Entry tags:
B7 on Mastermind
One of my friends is appearing on UK Mastermind with the specialised subject of Blake's 7. Go, her!
When the contender comes back to the black chair for their second round of questions (the general knowledge round), John Humphrys, the question master, likes to have a little chat with them. He will probably want to talk about B7. My friend would like some ideas of what likely questions might be, and some suggestions for answers to them. So far she's thought of:
- What was so good about B7?
- Wasn't it really cheap and ropey?
- Is it relevant today?
- What makes it different to other SF shows?
- Why has it become a cult?
So far I've come up with::
- The complex and witty characters of moral ambiguity.
- The sets and the SFX were, but the plots, characterisation, and dialogue more than make up for that.
- The series carries the initial message that we should fight against injustice and oppression, and that sometimes the people on the right side aren't exactly angels, yet ends with the very bleak and cynical message that the fight is a hopeless and doomed one. Do we accept that?
- It was the first to use plot arcs and morally ambiguous characters living in a dystopia.
- Because the characters are so interesting and snarkily witty, and because we are not told everything we need to know so there's so much room for speculation and discussion.

no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I was thinking of the incumbent.
no subject
no subject
no subject
Appearance except insofar as it applies to skin color, you mean? :)
no subject
(I won't name it for spoiler reasons, and also because it's more fun to make people rack their brains trying to figure it out. ;))
This, of course, does not negate the point!
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
4. The bad guys win. There's no irony, or back-pedalling, or allusions to hope for the future - and there's no punches pulled. They just win.
no subject
I suppose I could do B7 and the Marlow novels of Antonia Forest but I'd be stumped for another one. Perhaps Asimov's Foundation series? Both of those I could bone up on.
But I'd be far too nervous to do well anyway. I was once on a winning school team, but that's different, being one of four.
no subject
no subject
no subject
Black Adder also killed most off in the final show.
no subject
no subject
I chatted to one of the production assistants on Tues and Wed about B7 - he watched it himself when it was first broadcast, and wrangled the job of being the one to talk to me about it. In fact, we spent far longer gossiping about B7 than really necessary (and other stuff, including Life On Mars - *points at icon*) I put a post about it on my lj.
I think he intends to get back to me closer to the recording date, with some more focussed questions. I believe Jonh Humphrys will have looked at his notes, and picked out aspects he's interested in.
The shows won't be broadcast until the autumn (I don't have a date yet), but should be available to download on the BBC iplayer after transmission, I'd imagine.
no subject
I hope this was some help.
[deploys own
no subject
no subject
I can listen to radio programmes though.
I'd love a list of the questions. If you're interested, Australia's Einstein Factor did B7 and had some very easy questions (http://www.abc.net.au/einsteinfactor/txt/s1968887.htm)--I could answer all but one. Mind you, I may not have been able to on camera!