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Presented by none other than Andrew Marr? Well, other than having had this for the somewhat recent Anniversary of “On the Origins of the Species”? Personally, Andrew is one of the better presenters on the Beeb who has made a series on Daniel Dennett’s book of the same name, which people suggest as a companion piece to the series. Sure, it was broadcast over a year back (19-24 Mar 09), but I wasn’t aware of iPlayer then (or the original broadcast). Fortunately, I was able to pick up the DVD and look forward to seeing the programme. My copy just arrived today and I am really chuffed about it! Other goodies arriving from Amazon were Diarmaid MacCulloch’s and.

I downloaded both of those from iPlayer, but wanted a good copy of (poor resolution from iPlayer) and the complete version of. I caught the last half of the series taking me from Charles I to modern times, meaning I missed quite a bit of Scottish history before that time.

It’s catch up time! Well, it’s and I am going to eat Haggis, Tatties n neeps, and boiled cabbage. Maybe I’ll watch, Since I am alone in the city place, not to mention that I am south of the border–my wife asked if Andrew Marr is Scottish. What a stupid question!

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I didn’t really think about it, but Andrew is Scottish! What a way to celebrate St. Andrew’s Day. Eating haggis, drinking whisky, and watching on DVD. Personally, it would be more fun to have him and his family around to drink some Scotch than watch him on the the tube, but. I’ll just have to make do.

But it would be fun to have him come around wearing a Cameron of Lochiel kilt and 1972-era stripy Man at C&A tank-top. Sorry, but you’ll have to imagine Andrew in a kilt. Yet another distraction for when I am watching, I can think of him looking like this guy:! It’s hard to watch and think of the guy as some sort of. Then, this Nazi from the writes this nasty review of.

I mean it’s pretty obvious that Charles Moore is some form of reactionary from his review of the show. Not to mention the Telegraph is pretty right wing (but I still like reading it). I mean Marr makes me seem Conservative, but Moore really goes overboard when it comes to trashing ‘Red Andy’. Well, all I can say is “Here, you look just like that Andrew Marr you poor bugger.”. It seems like my life is fast becoming like the film, where the protagonist sees himself living in a cartoon. I should blame this on spending time in Belgium where is the national art form. I was going to make a comment that (top left) looks like a character from.

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A bleach blonde version of (right). I think it’s the hair. Or maybe the eyes. It seems that agrees with me on this.

They referred to as “The Hasbeano”, with the Spectator’s editor Boris Johnson becoming “Boris the Menace”. I prefer Boris to who sort of reminded me of when he had hair and a moustache. Not sure what Stephen Fry is doing in this picture, but I do think is brilliant. A Fred Flintstone look alike perhaps? Andrew Marr (top right) is a brilliant journalist.

I’ve started watching his “” which is interesting, but I am beginning to see I am not as much of a lefty as I think. This show is really oriented toward “democracy”. I think that the belief in my being left leaning comes from living in the US which seems to be turning more and more into a facist nation. Anyway, I think he looks like a cartoon with the ears. I thought I could come up with a “good” picture, but short of a screen capture, I don’t think one will show up in a picture search. I can’t help thinking of the (right) when I see Marr on the screen.

It seems that he once was approached by a man in a shop who said, “Here, you look just like that Andrew Marr you poor bugger.” Marr claims he was once mistaken for Vladimir Putin. Sorry, Andrew, but Putin looks more like than you. Unfortunately, that similarity caused an. Now, I just have to steer clear of.

Mick Aston was probably more important to the Show Time team than Tony Robertson. While Tony was the public face who kept the show going, Mick was the person who was responsible for the idea behind the show. Not to mention he worked to popularise archaeology. Mick was partly responsible for its creation after telling Professor Tim Taylor, the Time Team series producer, that it would be possible to evaluate a site in only three days. The show was developed from the an earlier Channel 4 series Time Signs, first broadcast in 1991. Both Time Signs and Time Team were produced by Taylor and featured Mick Aston and Phil Harding, who went on to be regulars on the Time Team Series. Mick was a passionate believer in communicating archaeology to the public.

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He possessed an incredible knowledge of the subject and had an effortless way of making archaeology accessible to people., the Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Pottery expert pointed out on Facebook that “there were howls of outrage from many professional archaeologists at the thought of the public doing archaeology. Now, most professional units have an ‘outreach’ team doing the very thing that was condemned by many of them at the time, and the public are involved in archaeology more than they ever have been.” The much-respected professor had suffered health problems but the cause of death is not yet known. He will be missed. An aside, I think the reason that the US version of Time Team shown on PBS was such a disappointment to me was that it did not have someone like Mick Aston on the show (the original presenter/host, Colin Campbell, was as affable as Tony Robinson and the show has a new host, Justine Shapiro, who I haven’t seen in action). Also, I think there wasn’t the core crew that the UK version had and it never got the same energy and personal dynamics, which is a shame.

