Broken News

Broken News
Genre News satire
Created by John Morton, Tony Roche
Directed by John Morton
Country of origin United Kingdom
Language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 6 (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Jon Plowman
Producer(s) Paul Schlesinger
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel BBC Two
Original run 31 October 2005 – 6 December 2005
External links
Website

Broken News is a comedy programme shown on BBC Two in autumn 2005 and in Australia on SBS-TV from the 17 July 2006. The show poked fun at the world of 24-hour rolling news channels. The title of the show is a play on the phrase "Breaking News". It had six thirty-minute episodes. Having previously worked on programs such as People Like Us and The Sunday Format, the show's production team worked closely with writer and director John Morton.

The show jump cut between its various spoof TV channels, which covered both the central story and other stories that would be of interest to their audience. A large part of the comedy came from observations about the nature of news presentation rather than the stories themselves.

The programme centreds on Britain's addiction to 24-hour news channels. Each week, Broken News looked at a fictitious news story such as "Tomato Flu" or "The End of the Rain". Its massive cast of 145 actors played Newsreaders and reporters on different networks.

It was released on DVD Region 2 on 12 June 2006.

Contents

The featured networks

The programme featured mainly the following fictitious networks:

Other smaller networks include:

Occasional separate weather reports are thrown in, with graphic and presentation styles similar to those found on many television channels in the UK. They are often cut together in such a way that the resulting sentences are complete nonsense. The weather reports vary from almost useless ("There's going to be a lot of air tomorrow") to over-useful ("The northern Tajikistan province of Gorno-Badakhstan has experienced no weather for over four months now.") and gives pointless figures similar to the pollen, pollution and sun indices used by BBC and ITV weather stations ("There is a warning of high altitude for people living on mountains in the Pennines and Yorkshire Dales").

Episodes

  1. Tomato Flu An outbreak of tomato flu is in the headlines. This alarming new super-virus (a parody of avian influenza) can be traced back to a turkey farm in Turkey. The news networks advise on the best way to avoid tomatoids in food such as tomato ketchup. In other news: a man is injured by a frozen block of urine.
  2. Missing Island A report that an island has gone missing in the Barents Sea triggers paranoia about rising sea levels in Lincolnshire and the end of the world as we know it. In other news: teenagers' attention spans are now as low as eleven seconds.
  3. Half Way There Day Reports on commemorations around the country to mark the day Britain reached the half-way point in the last World War. In other news: The MADI music awards are here again, without last year's controversy.
  4. Crime The publication of a Home Office report which reveals that the majority of teenagers are now criminals leads to a series of news stories from the country's worst-hit areas. A picture of Britain in which the teenage population "now effectively feral, roam Britain's urban landscapes in packs of up to fifteen at a single time." In other news: East Anglia could be gone within a decade.
  5. Bolivian Crisis Reaction comes from around the world to rumours that Bolivia might have acquired nuclear weapons. Including a report from The White House: This is a bad day for the good guys, President Bush. In other news: A cross-eyed man kills a horse while trying to shoot himself.
  6. Hijack Media frenzy is quick to follow after reports emerge of an apparent hijack of an American passenger flight bound for Amsterdam. This live breaking story dominates the running orders of the world's news networks. In other news: An injunction has been served on Josh Cashman.

Context and Criticism

Broken News follows a rich heritage of UK television comedies about news broadcasts and current news stories. While most UK news related comedy has been based on jokes about current events (such as Have I Got News For You, Seven Days and Mock the News), there have been also a few TV shows that parodied news broadcasts while not being topical (Not The Nine O'Clock News, The Day Today and Broken News). For contrast, in the USA it is typical for a news comedy show to combine both, and do topical news jokes in a format that also looks like, and frequently parodies news forecasts themselves (like The Daily Show, Saturday Night Live's Weekend Update and The Colbert Report).

As a parody of news shows and networks, Broken News updates and expands the genre from the original parody of news shows, Not the Nine O'Clock News which was later adapted for US audiences as Not Necessarily the News. Not the Nine O'Clock News was a parody of news broadcasts of the early TV era where news was very serious and before cable TV, the one nightly news broadcast would gather much of the nation around the TV set. Not the Nine O'Clock News would include topical jokes, but also poke fun at other TV formats such as music videos. The Day Today update the parody to focus only on TV news show in the modern era, when news anchors had become TV icons and often had huge egos, but as a TV show, it was still a parody of one TV news show. Broken News expanded the concept of news parodies into the modern world of 24 hour cable TV news, with multiple news channels, where the same news is covered on a wide range of news channels - not always accurately on each of them - and where some news channels might be oblivious to even dramatic world news. Broken News also extended the jokes into the various news tickers which in practice doubled the number of jokes per episode, and for fans of the show, provided a reason to watch each episode twice, once to see the visual and spoken gags, then to read the completely unrelated written gags in the news tickers of the various news channels parodied.

Some have accused the show of being too close in style, presentation, writing and humour to the groundbreaking news satire The Day Today, first broadcast in 1994. Broken News has been attacked as "The Day Today for idiots. A show with nothing to say, full of...sub-Chris Morris newspeak and malapropism-humour shorn of all originality. The Day Today had a reason to exist - this didn't."[1] However, co-creator John Morton said in The Guardian "I hope after the first 10 minutes of our show you realise that it's a different animal from The Day Today. The target has changed because we've got this Tower of Babel of news. Plus we're sillier and more harmless." [2]

References

External links