i had exactly the same sensation - i.e. that it wasn't meant so much for my eyes, as those overseas.
now if the beeb were to commission a series that truthfully and unsparingly documented the brutality of tiberius' reign, that really would be something to applaud. not such an easy sell to middle america though, methinks (check these sample pages of 'Caligula: Divine Carnage' for a hint as to why):
sample one
sample two
sample three
interesting to note that some of the text directly contradicts the programmes assertion that tiberius died one of the most popular emperors ever and that, in fact, he rarely attended the games such was his loathing for the roman populace.
Henry VIII programme
Re: Henry VIII (& Colosseum moan)
"History is the propaganda of the victors." ~Ernst Toller
Tony Robinson's take on Caligula was interesting, showing that while the man was by no means a paragon of virtue neither was he the monster portrayed in so many histories. Given he hated the Senate and its members and did all he could to hurt them, it's no surprise his name was blackened after his death.
What we know about leaders and kings from the ancient world up until the middle ages is open to doubt. Richard III, child-killing hunchbacked monster or a good king villified by the Tudor propagandists in order to legitimise that house's claim to the throne? Vlad Tepes, Romanian patriot or sadistic mass-murderer? In the end history only reflects what you bring to it.
"There is no truth. There is only perception." ~Gustave Flaubert
Tony Robinson's take on Caligula was interesting, showing that while the man was by no means a paragon of virtue neither was he the monster portrayed in so many histories. Given he hated the Senate and its members and did all he could to hurt them, it's no surprise his name was blackened after his death.
What we know about leaders and kings from the ancient world up until the middle ages is open to doubt. Richard III, child-killing hunchbacked monster or a good king villified by the Tudor propagandists in order to legitimise that house's claim to the throne? Vlad Tepes, Romanian patriot or sadistic mass-murderer? In the end history only reflects what you bring to it.
"There is no truth. There is only perception." ~Gustave Flaubert
Pervert
The Worlds Biggest Collector Of Ben Dover DVD`s
Koppite Till I Die
Remember - You`ll Never Walk Alone
The Worlds Biggest Collector Of Ben Dover DVD`s
Koppite Till I Die
Remember - You`ll Never Walk Alone
Re: Henry VIII (& Colosseum moan)
> "There is no truth. There is only perception." ~Gustave
> Flaubert
can that be true?
> Flaubert
can that be true?
Re: Henry VIII programme
i heard that in the 60s just trying to recall who told me i know mason williams recorded it,think it dates back to 14/1500s i tend to like baroque music as well.
Re: Pompeii - The Last Day
Looks like the BBC are going to give this the same treatment. Lots of computer trickery of Mount Vesuvius exploding. Lots of 21st century dialogue & a Hollywood type voice over as the look at what happened on that fateful day when Pompeii was engulfed in ashes.
Think it's destend for the American TV market!
It's on next Monday 20th if anyone is interested!
Think it's destend for the American TV market!
It's on next Monday 20th if anyone is interested!
Re: Pompeii - The Last Day
bring back frankie howard i say,lol the prologue
Re: Pompeii - The Last Day
no ,seriously i think they are making all these modern dramas set in historic times to ge more people interested in the events eg henry v111/pompeii etc.
Re: Pompeii - The Last Day
The Romans seem to be the big thing at the moment, what with Colosseum, Pompeii.....programs on Channel 4 about them etc.
Getting back to Henry VIII.......everytime I think about it I keep seeing Sid James as Henry in Carry on Henry.......lol.
Getting back to Henry VIII.......everytime I think about it I keep seeing Sid James as Henry in Carry on Henry.......lol.
Re: Pompeii - The Last Day
they had good settings the old carry ons,there was a series made in the 70s called carry on laughting which looked at historical things.