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A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: History Channel (USA) broadcast of Endeavour voyage reconstruction
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2002 Oct 10, 20:31 +0100
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2002 Oct 10, 20:31 +0100
Hal Mueller said- >The History Channel will be carrying, in 4 episodes, the BBC series >"The Ship", which has been discussed on this list. According to a >newsgroup post on alt.sailing.tall-ships, the "preview" ran on Oct 1, >4, and 7, and the actual series itself will be shown (with many >repeats) Oct 14-16. > >Check your local listings for details. >http://www.historychannel.com/ontv/index.html also has details, but I >found that to be a difficult/over-flashy website to navigate. > >Hal >(who doesn't have cable and will have to wait for the DVD) ===================== Comment from George Huxtable. Don't expect too much. I have seen some episodes of this series when it was broadcast last month in the UK (then in 6 50-minute parts, not 4), and been very disappointd. Mind you, I missed part 4, which dealt with the navigation (and which I am informed was much the best of the series), and part 5. In my view the series lacked any clear intention. It concentrated unduly on the trivia of shipboard life for the assorted contingent of 40-odd put aboard by the BBC, the whole "reality TV" cliche. The producer took his camera and seemed to wander round the vessel shooting whatever took his eye without any real plan. And there were long sections of political correctness concerned with the injustices perceived by the local indigenous peoples. Interspersed with this were short "dramatisations" of historical scenes from Cook's voyage, shot in false colour and out-of-focus, for some reason. But really, the historical side was just a peg on which to hang the modern human-interaction, which appeared to be the producer's motivation. It was misleading to portray itself as a series about history. But what a missed opportunity! Just think what could have been done, with access to that superb replica for a whole six-week voyage. For example, the BBC were perfectly placed to show how the square rig operated and how the vessel was manoeuvered. She could have gone about by tacking (or wearing, more likely) and it could have been explained what was going on. True, the were many shots of crew climbing ratlines and out on the footropes, but with no explanation, in any of the programmes that I saw, of what was happening, and why. But then that would have distracted from the producer's main interest, which was clearly the on-board personal interactions, and which needed no specialised nautical knowledge whatsoever. See it for yourself, though, and you may find you dissent from my sour view. George. ------------------------------ george@huxtable.u-net.com George Huxtable, 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK. Tel. 01865 820222 or (int.) +44 1865 820222. ------------------------------