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BBC Anerica Announced First Original Programming

Bob The Skutter

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In Memoriam
BBC America Announced First Original Programming

In the past few days BBC America have announced their first original content made specifically for American audiences. 2 unscripted and 1 scripted, along with a number of shows in development.

From BBC America

New York – BBC AMERICA’S General Manager, Perry Simon, today green lit two original series - Would You Rather with Graham Norton (wt) and Hard Drive with Richard Hammond (wt) - and announced an initial slate of unscripted development, kicking off the channel’s first major steps into original U.S. production.
The move comes on the back of BBC AMERICA’s highest rated quarter ever. In second quarter 2011, the channel beat all previous records and was up 30% year-on-year in prime and 31% in total day*.
Building on the popularity of the channel’s core unscripted program brands – such as Top Gear, Gordon Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares and The Graham Norton Show – the slate aims to expand on the talent and subject-matter BBC AMERICA viewers are responding to.


Simon commented: “Top Gear, Gordon Ramsay and Graham Norton continue to deliver ratings and strong ad revenue. It makes sense to offer our viewers even more of what they love about the channel by developing compatible original programs featuring some of our biggest stars. But this is just the start. Our development team, Richard De Croce, Rachel Smith and Erin Jontow, is already working on the next raft of titles including BBC AMERICA’s first original scripted series.”
Simon’s first original series pick-up on the unscripted side features host and comedian Graham Norton, who has entertained BBC AMERICA audiences for many years with his trademark irreverence and ballsy style of interviewing.

Norton’s new show is Would You Rather with Graham Norton (wt) (13 x 30), an all new original comedy game show that tests the wits of the best U.S. comics. Shot in New York, it’s produced by So Television and executive produced by Graham Norton, Graham Stuart and Jim Biederman. It will premiere later this year as part of BBC AMERICA’s recently launched comedy franchise, The Ministry of Laughs.

Top Gear has consistently rated as one of BBC AMERICA’s most successful shows. Now Top Gear host Richard Hammond will star in a brand new original series called Hard Drive with Richard Hammond (wt) (6 x 60). Produced by BBC Worldwide Productions and based on the BBC format, World’s Toughest Driving Tests, it features Hammond traveling the U.S. and competing with local experts driving some of America’s toughest and most extraordinary vehicles. The executive producers for BBC Worldwide Productions are Rob Fox, Elli Hakami and Jane Tranter.


In development, BBC AMERICA has a pilot with another Top Gear presenter, James May. James May's Man Lab U.S. is produced by Plum Pictures and based on May's successful British format of the same name. In the U.S. version, James comes to America and teams up with an American sidekick in order to help his transatlantic brethren rediscover and relearn the skills that define what "being a man" is all about. Executive Producers for Plum Pictures are Will Daws and Stuart Cabb.


AUTO Biography (wt), produced by Reveille, takes a ride down memory lane to track down the lost history of an exceptional vintage car. It’s Who Do You Think You Are? for cars as the host traces a vehicle’s family tree and meets the previous owners along the way while the vehicle is simultaneously restored and refurbished by our resident garage. The restored car will be reunited with one unsuspecting previous owner. The executive producer for Reveille is Heather Schuster and co-executive producer is Matt O’Brien.


Battlemodo, produced by True Entertainment in association with Gawker Media and its tech site Gizmodo.com is a field-based, hosted hour that takes Gizmodo’s recommendation and testing techniques into the real world with epic battles between two cutting edge products that reveal once and for all which is best. Executive producers are Glenda Hersh and Steven Weinstock from True Entertainment and Gaby Darbyshire from Gawker Media.


On the competitive food front, BBC AMERICA follows up on the success of its Gordon Ramsay programming with No Kitchen Required. This single episode format drops four chefs into some of the world’s most remote locations and challenges them to create a meal for the local community, putting their own unique spin on native ingredients. Produced by Notional, it features award-winning New York chef Michael Psilakis, who also serves as producer. The on-screen talent includes chefs Madison Cowan, Kayne Raymond and Dominque Crenn. Executive producers for Notional are Chachi Senior, Dave Noll and Cleve Keller.


