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TV show latest victim of swine flu

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Published Date: 10 May 2009
IT CHRONICLES the terrifying impact of a virus which sweeps the globe with devastating consequences for humanity. But a BBC drama could be a little too close to reality.
Scotland on Sunday can reveal that the cult BBC show Survivors could become a victim of the real-life swine flu crisis.

In the hit science-fiction show 90 per cent of the world's population is wiped out by an unprecedented outbreak of "European flu".

It comes as nine new cases of swine flu were confirmed in Britain yesterday, including one in Scotland, bringing the UK total to 47. The latest case in Scotland, a 19-year-old man from Greenock, brings the total number north of the Border to five.

TV chiefs are now considering shelving transmission of the second series to avoid accusations of poor taste and fear of causing unnecessary panic.

The first series, broadcast last year, showed the government and NHS failing miserably to cope with the pandemic, corpses piling up in hospitals and anarchy in the streets. The programme, which stars Scottish actress Julie Graham, was scheduled to return to screens in the coming months.

A BBC spokeswoman said: "We can confirm a second series of Survivors was commissioned last year. We are monitoring developments with regard to swine flu and no transmission date has been set."

The show gained a healthy average of six million viewers, was a hit with critics and was sold to the US, Australia, Norway and New Zealand.

Its success resulted in it being heralded as part of a BBC sci-fi renaissance alongside Doctor Who, spin-off series Torchwood and the commissioning of a remake of the John Wyndham classic Day of the Triffids.

But Frank Furedi, professor of sociology at the University of Kent, felt the uncertainty over Survivors was part of a wider over-reaction to swine flu.

He said: "What is very interesting is that people are starting to regard the possibility of causing offence as a very harmful phenomenon. Any good TV programme should offend some people, otherwise it would be without content or extremely mundane.

"It sends out the signal that people are so weak and pathetic they can't engage with the challenges of everyday life."

The academic believes the response to the real-life flu situation has been overblown.

He said: "Fearmongers now speculate about hundreds of thousands, millions or even billions of casualties. Even highly prestigious journals seem incapable of resisting the temptation to spread alarmist, high-casualty scenarios.

"However, there is no evidence that so-called swine flu, which has claimed a relatively small number of lives, will turn into a pandemic."

But there is a precedent for a show having an impact on public life. The 1938 radio broadcast of War of the Worlds allegedly caused mass panic as people across America tuned in and thought the US was being invaded by Martians.


The full article contains 489 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 09 May 2009 8:55 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: The BBC
 
1

Brodric,

10/05/2009 00:14:01
My, don't be ridiculous. Survivors is a really good drama. It is madness to consider shelving it. It might be useful (joke cos we aint going to reach that stage).


2

Brodric,

10/05/2009 00:16:32
The 1938 radio broadcast of War of the Worlds is a completely different scenario from now. The producers were breaking new ground by introducing the show as a news broadcast. People were more naive then, less prepared - and they didn't wait to hear more - would you if you thought the Martians were hovering somewhere above your city?
3

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 10/05/2009 01:45:06


foresight
['f???sa?t]

noun


1. provision for or insight into future problems, needs, etc,

2. the act or ability of foreseeing,

3. the act of looking forward,

4. (surveying) a reading taken looking forwards to a new station, esp in levelling from a point of known elevation to a point the elevation of which is to be determined, ? backsight

4

Ham Mei Si,

Hong Kong 10/05/2009 07:58:50
By all means show the series! Out here in HK during the terrifying SARS, epidemic, the TV was full of it! Everybody was watching actual footage of the shocking drama! HongKong fought hard to clean up its act ! Now every school kid in the territory knows the meaning of health crisis, and the Government will never want to get into that state of seriousness again! The best thing that could happen in the UK is that the showing of the programme will save lives!
5

King Richard IV,

BRISBANE 10/05/2009 09:03:57
More people have been killed by sharks this year than "Swine Flu",an I'm still swimming so lets not get carried away!Well...at least not till it reaches real countries where large numbers of Scot ex-pats hang out to avoid exorbitant tax rates!
6

Unimpressed one,

10/05/2009 09:28:29
The BBC PC brigade strike again.
7

Russell M,

Stirling 10/05/2009 09:36:01
"...a BBC drama could be a little too close to reality."

Isn't that one of the points of good fiction/drama/theatre? To let people explore ideas in a controlled environment that they might learn something about themselves and the world.

"TV chiefs are now considering shelving transmission of the second series to avoid accusations of poor taste and fear of causing unnecessary panic."
UNQUOTE

Those are judgement calls which one presumes the TV chiefs make everyday. Although the Sachs-gate affair throws that assumption into some doubt.

"It sends out the signal that people are so weak and pathetic they can't engage with the challenges of everyday life."

But isn't this the secret lesson the British government has been using to groom the public over much of the Twentieth Century? http://www.cato.org/pubs/policy_report/v26n2/cpr-26n2-1.pdf
8

Jacqueline Hyde ,

On the shelf 10/05/2009 09:37:49
If, by good fortune, any humans are still living on this planet by Christmas, will this mean that the major drug companies, their sponsored governments and their WHO puppets will claim that they have brilliantly and successfully averted world catastrophe?

Yet they seem to be unable to prevent a child dying of malaria every 30 seconds.

9

thx1138,

Edinburgh 10/05/2009 10:09:31
You would think this was the perfect time to show this series.
10

PointOf View,

10/05/2009 12:22:48
8 Russell M
Good post and spot on link. As you point out obviously the so called government know better (NOT), from cradle to grave ect. People are becoming pathetic and weak, unable to defend themselves. Its all part of the master plan isn’t it, Stepford society.
11

For Scotlands Future,

Vote for the SNP ---------DONT PRESS THAT BUTTON!! 10/05/2009 12:34:18
BBC Survivors. So this is what the Labour politicians will be doing during the recess. At least it will keep them out of their "second" home while the renovations take place before they sell it.

Property speculation- ah Maggie thatcher would be proud of them.
12

Wee Jane,

France 10/05/2009 21:42:17
Oh fur gawd sake ! The Beeb don't think we are capable of separating fiction from reality ?
We all managed pretty well in the past couple of weeks when the 'fiction ' of swine flu was presented as a 'threat to humanity' ( Headline on CNN news whenever they mentioned swine flu'.)
We are all perfectly capable of discerning truth from fiction.
Britain the nanny state and Auntie Beeb seem to think we are all now only good for watching purile shows such as Big Brother, Pop Idol and the like. Give us something to make our brains work for once !

 

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