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Tomorrow's World

Tomorrow's World is a former British television series about contemporary developments in science and technology. First transmitted on 7 July 1965 on BBC1, it ran for 38 years until it was cancelled at the beginning of 2003. The Tomorrow's World title was revived in 2017 as an umbrella brand for BBC science programming.[1][2]

Tomorrow's World
GenreFactual, Science & Technology
Created byGlyn Jones
Directed byStuart McDonald
Presented byNumerous (see Presenters)
Theme music composerJohn Dankworth (1965–1979 theme)
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes1,400
Production
Executive producers
  • Max Morgan-Witts
  • Michael Latham
  • Michael Blakstad
  • Richard Reisz
  • Dana Purvis
  • Saul Nasse
Producers
Release
Original networkBBC1
Original release7 July 1965 (1965-07-07) –
16 July 2003 (2003-07-16)
Related
The Tomorrow's World Roadshow

The show was usually broadcast live, often featuring inventors demonstrating their creations. Tomorrow's World also held exhibitions, allowing the public to see pioneering inventions firsthand. Presenters included Raymond Baxter, James Burke, and Judith Hann, the longest-serving presenter. The show introduced the British public to numerous key technologies, such as the breathalyzer, home computer, and mobile phone. After a decline in ratings, the show was axed in the late 1990s, but the Tomorrow's World brand has since been revived for science and technology news reports across BBC platforms.

Content

Tomorrow's World was created by Glyn Jones to fill a half-hour slot in the 1965 BBC summer schedule. Jones and his wife conceived the show's name the night before the Radio Times went to press.[3] In its early days the show was edited by Max Morgan-Witts and hosted by veteran broadcaster and former Spitfire pilot Raymond Baxter. For some years it had an instrumental theme tune composed and performed by John Dankworth. During the 1970s the programme attracted 10 million viewers per week.

The programme was usually broadcast live, and as a result saw the occasional failure of its technology demonstrations. For example, during a demonstration of a new kind of car jack that required much less effort to operate, the jack disintegrated. Pressing on in the face of such adversity became a rite of passage, both for new presenters on the show and for the young assistant producers whose job it was to find the stories and make sure this kind of setback did not happen.

Sometimes, however, the liveness gave an added dimension of immediacy to the technology, such as inventors personally demonstrating flame-proof clothing and bullet-proof vests while the presenters looked on. Sometimes it was the presenter who acted as test dummy.

Tomorrow's World also frequently ran exhibitions, called "Tomorrow's World Live", often based in Earls Court, London. These offered the general public the chance to see at first hand a variety of brand new, pioneering inventions, as well as a selection from that year's show. The presenters, by this time Peter Snow and Philippa Forrester, also ran an hour-long interactive presentation within.

The show was also occasionally parodied, for example by Not The Nine O'Clock News, which featured demonstrations of such inventions as a telephone ring notification device for the deaf – powered by a microprocessor looking like a "Shreddie", and later by the second series of Look Around You.

Presenters

Raymond Baxter, the show's first presenter, was noted for pointing out features of the new inventions with military precision using his Parker pen ("as you will see: here, here and here"). He left the show in 1977 after a difference of opinion with new young editor Michael Blakstad, who allegedly referred to him in a press interview as "the last of the dinosaurs".[4]

Other presenters included:

The idiosyncratic Bob Symes showcased smaller inventions in dramatised vignettes with themes such as Bob Goes Golfing. These often presented challenges for film directors with whom he worked when a close-up was required as Symes's own invention-related exploits in the workshop had resulted in him losing parts of several fingers. It was hard to find a finger that did not look too gruesome to show on screen. Other regular features included Whatever Happened to..., picking up on the oft-levelled criticism of the show that a significant number of inventions seemingly were never heard of again.[citation needed]

Technologies introduced

In many cases the show offered the British public its first chance to see key technologies that subsequently became commonplace, notably:

Perhaps the best-remembered item in the programme's history was the introduction of the compact disc in 1981, when presenter Kieran Prendiville demonstrated the disc's supposed indestructibility by scratching the surface of a Bee Gees CD with a stone. The show also gave the first British TV exposure to the group Kraftwerk, who performed their then-forthcoming single "Autobahn" as part of an item about the use of technology in musicmaking. Another programme concerning new technology for television and stage lighting featured The Tremeloes and the Syd Barrett-led Pink Floyd.

