a year on new productions, Netflix spends £1bn a year and 10,000 people work on their productions in the UK. Sky are committing billions to UK production, with a massive project at Elstree . What Film4 spends in a year on total film budget, Netflix spends on 3 episodes of one of their blue chip shows. I am all ears for suggestions. But no change isn't going to work. We see constantly now, the best talent goes to Netflix, Amazon. Its a bit like remembering when Wimbledon FC used to match up against the best in the Premier League, plucky upstarts on shoe string budget, and saying they can do it again....but now you either need billions and / or incredibly innovative owners like at Brentford. The flaw with this argument is why should we believe a privatised Channel 4 will become a second Netflix when no rationale at all is put forward for the change, beyond Nadine wants this? Channel 4 has a niche in its current form. What will the privatised version offer? Who gives a fuck. The government owning C4 is like the government owning W H Smith. What’s the point? Sell it while it is still worth something. We need the money But then why can't it make a profit for the Government and ease the burden on the taxpayer? Why shouldn't the BBC do the same? I don't really have a problem with public ownership. If it does make a profit and could be made to make even more profit - a pre-requisite for any company wanting to buy it, why then sell it? Why not keep it and keep getting the golden eggs? 1 Just listened to Boris on Sky on transgender and partygate debates..On transgender he said He does not agree children should face conversion therapy as this should be a parental decisionHe said that male transgender women should not compete in women's eventsHe believes women should have safe space in toilets, prisons etcOn partygate He said he will not comment before the police have concluded their investigations at which time he will make a statement on the subject On transgender he seems to have made a sensible statement On partygate is he thinking if he receives a FPN will he confound everyone and decide to give notice to the conservative party to commence the election of his successor at which time he will stand downThis is a betting site and as improbable as it seems it is not impossible On transgender, let us pick apart those viewsHe does not agree children should face conversion therapy as this should be a parental decision- If by 'conversion therapy' he means puberty blockers and/or cross-sex hormones then it's an interesting one. When do you need to use puberty blockers to be effective? In childhood cross-sex hormones are not available until post-16 anyway, afaikHe said that male transgender women should not compete in women's events- Not sure quite what that means - transgender women still with male anatomy? For me, I'd base decisions on whether there is likely to be an advantage beyond normal variation - for many sports of strength/stamina there may well be, certainly for anyone who reached adulthood as a man. But for a birth male who got puberty blockers pre-puberty and cross-sex hormones at 16? Maybe there is still an advantage, I do not believes women should have safe space in toilets, prisons etc- Indeed. What about transgender women? Are they safe in male toilets/prisons etc? I'm not necessarily taking the opposite viewpoint, although it may appear that way. But these are complicated issues that don't have quick soundbite answers. Should a Gillick competent 13 year old female who wants to be a male be denied treatment that would prevent breast growth until they are 16 and already have breasts? On the other hand, is a 13 year old really able to choose treatment that might make them infertile for life?Complicated issues, without easy answers. It seems complicated to some but Boris laid out a clear position that I suspect is the position of many 2 The BBC is great. The Ukraine war underlines its value. Arguments about the licence fee are used as a fig leaf by people who object to the BBC for various political reasons. To an extent. But I'm not convinced that's the whole of it. Personally I deeply value the news output and think, whilst there are other news outlers out there, that its worth paying for a national broadcaster. But I find it hard to justify in the modern age about paying for all the entertainment aspects it seeks to provide. It's not particularly good compared to anything else, is it any more unique? The back catalogue is a great boon, to be sure, and there is stuff made that can be sold, but is that worth paying for?Either way, it gets attacked from left and right at times, though more on the right, so I think the current set up just cannot hold. 0 The BBC is great. The Ukraine war underlines its value. Arguments about the licence fee are used as a fig leaf by people who object to the BBC for various political reasons. To an extent. But I'm not convinced that's the whole of it. Personally I deeply value the news output and think, whilst there are other news outlers out there, that its worth paying for a national broadcaster. But I find it hard to justify in the modern age about paying for all the entertainment aspects it seeks to provide. It's not particularly good compared to anything else, is it any more unique? The back catalogue is a great boon, to be sure, and there is stuff made that can be sold, but is that worth paying for?Either way, it gets attacked from left and right at times, though more on the right, so I think the current set up just cannot hold. The right seem to prefer that we get our news and entertainment from oligarchs albeit of various flavours. If anything has had its day it is that. 2 The BBC is great. The Ukraine war underlines its value. Arguments about the licence fee are used as a fig leaf by people who object to the BBC for various political reasons. To an extent. But I'm not convinced that's the whole of it. Personally I deeply value the news output and think, whilst there are other news outlers out there, that its worth paying for a national broadcaster. But I find it hard to justify in the modern age about paying for all the entertainment aspects it seeks to provide. It's not particularly good compared to anything else, is it any more unique? The back catalogue is a great boon, to be sure, and there is stuff made that can be sold, but is that worth paying for?Either way, it gets attacked from left and right at times, though more on the right, so I think the current set up just cannot hold. The right seem to prefer that we get our news and entertainment from oligarchs albeit of various flavours. If anything has had its day it is that. Sky is American owned 0 I didn't know it was all out elections in St Dems are therefore probably certain to win a huge majority anyway with the Tories winning a few seats around London Colney and Harpenden. So this is one council where the Tories will definitely see large seat losses. 0 Even the most ghastly regime can't be held responsible for the acts of individuals under its command. I suspect there are Russian soldiers out there trying not to blindly kill. I certainly don't see Putin as responsible for their acts. 0

DoctorWho: Revolution of the Daleks film 2021 streaming vf Thank’s For All And Happy Watching Find all the movies that you can stream online, including those that were screened this week.

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Toutd'abord, il y a les piqueniques un peu partout en France organisés par le groupe Facebook Doctor Who Classic, fans francophones. On répète les informations : le 9 juin, dans quatre villes de France : Lille, Nantes, Marseille, Bordeaux. Vous avez les liens vers les évènements Facebook dans le menu de gauche. DramaScience Fiction & FantasyThrillingDavid Tennant steps into the role of the Doctor for the second series of Doctor Who. Following on from the first series the second instalment is full of new thrills, new laughs, new heartbreak and some terrifying new monsters.

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Àla suite de l’exécution d'agents de renseignement à travers le monde, le Docteur, Yaz, Graham et Ryan sont convoqués par le chef du MI6, « C », pour enquêter. L'ADN des victimes a été transformé en quelque chose d'extraterrestre. Leur seul suspect est Daniel Barton, PDG de la société de médias pour moteur de recherche « VOR ». DD7r.
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