Category: Channel 4

  • A Look At 1980s British Video Game Adverts (On The Telly)

    A Look At 1980s British Video Game Adverts (On The Telly)

    In the 1980s computers were often referred to as “home computers”. Until then, the very idea of a such a thing would conjure up images of enormous and frightening rooms in “research centres”, filled with blinking lights, spinning tape reels and Joe 90 having his mind erased and then re-programmed with the thoughts of someone who was really good at yachting.

    And on top of that, computers were also called “electric brains”, which had a tendency to blow up if Patrick McGoohan asked them the question “Why?”. (For some reason they never printed out a slip of paper replying “Why not?”, like in a comedy text adventure.) Ultimately, prior to about 1980, the idea of something along those lines in someone’s house was the stuff of madness.

    But this was now the decade of The Microchip Revolution, and of R Tape Loading Errors and Kevin Toms’ cheerful bearded face. Now you could buy your very own computerised electrickery thinking boxes, and if you typed “Why?” into one it would sternly respond with something like “Nonsense in BASIC”. Checkmate, Number Six!

    Anyway, all that shite I just wrote is an intro to an article about ads for computer games on actual British TV, which I did because you have to have an intro.

    First off is K-Tel’s faintly odd attempt at muscling in on the lucrative Spectrum market, and the slightly less lucrative Vic 20 one as well. K-Tel, of course, had a number of fingers in all sorts of pies, usually to do with crap compilation LPs or “labour saving” gadgets that insulted your intelligence simply by existing. K-Tel weren’t adverse to new trends, and one particularly gravy-filled pie they decided to jab a hairy swollen digit into was one with the words “VIDEO GAMES” baked into it, using extra bits of pastry to… make out the letters… or, er, by carving that into the crust or something. (That metaphor sounded better in my head when I started writing it.)

    So, instead of K-Tel advertising 20 Golden Hits Of The Enoch Powell Stranglewank Band Playing The 40 Platinum Smashes Of Lennon & McCartney & Gilbert O’Sullivan, here they’ve got cassettes with actual games on them in actual shops. And game(s) plural is the important bit to note, as each tape has TWO games on one cassette, whereas other tapes would only have one! Hoorah! Which would be good if any of them were actually halfway decent, but this is more The Power House than Ultimate Play The Game.

    Indeed, even the shittest effort from the latter company would likely be more entertaining than the two being flogged here, with the second one appearing to be a not-as-good version of Chris Sievey’s minor classic “The Biz”. I’m not sure if this came first or The Biz did, but either way there’s nary a mention of Whistle Test or Probe Records to be seen. The whole two for one thing wouldn’t really catch on, even if you tried including an actual officially licensed game of The Evil Dead on the B-side.

    The advert itself is a cracker, though – I wish the absurd camp nonsense of it could go on for a few more minutes at least. Extras from a provincial theatre group staging of some sort of 50s jukebox musical are pissing off a Dracula with their wild hip gyrations, which are so gyratory they’re woken both him and Lady Dracula, even though these are their waking hours. (He probably wasn’t too happy with their Sinclair BASIC attempt at drawing him, either.)

    However, Lady Dracula is basically fine with the younger generation, ultimately clicking her fingers to the crazy wild cat rock’n’roll sound of The Big Bopper claiming “I got no money, honey!”, before dying in a massive plane crash. If only Don McLean could have had an Oric in 1959, it might have taken his mind off that whole “would you believe that bloody levy was dry?” business.

    Meanwhile, there’s a classic example of that kind of detached, faintly ironic voiceover used in ostensibly humorous ads back then on British television. If you needed to make some sort of wry comment juxtaposing the product being sold with whatever stuff was being shown on screen, then this is the kind of thing you did.

    So, this time round, the voice of someone who you’d imagine would be otherwise be taking a “side-eye glance” at Ronald Reagan saying “Well” a lot is trying to sell you some Spectrum games – or if wet, games for the Vic 20. And they’re all available at a billion shops you haven’t thought about in years, or are at least now teetering close to bankruptcy. “Twice the fun with two games on one”, as long as you’ve got the 8K RAM expansion.