Offbeat aspects

Featured inventions that did not change lives included a fold-up car that fitted into a suitcase, numerous gadgets such as a miracle chopping board for the kitchen, and collapsible knives and forks. Members of the public frequently sent in their ideas.[citation needed]

Final years

By the late 1990s, the live studio demonstrations were dropped in favour of purely pre-recorded items. The final series, presented by Adam Hart-Davis, Kate Humble and Roger Black, attempted to revert to the original live format of the show, even using a remix of one of the theme tunes used during its more successful years, but ratings continued to fall, and with only three million viewers in the last series the BBC decided to axe the show. At the time they said that they would produce a number of science special editions under the Tomorrow's World "brand" from time to time. The "Tomorrow's World Roadshow" appeared in 2004 with Gareth Jones (co-host of CITV's How 2) and Katie Knapman taking the helm as the last presenters of a show bearing the Tomorrow's World name, before a partial return to television in 2007.

For the 1000th episode, a commemorative CD was produced by Nimbus Records. It contained four audio tracks of the four theme tunes that were used from 1965 to the early 1990s. 1000 copies were made and were given away in a competition. The CD was notable as being the first holographic audio compact disc ever made.

On 14 September 2009, the BBC made some clips and episodes available online.[7][8]

In the United States, episodes of the series aired on the cable channel TechTV between 2001 and 2003.

The Prince of Wales Award for Industrial Innovation and Production

At the end of each series, the Prince of Wales gave an award or awards for superlative inventions.

Revival of the brand

At the start of 2007, the BBC announced that the Tomorrow's World brand would be used on science and technology news reports across the BBC's TV, radio and internet services, including a blog. The Tomorrow's World name returned to television screens on 8 January 2007 as part of the BBC's news coverage on BBC Breakfast, hosted by Maggie Philbin and as a blog on the BBC News website.[9] In August 2007, it was reported that Michael Mosley, director of development at the BBC's science wing, had pitched the concept of resurrecting the format to BBC commissioners.[10]

In May 2017, the BBC announced it was launching a year of science and technology under the Tomorrow's World banner. Its purpose is to "seek to address how science is changing peoples' lives, reshaping the world, and rewriting the future of healthcare".[1]

BBC 4 Live Edition

Tomorrow's World returned for a one-off live special, with Hannah Fry and four presenters from the show's original run: Maggie Philbin, Howard Stableford, Judith Hann and Peter Snow. The 90-minute interactive show was broadcast at 9pm on BBC 4 on 22 November 2018.[11][12]

Science Channel Reboot

In May 2018, Science Channel premiered a new version of the show called Tomorrow's World Today.[13] The show explores sustainability, technology, new ideas and worldwide concepts around innovation. Julian Taylor serves as executive producer and the program features executive producer George Davison as host and field reporters Tamara Krinsky and Jackie Long.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Tomorrow's World: BBC and partners launch year of science and technology". BBC. 2 May 2017. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  2. ^ Knapton, Sarah (5 May 2017). "Tomorrow's World returns to BBC with startling warning from Stephen Hawking – we must leave Earth". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  3. ^ "Glyn Jones - The man who invented Tomorrow's World". The Guardian. 12 October 1999. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  4. ^ "Obituaries – Raymond Baxter". The Telegraph. London. 16 September 2006. Retrieved 15 January 2015. Blakstad allegedly called the gravel-voiced presenter "the last of the dinosaurs"
  5. ^ a b c d e "The predictions Tomorrow's World got right as it returns to our TV screens". BBC. 3 May 2017.
  6. ^ "Tomorrow's World - Moog Synthesiser". BBC. from the original on 2 June 2020.
  7. ^ "Tomorrow's World classics go online". BBC News. 14 September 2009. Retrieved 25 May 2010.
  8. ^ "Archive – Tomorrow's World – Tomorrow's World | First Edition". BBC. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  9. ^ Waters, Darren. "Why Tomorrow's World?". BBC News Tomorrow's World. BBC News. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  10. ^ Return of an old favourite as 'Tomorrow's World' is reborn 26 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Independent 6 August 2007
  11. ^ "BBC to reboot Tomorrow's World for one-off live special". The Guardian. 3 November 2018. Retrieved 3 November 2018.
  12. ^ "BBC Four - Tomorrow's World Live: For One Night Only". BBC. BBC. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  13. ^ a b "Tomorrow's World Today". Tomorrow's World Today. Retrieved 28 February 2018.

