Sunday, 31 July 2022

Scary Drama II


Last time on the blog, we had quite the look at the UK airdates for the 1990s Goosebumps TV series, so you'd better go and read that now if you haven't already, or this post with a few follow-up details will make even less sense than it already does.

Sunday, 24 July 2022

Scary Drama


In the late nineties and early noughties, the BBC aired all four seasons of the TV series Goosebumps, adapted from R. L. Stine's infamous book series, as part of its children's' programming strand, CBBC. Well, they aired a fairly high percentage of it, at any rate; many episodes were censored for the 4.35pm timeslot, sometimes removing entire scenes, and twelve episodes were banned altogether, seemingly down to either just being too much for viewers, or concerns over imitable content.

(A baffling sidenote: several of the TV episodes were novelised under the banner Goosebumps Presents, to differentiate them from the books they'd originally been adapted from. These were published in the UK -- in the series' heyday we got pretty much everything except for a few of the short story collections released over here -- and the adaptations of the banned episodes were still released. One suspects a breakdown in communications between the publisher and the BBC, or possibly just no communications whatsoever.)

But if you were to glance at the Radio Times, you might not be aware that the series was so problematic for the censors. Because they only had a very short amount of space to provide synopses for children's programming, the RT listings didn't always provide a great summary... sometimes, in fact, a hilariously inappropriate one. Here, then, is my guide to the CBBC airdates of the show, via the medium of how they were billed in the Radio Times, as retrieved from the BBC Programme Index.

Sunday, 17 July 2022

Broken Gamebooks #21: Dead of Night


Sometimes I regret the name given to this series of articles, because Dead of Night -- the 40th entry in the Fighting Fantasy series, written by Jim Bambra & Stephen Hand and published by Puffin in late 1989 -- isn't really broken, it's basically just got two small-ish logistical errors, one of which the player can easily exploit. It's also rightly considered one of the strongest and most memorable entries in the series, owing to its pervading sense of Gothic horror, high quality of writing, innovative additions to the basic gameplay system and having multiple possible ways to get the successful ending.

But you came here for the mistakes.

Friday, 15 July 2022

Truth and Consequence


Buried deep in old revisions of the Wikipedia article for Would I Lie to You?, and the Wikipedia article for the list of episodes of Would I Lie to You?, are the recording dates for every episode except those in the first series, and one other day when I'm stuck for things to write about I'll probably stick them all up here.

Most of the time, WILTY? is recorded a while before broadcast -- ranging from Series 2 remaining on the shelf for seven months before broadcast, to Series 6 filming its final episode on 30 March 2012 and then beginning transmission just two weeks later on 13 April. But Series 7 is an odd one -- due to David Mitchell being in Turkey to shoot the short-lived comedy drama Ambassadors, it doesn't start in the same week as the return of Have I Got News for You as likely intended, but a few weeks in, and it's the only series that's still being filmed whilst it starts airing. So let's have a quick look at the order.