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March 2008 | by: Kate Chisholm | Comments (1)

Death of television

It all began with a short story by Peter Ackroyd, telling of an extraordinary visitation by the Virgin Mary that was promised to occur sometime soon at St Mildred’s Church in Bread Street in the heart of London. Her reappearance would signify a great outpouring of religious fervour. Pilgrims from across the land would converge on the capital in the hope of seeing the Virgin, touching the hem of her garment and receiving her blessing. Virgin Day was born. And so was the idea of ‘A Film for Radio’.

Six short plays were commissioned for broadcast on Radio Four inspired by Ackroyd’s story and just in time for Easter, that most revolutionary of Christian festivals, demanding of its followers not just a token adherence to precepts of moral and ethical behaviour but also a leap into the unknown, into an alternate reality of resurrection and transfiguration. In response, you might say, to this act of divine revolution, to this mould-breaking act of faith, the powers that be at Radio Four and BBC TV finally agreed to come together to create The City Speaks (Wednesday and Thursday, multimedia). To enjoy its full impact, we were supposed to tune into Radio Four and press the red button on our digital TVs so that we could watch as well as listen.

Superficially, you might think that this was a final submission by the radio controllers to the advances of its cheeky upstart successor; an admission that in this world of new web-inspired technologies radio just can’t compete. It’s too backward-looking, too easy to use, too resistant to diversification. The voice, the word, on its own, is not enough for our internet-addled imaginations. But you’d be wrong. It’s TV that’s in trouble, not radio. And this might be the beginning of the end of TV as we know it.

Think about it. You can now listen to the radio you want to hear (rather than according to the scheduling whims of the broadcasters) wherever you want (in the bath, on holiday in John O’Groats or Timbuktu), whenever you want (just download or podcast or stream) and however you want (mobile phone, iPod, TV or your favourite old Bakelite). Television just hasn’t the same flexibility. How long, for instance, has it taken to develop the iPlayer facility, enabling you to catch up with programmes that have already been shown? And how much has it cost to set up compared with BBC Radio’s Listen Again facility?

More articles from: Kate Chisholm | this section

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Conor Lennon

March 23rd, 2008 10:46pm Report this comment

Dear Kate I've read a few reviews of The City Speaks, and this comes closest to getting the point of what I was aiming to achieve. If anyone wants to know more about the project I've set up a Website which contains background information: www.thecityspeaks.co.uk.

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