External links

  • BBC archive material with clips and old episodes
  • TV Cream on Tomorrow's World
  • A view on the demise of Tomorrow's World by Simon Singh
  • Tomorrow's World at BBC Online
  • Tomorrow's World at IMDb

tomorrow, world, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, book. For other uses see Tomorrow s World disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tomorrow s World news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Tomorrow s World is a former British television series about contemporary developments in science and technology First transmitted on 7 July 1965 on BBC1 it ran for 38 years until it was cancelled at the beginning of 2003 The Tomorrow s World title was revived in 2017 as an umbrella brand for BBC science programming 1 2 Tomorrow s WorldGenreFactual Science amp TechnologyCreated byGlyn JonesDirected byStuart McDonaldPresented byNumerous see Presenters Theme music composerJohn Dankworth 1965 1979 theme Country of originUnited KingdomOriginal languageEnglishNo of episodes1 400ProductionExecutive producersMax Morgan WittsMichael LathamMichael BlakstadRichard ReiszDana PurvisSaul NasseProducersRoy BattersbyJohn MansfieldRichard LoncraineLiz TuckerSam RobertsMichael CummingRichard DaleMartin MortimoreSam StarbuckDavid McNabRichard CollinReleaseOriginal networkBBC1Original release7 July 1965 1965 07 07 16 July 2003 2003 07 16 RelatedThe Tomorrow s World RoadshowThe show was usually broadcast live often featuring inventors demonstrating their creations Tomorrow s World also held exhibitions allowing the public to see pioneering inventions firsthand Presenters included Raymond Baxter James Burke and Judith Hann the longest serving presenter The show introduced the British public to numerous key technologies such as the breathalyzer home computer and mobile phone After a decline in ratings the show was axed in the late 1990s but the Tomorrow s World brand has since been revived for science and technology news reports across BBC platforms Contents 1 Content 2 Presenters 3 Technologies introduced 3 1 Offbeat aspects 4 Final years 4 1 The Prince of Wales Award for Industrial Innovation and Production 4 2 Revival of the brand 4 3 BBC 4 Live Edition 5 Science Channel Reboot 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksContent EditTomorrow s World was created by Glyn Jones to fill a half hour slot in the 1965 BBC summer schedule Jones and his wife conceived the show s name the night before the Radio Times went to press 3 In its early days the show was edited by Max Morgan Witts and hosted by veteran broadcaster and former Spitfire pilot Raymond Baxter For some years it had an instrumental theme tune composed and performed by John Dankworth During the 1970s the programme attracted 10 million viewers per week The programme was usually broadcast live and as a result saw the occasional failure of its technology demonstrations For example during a demonstration of a new kind of car jack that required much less effort to operate the jack disintegrated Pressing on in the face of such adversity became a rite of passage both for new presenters on the show and for the young assistant producers whose job it was to find the stories and make sure this kind of setback did not happen Sometimes however the liveness gave an added dimension of immediacy to the technology such as inventors personally demonstrating flame proof clothing and bullet proof vests while the presenters looked on Sometimes it was the presenter who acted as test dummy Tomorrow s World also frequently ran exhibitions called Tomorrow s World Live often based in Earls Court London These offered the general public the chance to see at first hand a variety of brand new pioneering inventions as well as a selection from that year s show The presenters by this time Peter Snow and Philippa Forrester also ran an hour long interactive presentation within The show was also occasionally parodied for example by Not The Nine O Clock News which featured demonstrations of such inventions as a telephone ring notification device for the deaf powered by a microprocessor looking like a Shreddie