Tuesday, 21 April 2009

ATVLAND.productions has a new website!

Well I thought it was a good time to let you all know the new ATVLAND.productions website is online.

Although it is still in its infancy (lots of stuff to be added), we have set up a page which comes complete with the latest video trailer and links to both the blog and Facebook group.

The website will be the central hub for all news and information about the team, press releases, and updates about our first production 'FROM ATVLAND IN COLOUR'.

Please bookmark www.atvlandproductions.com and keep watching for further news.

Sunday, 12 April 2009

IT'S NOT ALL ABOUT PRESENTATION....

This last couple of weeks have been fairly busy, with another 2 interviews and a location shoot in Nottingham...

On April 1st we had the pleasure of heading into deepest Cheshire to meet with a former ATV continuity announcer, Diana Mather. What a pleasure this was, as Diana is the perfect hostess. This is not really surprising, because nowadays she runs finishing schools and etiquette classes, and calls herself an "etiquette guru". Diana fondly remembered her time there and was able to recount many stories from her time at ATV which will be featured in the programme.

Thanks to Diana we were able to meet up with another former announcer the following week, this time former Central presenter Jo Wheeler. Jo was also very talkative about her time at Central as presenter of The Magic Micro Mission and later as continuity announcer. These days Jo can be seen on the Sky News channel at the weekends where she presents the weather.

It was a pleasure to meet both of them and their stories will be enjoyed by viewers of 'From ATVLAND In Colour' I am sure....


In addition to all of that, some further filming took place last week at the former Central studios at Lenton Lane,Nottingham - home of Blockbusters, Price is Right and many other big productions in the 1980's and 90's. Of course the story we are telling is about Broad Street, so you may wonder what we were doing filming at a different site. Well the answer is simple, we will mention these studios as a part of the story of Broad Street, but much of the footage we have shot will probably be used in a future project, so watch this space....

Now that all that is completed, we are looking forward to more interviews coming up in the next few weeks, including Gary Terzza whom Matthew has been in contact with.... But as the title of this blog says - it isn't all about presentation - oh no - we will be having people from all areas of programming and production from Broad Street featured in our programme.

Sunday, 29 March 2009

Sticking the pieces together

The sun's out, the clocks have changed and we're out of 'hibernation'! As a cameraman, one of the frustating things about winter is the short amount of daylight you get. One of my plans for the documentary was to spend a day in London filming relevant places to illustrate key points in the history of ATV/Central.

Obviously, we're still focusing on the Broad Street studios in Birmingham, but it does help to have a few shots here and there of external influences. So, ATV's old HQ in Great Cumberland Place and the transmission centre in Foley Street are just two places I'll be filming.

Then we have some offbeat locations. Shopping channel QVC's current home - Marcopolo House in Chelsea - may not seem like an obvious priority, but a few seconds of that will be needed, as it was the former home of BSB - a broadcaster that commissioned sci-fi opera Jupiter Moon from Central, itself made at Broad Street.

Let's not forget that Marcopolo House was also home to the ill-fated ON Digital. Thankfully that's a footnote in broadcasting history, something we'll give the briefest of mentions to when it comes to wrapping up the post-active years of Broad Street's studios. We do aim to give a concise look at how television has changed since the last pictures were TX'ed out of the place. Maybe it'll come off as a little pessimistic, what with the modern-day ITV system looking very much different, even when compared to Broad Street's final active year, 1997.

It's quite easy to take a dim view of the way the media world is now, where there's 57 channels and nothing on. Not that we're bidding to be the new Grumpy Old Men. There's still quality around if you look for it.

I've spent the winter break collecting up pieces of footage. With an incredibly massive hard drive, an Apple iMac and several evenings to spare, I dumped down various stuff I've shot over the past four years. Admittedly, a lot was filmed for usage on the TiswasOnline website, but the vast majority of it has still never seen the light of day, and is truly relevant to the Broad Street documentary.

My other colleagues - Stephen Thwaites and Pete Raven - have been just as busy. We collated all our footage at the recent ATVLand meeting in Birmingham, so I can say I've had the privilege of viewing their interviews in full. Plenty of astonishing revelations about how ATV/Central/Carlton worked, from the 1950s, up to the point of Carlton-era Crossroads crashing and burning at Lenton Lane in the early Noughties. There's some jaw-dropping stuff in there, ranging from the warm friendly atmosphere of Sir Lew Grade's operation, to the catastrophic 'bean-counter' days of Carlton. I learnt that Crossroads basically kept Central going as a major player in the 1980s, and whatever you think of the soap, you only have to look at Central's output post-1988 to see how its force had diminished.