The channel has also ordered a one hour special/back door pilot of Shock Therapy, produced by BBC Worldwide Productions and adapted from the BBC UK format, Fat & Fatter. The special aims to help addicted young people by pairing them with an extreme version of themselves in order to “shock” them to change their lives and habits for the better. Izzie Pick Ashcroft and Jane Tranter are executive producers.
From BBC America

In its most significant original programming commitment to date, BBC AMERICA has announced its first original scripted drama series, Copper. The 10 episode series, which centers on a young Irish cop operating in the immigrant communities of 19th century New York, is co-created by Tom Fontana (OZ, Homicide: Life on the Street, St. Elsewhere) and Will Rokos (Monster’s Ball, Southland). The executive producers include Fontana, Rokos, Barry Levinson (Good Morning, Vietnam, Rain Man, You Don't Know Jack) and Christina Wayne (Broken Trail and executive in charge of Mad Men at AMC) of Cineflix Studios. Copper is set in the Five Points Irish neighborhood of New York City in the 1860’s. The series focuses on a rugged young Irish cop who has to navigate the unruly and sometimes violent currents of his immigrant neighborhood, while simultaneously interacting with uptown Manhattan high society and the emerging black community in Harlem.
Copper will commence production in the fall of 2011 in Toronto and premiere on BBC AMERICA in Summer 2012.
Perry Simon, General Manager, BBC AMERICA says: “Copper is a great fit for BBC AMERICA, capturing the early American multicultural experience in provocative, ground-breaking fashion. In the spirit of great BBC drama it’s brimming with fascinating and complex characters giving us the opportunity to cast the best actors from both sides of the Atlantic. I’m delighted to be working with Tom and Barry again, together with Will, Christina and the talented team at Cineflix Studios. We could not be in better hands for BBC AMERICA’s first dramatic series”.
“BBC AMERICA is the ideal home for Copper in the U.S.,” said Glen Salzman, CEO, Cineflix. “Cineflix Studios has put together an amazing team for this series, some of the best in the business, who will produce compelling television with widespread international appeal. We look forward to starting production in a few months and continuing to ramp up our scripted programming slate.”
Have to wonder if these shows will be aired on the BBC in the UK as well, as a cheap way to fill time with their budget cuts.
 
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Have to wonder if these shows will be aired on the BBC in the UK as well, as a cheap way to fill time with their budget cuts.

I certainly hope Copper will - sounds like a grittier competitor for Murdoch Mysteries - and Hamster and Captain Slow's series sound OK.

They can fucking keep Graham Norton. Preferably in Gitmo.
 
Well Man Lab has already been on here, think there's some tweaking and a second series expected, but maybe it's turned in to this BBCA show.
Yeah Copper sounds like it could be interesting, could see it working on BBC Two or Four.
 
I'm all for anything that breaks up the endless stream of years-old Top Gear reruns and countless hours of non-stop Gordon Ramsey. BBCA used to have a variety of shows. Now? Not so much.
 
James May is gonna show American men how to be more manly? That oughta be good. :lol:
"Manly" is too narrow a definition, really. It's more about "Man Tasks" as May sees them - ranging from disarming a bomb to making a fish-finger sandwich. And that's just in the first episode.

:D
 
"Manly" is too narrow a definition, really. It's more about "Man Tasks" as May sees them - ranging from disarming a bomb to making a fish-finger sandwich. And that's just in the first episode.

:D

Mmm Fish Finger sandwiches.:drool:
And your condiment of choice would be?

(Clue: The correct answer is ketchup).

In that case, brown sauce. Which is my default condiment for everything.
 
Hope BBC show it here, it sounds like an interesting idea. And I guess it's the way they're going, Torchwood seems to be the experiment for doing production in America and showing it in both countries.
 
Copper could be interesting. Certainly the presence of a couple of Homicide: Life on the Street producers is promising.

Still, it staggers me that BBC America is mostly just filled with reality shows while The Catherine Tate Show still has yet to be aired on our shores! I thought the idea was supposed to be importing the best of British television, not the cheapest.:rolleyes:
 
More reality crap, meh.

If Copper is set in the 1860s, I hope it's the Civil War part of the 1860s because that's certainly the most interesting period, even if it's focused only on NYC.

Or maybe I hope it isn't, because I'd just be watching and wondering "why don't they do a series about the Civil War instead?" I'm so damn sick of cop shows, even a historical cop show just seems tired.
 
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