I've always found Our Nige deeply annoying, but I'll watch this in the hope that it might change my mind! This series is always worth watching- it is probably the only intelligent interview show left on television.
"In Confidence" with Nigel Kennedy
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amateur51
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostI've always found Our Nige deeply annoying, but I'll watch this in the hope that it might change my mind! This series is always worth watching- it is probably the only intelligent interview show left on television.
I always understood that Kennedy spoke very well of you, btw
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VodkaDilc
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostI've always found Our Nige deeply annoying, but I'll watch this in the hope that it might change my mind! This series is always worth watching- it is probably the only intelligent interview show left on television.
Kathy Burke and Peter Maxwell Davies. Like you I enjoy the gimmick-free nature of the interviews (modelled on John Freeman, I think, and his memorable Face to Face series). Some members might not like to read this, but I am sure that, if this was on one of the terrestrial channels (as I still think of them), it would have to be 'spiced up' with all sorts of trivia. The advantages of satellite channels again!
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amateur51
Originally posted by VodkaDilc View Post. Like you I enjoy the gimmick-free nature of the interviews (modelled on John Freeman, I think, and his memorable Face to Face series)
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VodkaDilc
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostAs created by the BBC in 1959, revived by the BBC with Jeremy Isaacs in 1989 - a well-tested format but scarcely cutting edge
Definition - very modern and with all the newest features
So Face to Face (1959) is not 'cutting edge'!
However, this is a quote from the BBC website:
Fifty years on the programmes still shine, remarkable for their relentless camera close-ups and Freeman's forensic questioning, bringing celebrities to television screens as never before.
Something worth preserving, in my view.
Here's the complete reference:
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostAs created by the BBC in 1959, revived by the BBC with Jeremy Isaacs in 1989 - a well-tested format but scarcely cutting edge
However, I'm glad you mentioned Jeremy Isaacs. You must have forgotten that Isaacs was the founder of the Artsworld channel, which would have long since gone into liquidation had Sky not taken a 50% share in 2007, rebranding it as Sky Arts, with- yes, you guessed it- Jeremy Isaacs as Chairman.
Really, amateur. Do your research......Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post1989 was an awful long time ago, and such intelligent interviewing- at least on television- has long since been dumped by the BBC in favour of Graham Norton, Jonathan Ross, Sarah Millican, etc., etc. Honestly, can you imagine the BBC devoting an hour of peak-time broadcasting to a one on one interview with a classical musician?
However, I'm glad you mentioned Jeremy Isaacs. You must have forgotten that Isaacs was the founder of the Artsworld channel, which would have long since gone into liquidation had Sky not taken a 50% share in 2007, rebranding it as Sky Arts, with- yes, you guessed it- Jeremy Isaacs as Chairman.
Really, amateur. Do your research......
I assume that all the hour-long arts interviews that Alan Yentob has been doing for years under the Imagine heading have passed you by because you're tucked up in bed under your Soar-Away Sun F1 duvet cover at that hour
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostYou must have forgotten that Isaacs was the founder of the Artsworld channel, which would have long since gone into liquidation had Sky not taken a 50% share in 2007, rebranding it as Sky Arts, with- yes, you guessed it- Jeremy Isaacs as Chairman.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
I assume that all the hour-long arts interviews that Alan Yentob has been doing for years under the Imagine heading have passed you by because you're tucked up in bed under your Soar-Away Sun F1 duvet cover at that hourPatriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostWell, the fact I might be tucked up means that they're not shown at 8pm peak time, but apart from that, the Imagine programmes are a very different beast to the In Confidence series. The latter is quite simply Laurie Taylor in one chair, and the interviewee facing him in another; and that's it. Whereas Imagine is usually short snippets of interview interspersed with location filming and Alan Yentob wandering about talking to the camera. Not the same at all. That's why I said in my OP that it is the only intelligent INTERVIEW show left on TV.
Why is it a television programme then? Sounds like radio to me
Oh no, that was In The Psychiatrist's Chair with that nice Clare Anthony, innit. And then it was on BBC TV.
Yes the Sky programme is quite unique
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