The US really needs to pay more attention to its history, rather than its founding myths. One advantage of living in Europe is that there is far more obvious history throughout the continent which means one doesn’t need to go too far afield to find neat things. For example, metal detectorists have found the and while tooling about in British fields. It doesn’t take too much to find Anglo-Saxon what nots these days as well. Although, I was told of friends visiting the Holy Land being shown pieces of pottery that their guide tossed because they were only “a couple of thousand years old”.

While there are similar antiquities in the Western Hemisphere, they are usually in South or Central America. Just ain’t the same as it’s. And it isn’t just that the US version lacks Tony Robinson. I think the UK version caught people’s attention by showing what could be found in people’s gardens and then grew from there.

The US version just doesn’t reach the collective soul: even if it is good to know the origins of the land. But, where I am going with this is that someone with a metal detector can poke around and find bits of “archaeology”, which is probably more a Time Team UK concept than one from the US–especially since the UK finds can be far more exciting than some buttons. Although, the US Time Team did do some very interesting digs, such as trying to find. Who knows what stuff might be lurking under the North American soil that could lead to interesting new discoveries? Unfortunately, because of the dearth of history in North America, one needs to look across the water to Europe for resources (or South to neat sites). Or so one would think. Who knows what is under the North American soil that might provide a new perspective on the peopling of the land?

While Lewis and Clark were the first American (U.S.) explorers, Anyway, like most of my posts, this is something to get one’s mind going whether one lives in the Western or Eastern Hemisphere. If you’re in Australia, you can go looking for the (and LaSalle’s Le Griffon if you’re in the US).

But, the real idea behind all this is to explore, discover, and learn. Some resources:. Mick Aston Archaeology Is Rubbish: A Beginner’s Guide (any of Mick’s books are a good start). I’m not sure what got me looking at Time Team DVDs on Amazon, but I was there. Perhaps it was because I was looking at the silly show, which the BBC describes as an “Archaeological drama series”.

Most people call it comedy who know anything about history of archaeology. I did also see that is available on DVD as well.

Anyway, Time team has been around for since 1994, for 19 Series with around 200 digs, yet Channel 4 have finally released Series 18 on DVD. I should add that PBS did a US version which lacked the personality of the UK version (not to mention the wealth of history). Despite this, there have been only a couple of “Best of DVDs” issued ( The Very Best Time Team Digs, Time Team Digs-A History of Britain, and Time Team in Your Garden). The recently released DVD, Time Team-Tottiford and Other Digs, is the first complete season to be released on DVD. Nevermind that one can download quite a most seasons of the show on line if one can’t watch it on.

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Despite the cost of this set, I plunked down the dosh to buy a copy hoping that will lead to positive reinforcement for the Channel 4 Marketing types. ALthough, I wonder if, being commercial, they are immune from the lack of funds which plague Aunty. Still, you would think that both the Independent Broadcasters and the BBC would do what they could to make a few quid by trying to flog DVDs of their programmes. Although, I will add that there is a mystery to me as I watch a couple of historic Panorama episodes from 1955 that have been on iPlayer of Malcolm Muggeridge interviewing and. These are only available for streaming at the BBC site, but at least they are available. This may have something to do with a page called.

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Any luck, BBC 4 will add the David Frost Nixon Interview to this list. And you wonder why I want to connect my TV to my computer? It beats having to watch this stuff on a crappy monitor! Anyway, there is a lot of material out there which I wish had better availability. Of course, that statement will puzzle the powers that be who think they are making the material pretty available, yet there is a reason that some sites exist which facilitate the downloading of this material. Personal choice is to use the official channels and contribute to seeing more of this material being produced. Someone also said that other Time Team Series were available in Australia, but I was unable to find these from my sources.

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Seriously, if people are waving money in their faces of the people who produce this material, why don’t they take it? It makes a bit more sense than having TV detector vans driving about. This couild become yet another rant about BBC archival policies, DVD production, and so on. Of course, I should also plunk down the money to buy the DVDs of some of the other programmes I mention here–even if I will never see them again–if I want to practise what I am preaching. But, that would come with the hope that the Powers that Be would get the message.