> Alison wrote:
> >Anyone got the actual list, for discussion purposes? As I recall:
[Cough] That was me. :-)
Harriet:
> I've just rewound the tape to the final countdown. In forward (or
> whatever is reverse of reverse) order:
>
> 1. Star Trek
> 2. Dr Who
> 3. Red Dwarf
> 4. Thunderbirds
> 5. Hitchhiker
> 6. Blake's 7
> 7. Sapphire and Steel
> 8. Tomorrow People
> 9. Buck Rogers
> 10. Space 1999
Ta, muchly.
> I gathered there had been some sort of poll of the general public to
> arrive at these - presumably we didn't hear about it in time to stuff
> the ballots?
Actually, no, I don't think so. As has been pointed out, it's more
to do with what they can show clips of, and what their pundits talk
about - possibly which they're most entertaining about. The Top Ten
series has always been somewhat bizarre in its selections.
But even so, I'm not surprised that B5 wasn't there. Everything in the
list is Old, with the exception of Red Dwarf, and that was a prime-time
sitcom. I believe that much of the decline of quality of media sf is because
it was the sort of stuff watched by kids two decades ago, who are now
running TV companies, and think that stuff's just for kids - they don't
watch it themselves, and don't think it deserves the time and effort "real"
drama gets - sorry, off on a rant there.
Point is, most of it's had twenty-odd years to seep through public
consciousness and take root, sometimes spawning collectable Dinky toys
en route, and it comes from an era when you watched that stuff because you
didn't like what was on either of the other two channels. Nowadays, B5
is a kids-only thing that's purely ephemeral, and lost in the noise of
the satellite and cable channels.
steve