and later by the second series of Look Around You Presenters EditRaymond Baxter the show s first presenter was noted for pointing out features of the new inventions with military precision using his Parker pen as you will see here here and here He left the show in 1977 after a difference of opinion with new young editor Michael Blakstad who allegedly referred to him in a press interview as the last of the dinosaurs 4 Other presenters included James Burke 1965 1971 Michael Rodd 1972 1982 Anthony Smith Lyall Watson William Woollard 1974 1978 Judith Hann 1974 1994 the longest serving presenter Anna Ford 1976 1978 Kieran Prendiville 1979 1983 Su Ingle 1980 1984 Peter Macann 1983 1991 Maggie Philbin 1983 1994 Anna Walker Howard Stableford 1985 1997 Kate Bellingham 1990 1994 John Diamond 1991 Carmen Pryce 1991 1994 Monty Don 1994 1995 Carol Vorderman 1994 1995 Vivienne Parry 1994 1996 Rebecca Stephens 1994 1996 Shahnaz Pakravan 1994 1997 Richard Mabey 1995 Craig Doyle 1996 1999 Philippa Forrester 1996 2000 Jez Nelson 1996 2000 Peter Snow 1997 2000 Anya Sitaram 1998 2000 Nick Baker 1999 2000 Lindsey Fallow 1999 2000 Sophie Raworth 1999 2000 Katie Knapman 2002 David Bull 2002 2003 Adam Hart Davis 2002 2003 Roger Black 2003 Kate Humble 2003 The idiosyncratic Bob Symes showcased smaller inventions in dramatised vignettes with themes such as Bob Goes Golfing These often presented challenges for film directors with whom he worked when a close up was required as Symes s own invention related exploits in the workshop had resulted in him losing parts of several fingers It was hard to find a finger that did not look too gruesome to show on screen Other regular features included Whatever Happened to picking up on the oft levelled criticism of the show that a significant number of inventions seemingly were never heard of again citation needed Technologies introduced EditIn many cases the show offered the British public its first chance to see key technologies that subsequently became commonplace notably Breathalyser 1967 Home computer 1967 5 Light pens and touchscreens 1967 5 Artificial grass 1968 5 Synthesizer 1969 6 ATM and Chip and Pin 1969 5 Pocket calculator 1971 Digital watch 1972 Teletext Ceefax 1974 Mobile phone 1979 5 Personal stereo 1980 Compact disc and player 1981 Camcorder 1981 Barcode reader 1983 Wind up radio 1993 Starlite insulation 1993 Robotic vacuum cleaner pioneered on Electrolux Trilobite prototype 1996 Targeted intra operative radiotherapy for breast cancer 2000 Perhaps the best remembered item in the programme s history was the introduction of the compact disc in 1981 when presenter Kieran Prendiville demonstrated the disc s supposed indestructibility by scratching the surface of a Bee Gees CD with a stone The show also gave the first British TV exposure to the group Kraftwerk who performed their then forthcoming single Autobahn as part of an item about the use of technology in musicmaking Another programme concerning new technology for television and stage lighting featured The Tremeloes and the Syd Barrett led Pink Floyd Offbeat aspects Edit Featured inventions that did not change lives included a fold up car that fitted into a suitcase numerous gadgets such as a miracle chopping board for the kitchen and collapsible knives and forks Members of the public frequently sent in their ideas citation needed Final years EditBy the late 1990s the live studio demonstrations were dropped in favour of purely pre recorded items The final series presented by Adam Hart Davis Kate Humble and Roger Black attempted to revert to the original live format of the show even using a remix of one of the theme tunes used during its more successful years but ratings continued to fall and with only three million viewers in the last series the BBC decided to axe the show At the time they said that they would produce a number of science special editions under the Tomorrow s World brand from time to time The Tomorrow s World Roadshow appeared in 2004 with Gareth Jones co host of CITV s How 2 and Katie Knapman taking the helm as the last presenters of a show bearing the Tomorrow s World name before a