    Onwards into the beyond. What do we see now? An ominous bleak landscape, John Hurt narrating, it’s the 80s… no, this isn’t how we’re all going to die from shagging; it’s only the bloody Intellivision!

    Hurt, modulating his voice from the more familiar “THERE IS NO KNOWN CURE” doom-tone into a “look how grand and mint and skill this amazing thing is” kind of manner, is extolling the virtues of Mattel’s ill-fated dalliance with early 80s video games.

    If you know your gaming history, you’re aware how this console was wiped out in / partially caused the North American Video Games Crash – which didn’t really concern anybody outside the US or Canada to a large extent. In the UK we all shrugged our collective shoulders, if we noticed it at all, and got a Spectrum or C64 or something instead. And if you were really unlucky, you got a Dragon 32.

    Still, at this point all that’s yet to happen, and Our Lord God John Hurt runs through the amazingness of the console best known these days for that strangled electronic voice saying something about being a “buhhhmerrrr”. (Well, you know what Texans are like.)

    The word Intellivision was meant to denote “intelligent television” – TV you interacted with, rather than everyone’s favourite badly-dressed transphobic educational organisation with a jingle composed of naught but total malevolence. In 1982 it was still remarkable to plug a box into your TV’s ariel socket and make a white rectangle hit a square, so something with actual colours and graphics and text and sounds other than “BIP!” (although they still weren’t a million miles away from that) blew everyone’s minds.

    Once the Temu Milky Bar Kid picks up that weird disc-and-keypad controller (note to imaginary editor: would “the Happy Shopper Milky Bar Kid” make more sense in this context? “The Fine Fare Milky Bar Kid”…?), the almighty power of the machine is revealed through, er, a magic cloud? Oh, no, it’s a future hover-city, my mistake. This advert may have been recorded on Betamax, which was technically superior to VHS and all, but it’s still a bit hard to make out at first.

    And then we get to see an actual game. I’m not going to make fun of the games themselves – within the context of the time, they really were genuinely enjoyable back then, and the best of them are still fun for a quick outing today. You’re not going to get Red Dead Redemption or anything, but they do have their worth.

    I must point out, though, that the description of the ad’s featured game Star Strike -“the ultimate space battle… destroy these aliens” – described 95% of all games at that point. The remaining 5% were either about gorillas kidnapping the girlfriends of Italians (shut it, Manning), or unsettling British whimsy about a man in a hat having to avoid toilets.

    Apparently, you must get an Intellivision because “no one else can take you there” – I assume “there” means playing excellent games and that, and not that time when you asked your dad to take you to London to maybe perhaps possibly buy a NEC PC Engine from an import electronics store in 1989, and him flat out saying “NO”.

    And it was true that no one other than Intellivision could take you “there”… well, apart from the Intellivision’s rival Colecovision, which had the best graphics of that console generation. (And was manufactured by a leather company…?) Even the increasingly creaky Atari 2600 could be relied upon for some decent thrills in 1982-ish, thanks to programmers going above and beyond to squeeze as much as they could out of that disco-era console.

    As with that K-Tel business above, one of the major delights of these sorts of adverts is seeing all the old stores where you could have bought this vision of the future. Here it’s pretty much bloody everywhere, including the famed Bentalls department store.

    Personal reminisce time! I visited the Kingston Upon Thames flagship store many times as a child, though I don’t recall seeing an Intellivision there myself. I think I was too distracted by the giant Playmobil figure they had standing by the toy department entrance. But now in the Hell Year 2025, the only thing like a console you can get in Bentall’s toy place are one of those Amiibo-like figurines that come shaped like Pikachu or Wonder Woman. I’ve nothing against “Wondy” or Pikachu (if I could have a baby, I would want it to be exactly like that adorable electric mouse), but y’know, it’s not the same. Come to think of it, they might have been actual Amiibos. But more unforgivingly, Bentalls has been “re-branded” as “Fenwick’s”. Gah. Personal reminisce time over!