As a mark of respect to Crossroads, it's featuring a fair bit throughout our tribute to the Broad Street studios. It's a show that began before a single slab of concrete formed B1 2JP, and resurfaced in a zombie-like fashion years after the shutters came down on Broad Street.

Those of you who never enjoyed the goings on at King's Oak, fear not, as our documentary delves into plenty of other shows. We're not just talking of Tiswas, as we have a plethora of other shows that are already covered by the interviews we've accumulated!

The recent meet was also good, as ATVLand.productions members saw the final draft of the 'early years' script. This was put together by Roddy Buxton and Pete Raven, and it's been intensively researched. Every paragraph is laden with facts and there's clearly passion driving this mission-to-explain. I'm glad we're seeing the script at last, as this gives us direction.

As I read the script for the first time, I could already 'see' the documentary in my mind's eye. My Mac was switched off, but I was already doing an edit in my head! I instinctively felt which bits of my interviews could fit where. There's also the need to shoot new scenes. The jigsaw is coming together.

While the story of the early era from Roddy and Pete easily satisfies the 'anoraks', we'll also weave in some entertaining views of ATV and Central. Stuff like soap opera stars ad-libbing with a bunch of wigs, Hue & Cry causing an upset on live children's television and Lew Grade deliberately not copyrighting an ATV production so other regions could copy it in the name of public service.

Well, I began this blog post by opining how the sunny days are more than welcome, and I hope April is free from downpours as I'm off to London to do a few shoots, and there's also some other places down south where we're doing some interviews. We can't mention any names yet, but they're really impressive!

Monday, 2 March 2009

Production at a Crossroads?

Now that Christmas (and all the fun and games that entails) is over, the team have been getting on with things, firstly with an improved script being written mainly by Roddy Buxton, who has a vast knowledge of the ATV Centre and of broadcasting in general. Roddy is a lighting man by trade, and has worked on plenty of programmes including Ashes to Ashes and the forthcoming drama Red Riding. Roddy's knowledge of the ATV centre has already led to some feature articles on the Transdifusion website www.transdiffusion.org and so he has taken over where I left off with writing the story of this great television complex, enhancing the original draft with plenty of details.

The team as a whole have a new sense of direction, and as time and discussions have gone on, the focus has been more on how we can make this programme as interesting and informative to the viewer as possible and remind them of the fabulous contribution to British television made by the people who worked at the ATV Centre.

To that end we have been arranging more interviews with people you will recognise from over the years, the latest generous interviewee being a star from a particular Motel soap opera - I am not going to say too much as yet, but I can promise you that it was a fabulous and informative interview. In addition we have recently made arrangements to speak to one or two other famous faces from the presentation department of ATV and Central about their time there. More will hopefully be following and we will be busying ourself right through the spring and summer getting as many contributions 'in the can' as possible.

So lots to do still, but we are making great progress. Next week some of us are off again, filming in the midlands, it is certainly keeping us busy!!

Tuesday, 30 December 2008

The 2009 Shuffle

Working in From ATVLAND In Colour is a joy, but the toughest part is that the members are flung all over the UK. Luckily, we don't need all of our team for each filming assignment, and the power of the internet means we can get on with research work and script-writing at home.

Keith Jacobsen - there's a name I mentioned very early on in this blog. Keith is an ex-BBC/ITV cameraman who continues to work in television. He also happens to own Television South Limited. This is the guy who came up with the concept of producing a documentary DVD on the history of ATV/Central's Broad Street studios back in 2006.

Well, Keith's back on board. His recent services have been valuble to us in warding off those aforementioned legal threats. Plus his own knowledge on putting a production together is at an expert level. It's great to have him back.

Here we are at the end of the year, and with Christmas nearly over and done with, we're looking forward to resuming project work in the New Year. While we still have some cold winter months ahead, I can sit at home during the nights, hunched over the iMac, composing music for the DVD, and script-writing.

And now, to blow my own trumpet. I've finished putting together Tiswas Night 2008 for viewing online. It's slightly justified, as I'll be doing a lot of editing and design work on the From ATVLand In Colour DVD. Whilst the camerawork is a bit shaky on this (it is a live event with immense spontaneity after all), it's the production as a whole I'm quite proud of. Thanks must go to Matthew Gulliver for enabling me to put on an almost authentic Central-Television-style presentation!