partial return to television in 2007 For the 1000th episode a commemorative CD was produced by Nimbus Records It contained four audio tracks of the four theme tunes that were used from 1965 to the early 1990s 1000 copies were made and were given away in a competition The CD was notable as being the first holographic audio compact disc ever made On 14 September 2009 the BBC made some clips and episodes available online 7 8 In the United States episodes of the series aired on the cable channel TechTV between 2001 and 2003 The Prince of Wales Award for Industrial Innovation and Production Edit At the end of each series the Prince of Wales gave an award or awards for superlative inventions Revival of the brand Edit At the start of 2007 the BBC announced that the Tomorrow s World brand would be used on science and technology news reports across the BBC s TV radio and internet services including a blog The Tomorrow s World name returned to television screens on 8 January 2007 as part of the BBC s news coverage on BBC Breakfast hosted by Maggie Philbin and as a blog on the BBC News website 9 In August 2007 it was reported that Michael Mosley director of development at the BBC s science wing had pitched the concept of resurrecting the format to BBC commissioners 10 In May 2017 the BBC announced it was launching a year of science and technology under the Tomorrow s World banner Its purpose is to seek to address how science is changing peoples lives reshaping the world and rewriting the future of healthcare 1 BBC 4 Live Edition Edit Tomorrow s World returned for a one off live special with Hannah Fry and four presenters from the show s original run Maggie Philbin Howard Stableford Judith Hann and Peter Snow The 90 minute interactive show was broadcast at 9pm on BBC 4 on 22 November 2018 11 12 Science Channel Reboot EditIn May 2018 Science Channel premiered a new version of the show called Tomorrow s World Today 13 The show explores sustainability technology new ideas and worldwide concepts around innovation Julian Taylor serves as executive producer and the program features executive producer George Davison as host and field reporters Tamara Krinsky and Jackie Long 13 See also EditBeyond Tomorrow Click Daily Planet Look Around You series 2 satirised Tomorrow s WorldReferences Edit a b Tomorrow s World BBC and partners launch year of science and technology BBC 2 May 2017 Retrieved 13 June 2017 Knapton Sarah 5 May 2017 Tomorrow s World returns to BBC with startling warning from Stephen Hawking we must leave Earth The Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 2 May 2017 Glyn Jones The man who invented Tomorrow s World The Guardian 12 October 1999 Retrieved 5 March 2018 Obituaries Raymond Baxter The Telegraph London 16 September 2006 Retrieved 15 January 2015 Blakstad allegedly called the gravel voiced presenter the last of the dinosaurs a b c d e The predictions Tomorrow s World got right as it returns to our TV screens BBC 3 May 2017 Tomorrow s World Moog Synthesiser BBC Archived from the original on 2 June 2020 Tomorrow s World classics go online BBC News 14 September 2009 Retrieved 25 May 2010 Archive Tomorrow s World Tomorrow s World First Edition BBC Retrieved 22 September 2014 Waters Darren Why Tomorrow s World BBC News Tomorrow s World BBC News Retrieved 22 March 2017 Return of an old favourite as Tomorrow s World is reborn Archived 26 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Independent 6 August 2007 BBC to reboot Tomorrow s World for one off live special The Guardian 3 November 2018 Retrieved 3 November 2018 BBC Four Tomorrow s World Live For One Night Only BBC BBC Retrieved 23 November 2018 a b Tomorrow s World Today Tomorrow s World Today Retrieved 28 February 2018 External links EditBBC archive material with clips and old episodes TV Cream on Tomorrow s World A view on the demise of Tomorrow s World by Simon Singh Tomorrow s World at BBC Online Tomorrow s World at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tomorrow 27s World amp oldid 1157490114, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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