    Still, Mattel would go back into video games once Nintendo had taught Corporate America that it’s not a good idea to run a gaming company like this twat did. After that, the following decades would see a steady flow of games licensed from Mattel for Nintendo, Sega, Sony, and Microsoft. They tended to focus mainly on Barbie, and also Barbie, with some Barbie thrown into the mix, and sometimes Shit Version Of Action Man… but mainly Barbie. Fair enough.

    And finally, a compilation of one of the most legendary crossovers produced by human hand. Forget anything to do with DC or Marvel or anything like that – behold Morecambe And Wise And Atari!

    After you’ve sat through the classically Youtubey thing of the uploader putting an intro at the start that’s a bit too long (first advert starts at 17 seconds in, accurate starting time fans), we get the head-spinning juxtaposition of The Stage newspaper and the concept of music hall with Missile Command and Pac-Man, rammed right next to each other.

    Eric Morecambe cackling while manhandling a joystick (steady now) while in his classic flat cap and mac get-up is worth the price of admission alone… which is, er, free. Or at least the price is sitting through at least two adverts, one of which may be some weird and creepy bit of disinfo from that there “manosphere” they have these days, annoying everyone by screaming at the sight of blue hair dye and going insane in prison.

    Other delights are Eric and Ernie having much the same arguments about playing a game as you did with your friends / cousins / siblings at any time between 1982 and 2000, and Eric doing a classic bit of business by not allowing Ernie to play Yar’s Revenge.

    But rather than me waffling on about it any longer, you’re better off just watching it yourself. The above video is approximately four minutes of pure joy, and has the power to end wars. Have you played Atari today? (Bites tongue to avoid mentioning emulation – oh no what a giveaway…)

  • Have A New Year!

    Have A New Year!

    Count down the final minutes to 1991 with Channel 4, in the presence of top light entertainer and singer – Mr Vic Reeves:

    From the TV listings of the Daily Express, this is the latter part of Channel 4’s New Year’s Eve line up from 1990. Pretty decent night for comedy across the channels, as it happens. Over on BBC2 at ten to eleven there was another installment of Peter Cook’s proto-Why Bother, “A Life In Pieces”. And if you didn’t fancy Squeeze then you could wait five minutes before switching back to BBC2 to catch Mel Brooks’ “Young Frankenstein”… all those “best bloopers” things from The Chase or whatever don’t compare, do they?
  • Oxide Ghosts: The Brass Eye Tapes – A Brief Review

    Oxide Ghosts: The Brass Eye Tapes – A Brief Review

    Originally posted on Letterboxd. Watched at a screening that took place on 1st November 2024 – this review was edited slightly on the 19th. “Only shown at live events, Oxide Ghosts: The Brass Eye Tapes is made from unseen sketches and outtakes from seminal British TV series Brass Eye.”

    I’m not going to reveal too much about this – instead I’ll point out a couple of things.

    First, it’s fascinating how so many famous moments from the series effectively began as beta versions, if you’ll excuse the grotesquely tech-orientated term; there’s entire stretches which are like a compilation from a Brass Eye that exists in an alternate universe, with moments like the weasel fighting in “Animals” coming across as if viewed from a different angle.

    On top of that, there’s countless bits cut from well-known sketches (reports?) that are entirely up to standard. One extreme example of this is the Jam Factory sketch from “Moral Decline” (criticised by some as feeling below-par compared to the rest of the series), which exists here as a much-expanded and, to be honest, much better version of what got broadcast. There’s also the inclusion of material that was rejected for not really working, and various bits and pieces that were only shot just to distract the censors while other stuff was smuggled in.

    Secondly – it’s magical to see so many outtakes where Chris Morris just full-on cracks up because something’s gone wrong, or he gets too amused by something he’s literally just come up with while on camera. In fact, quite a few legendary lines begin as moments of inspiration that dissolve into laughter, which are then swiftly re-taken.

