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BBC To Ditch "Tomorrow's World"

Pipsicola writes "The BBC news site reports their decision to ditch the Popular science show, Tomorrows World , after 30 years. It may not have had the most bleeding edge content (we often dubbed it 'Yesterdays World' ...), but it was one of the few programmes which fired the imagination of young British nerds. Several generations of Britain's scientists and technologists grew up watching TM. Lets hope the BBC fulfills its promise to replace it with more science-based shows using a different format. Which formats have worked in other countries I wonder?"

10 of 225 comments (clear)

  1. new formats by -strix- · · Score: 5, Funny

    they should try hosting the show naked.

    nudity can make anything better.

    1. Re:new formats by Bonker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sex and Sci-fi?

      Look at Anime. A great deal of the action anime boils down to guns, robots, tits, and ass.

      Now which country is it again that is famous for pioneering work in robotics, minaturization, and embedded computers?

      Ahem. If you need me, I'll be busy watching my 'Bubblegum Crisis' OAVs for the 392nd time.

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  2. do you get techtv? by SHEENmaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While its future shows may suck, "Big Thinkers" will make you think. I would actually PAY for this on dvd (unencoded of course!)

    I'm not sure whether or it's shown in Britain, but you should look into it.

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
  3. Beyond 2000 by Siriaan · · Score: 5, Informative

    There's an Australian magazine show called Beyond 2000 that has run for quite a long time and is screened in quite a few countries starting in 1985 and still being made. The science it covered was pretty cutting edge (or at least it seemed, I was kid since I saw it last, hehe) and had interesting stories presented by interesting reporters.

  4. the Internet killed it by NixterAg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    With the Internet, it becomes more and more difficult to keep shows like this on the air. Once upon a time, 'Tomorrow's World' gave you a glimpse of things you'd otherwise never know existed (at least at the time of viewing). With the Internet, anything heralded on television has been already discussed on the web a thousand times.

  5. Daily Planet by Jose · · Score: 5, Informative

    Daily Planet (link) is a pretty good show. It was called @Discovery Canada, but changed a little while ago. It runs on the Discovery channel here in Canada. Read the site for more info.

    --
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    1. Re:Daily Planet by Da+Masta · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well the new chick is much hotter.

      And besides, its hillarious watching her interview the male researchers and seeng their responses vary from just gazing at her to stuttering to going completely gaga.

  6. The best episode.. by Doomrat · · Score: 5, Funny

    The best one was on April 1st one year where they asked you to vote for something by touching your television screen.

    I touched Phillipa.

  7. Horizon was the "harder" science show. by bangzilla · · Score: 4, Informative

    Tomorrow's World ran on BBC 1 (used to be Thursday's before Top of the Pops). It was always a soft science show -- more entertainment than hard science. BBC 2 ran the harder science show "Horizon" - each episode of which was an hour long. I've been away from the UK for nearly 19 years so don't know if Horizon is still going -- but at the time it was an outstanding show - would compare with the likes of the better shows on TLC and Discovery. Sad to see Tomorrows World going -- but it did give a great start to James Burke who went on to do the Burke connection and Connections.

    --
    Rich people are eccentric. Poor people are strange. Me, I'd be happy with odd.
  8. The decline of Tomorrow's World by marm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From my point of view what killed TW was a gradual, slow change in the kind of stories they showed. When I used to watch TW religiously, back in the mid-late 80's, the vast majority of their items were to do with either consumer technology inventions (CD's, home computers and so on) or physical sciences (string theory, birth of the universe, or, more paractically, the first mention I ever heard of quantum computing and quantum encryption back in 1988 or so). During the 90's, in what seemed to me to be a misguided attempt to win ratings, the show gradually changed to a more human-interest type show, all about biology, genetics, medicine, until by the late 1990's that was all there was: no inventions, no physical science news, no astronomy, just item after item of medical discoveries, biotechnology, with the odd reference to the BBC's 'Webwise' project to get people hooked up to the Internet.

    That was when I stopped watching it, it just didn't interest me any more. I appreciate the importance of medicine and the biological sciences (although these interest me less than the physical sciences and associated inventions), but there just wasn't anything else on TW, and it got boring because of this.

    I don't think I'm alone in feeling this - I've met quite a few geeky Tomorrow's World ex-fans who say the same thing, they just stopped running the stories that interested them. It's quite a tragedy - in an attempt to make the programme trendier and gain mainstream audience share, they completely killed off their core audience, and the production team seemed to have absolutely no idea what the problem was. It's entirely the BBC's own fault.

    Oh well, here's hoping they'll wake up one day, realize their mistake and revive it, just like they have with Doctor Who.

    N.B. The last sentence used a technique known as irony. Some of you may wish to study and attempt to understand it.