    The Q+A afterwards at the screening I attended was great as well, and some interesting stuff was uncovered – and this is the only thing which I’ll share, as it didn’t come up in the film. There’s an almost flash-frame like moment in the opening titles where (among Liam Gallagher flicking the V’s and Morris dramatically turning and pointing) you can see an odd pink version of Cake in the hands of David Jatt.

    Well, it turns out that was a prop originally created for an episode of Alas Smith & Jones(!), and was in fact the inspiration for the whole idea of Cake when Morris spotted it on a shelf in the TalkBack Productions offices. As Cummings himself said to us, somewhere in an episode of Mel & Griff’s 80s / 90s sketch show you might catch a glimpse of a large and strangely familiar pink tablet that would later cause questions to be asked in the Houses of Parliament, and change British TV comedy forever.

    Live screenings of Oxide Ghosts continue until 27th November – see this page for more details: https://www.michaelcumming.co.uk/oxide%20ghosts/

  • Murun Buchstansangur lay in his bed, drinking cups of coffee

    Murun Buchstansangur lay in his bed, drinking cups of coffee

    “5.20 MURUN BUCHSTANSANGUR. Original animated series featuring a smelly, disgusting, but irresistible creature that lives in a crack beneath the kitchen cupboard.”

    If you know what “Murun Buchstansangur” is at all, you know that it’s a series of five minute cartoons made between 1982 and 1988 for Channel 4 in the UK, and it stars a weird and somewhat unappealing blue blob man. The show itself is also weird and somewhat unappealing, and that’s why it’s so fascinating.

    It takes the form of a children’s cartoon, but it isn’t for kids at all; yet neither is it something that could logically be shown on something like Adult Swim. It’s too early eighties British, too unsettling in a way that doesn’t lend itself easily to memes and posts on the socials (other than the usual “Bri’ish” stuff – the meme equivalent of nervous laughter). If the creators of Mr Pickles took one glance at this, they’d have an existential crisis.

    The first episode went out only 12 days after Channel 4’s launch, at 5:20pm on a Sunday. The following episodes were repeated for many, many years, long after production had ceased. Eventually I started to wonder – when did it exit the schedules? It must have been the 90s, right?

    Well, yes, I was right – Murun Buchstansangur’s last air date, as far as I can tell, was on Tuesday July 30th 1996, at 5 minutes to 6 in the evening. It followed the airing of a Terrytoons cartoon, perhaps further emphasizing that Channel 4 probably never bothered watching a single episode of it themselves.

    1996 was perhaps the last year you could argue that Channel 4 was still at some level “Channel 4”, in the original Red Triangle / alternative comedy / “Channel Swore” meaning of the name. But by this point the schedules were very different. Despite Murun being followed by a repeat of The Avengers (as in Mr Steed and Emma Peel, not Marvel), which also graced the fourth channel in 1982, another programme that had been on earlier was Ricki Lake’s talk show. The following morning would feature Rocko’s Modern Life, The Secret World Of Alex Mack, and of course The Big Breakast.

    Embarassingly, while I do remember seeing the title of the programme in TV listings back in the 80s, I didn’t watch it due to a typical childhood misunderstanding. My small brain thought that “Murun Buchstansangur” must be something in a foreign language, and therefore I wasn’t allowed to watch, as that would break the law or something. A related bit of confusion happened with The Hitman And Her, which was on well after my bedtime in 1989 – I assumed it must be a thrilling American import about an assassin who now has to work for the cops, and who gets partnered up with a tough street-smart female detective (the “Her” of the title).

    Anyway, not too long ago I uploaded a painstakingly compiled video of the first 13 episodes of Murun Buchstansangur to this channel, and it’s embedded above. For more info on the programme, I highly recommend this review / ranking of these same first 13 episodes, courtesy of The Anorak Zone.

    A VT clock for the fourth episode, bearing the extraordinary altered title of "Murun Barfstrangler". Clearly someone in Channel 4's playout had already got tired trying to spell the title correctly - one of the previous editions has a completely managled attempt on its VT clock...