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~ rants & reflections of Martin Jameson, writer, director & grizzled media gunslinger.

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Tag Archives: reviews

What the Small Screen told me in 2025

04 Sunday Jan 2026

Posted by Martin Jameson in BBC, Continuing Drama, Criticism, Main Stream Media, Media, Television, Television Criticism, Television Drama, Writing

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Adolescence, apple-tv, BBC, Bookish, itv, netflix, reviews

As a working writer, most years I do my very best to catch at least one episode of as many new television dramas as I can. This is the age of streaming after all, and anyone serious about writing for (or about) TV should at least watch the medium. You need to know what’s in the air, what the trends are, who’s doing what, etc, especially if you want to be able to conduct a coherent conversation in a pitch meeting… or know who to pitch to in the first place.

So it was, that in 2025 I sat down in a spirit of eternal optimism and checked out 52 different TV drama series. Given that I also watched 133 movies (you can read about ‘What the Big Screen told me in 2025’ here), the first thought that comes to mind is that I need to get a life. These 52 TV series consisted of 335 hours of content, which, on the basis of an eight hour working day, would have taken me 42 days to watch, or, allowing for one day off a week, 7 weeks of my precious time on this good earth.

Luckily, I do have a life – along with a crushing sense of my own mortality – and so it also was that I abandoned 31 of them by the end of their first episode – saving 161 hours and reclaiming nearly three and half weeks to spend, instead, scrolling aimlessly on the internet. Assuming that you, dear reader, are also scrolling the internet rather than doing something useful with your life, and given that I’m anal enough to keep notes on everything I watch, let’s have a rummage around the numbers to see what, if anything, I learned from such a colossal waste of time.

First up, not all of it was bad. There were at least thirteen of those 52 shows that would probably be judged good or exceptional by most people.

Adolescence was universally acclaimed, with Prisoner 951 and The Bombing of PanAm 103 not far behind as quality showings from the BBC. Squid Game, Paradise, Zero Day, Cassandra, and The Eternaut made for compelling genre viewing (if you’re into that kind of thing), and Bookish, Landman, White Lotus (even if Series 3 was too thinly spread, it was still a quality watch), Down Cemetery Road and Your Friends and Neighbours did the heavy lifting for drama and crime. Five of these shows are British; five are American; one is Korean, one is German; and one is Argentinian. This distribution is what you might expect with the UK more or less pulling its weight. For twenty percent of any art form to be good-to-excellent isn’t bad… but what strikes me is that there isn’t much of a middle-ground.

There were a variety of reasons that I bailed from more than 60 percent of the shows I started. Obviously this is subjective (albeit informed by a working knowledge of the industry) but according to my notes, eighteen were unwatchably bad, somewhat outnumbering those worthy of a triple thumbs up . Usually it was the script that honked, occasionally aided and abetted by iffy production values and dodgy-as-hell acting, leaving me wondering how on earth they got to the small screen without someone shouting: ‘Oi! No!!! Stop!!!!’ To be fair to the remaining thirteen shows in the ‘Ep1 Bail’ category, they were decently written and produced, but when faced with the choice of what to watch next they just didn’t do enough to earn a place in my heart. After one episode, I felt like I’d got the general idea and seen enough. A test of this is when you come back to watch the second episode, can’t remember what on earth happened the last time and can’t be bothered to find out. Rather a lot of TV is like this.

And while the UK seems to hold its own at the quality end of the stats, 81% of these ‘Ep1 Bails’ were British with just 19% of them being of U.S. origin. Obviously watching from the UK it’s bound to be weighted that way (i.e. because U.S. turkeys don’t really make it over the pond nor onto British algorithmically determined watchlists), but let’s be brutally honest, there’s something uniquely limp about far too much of our homegrown product.

It’s the thrillers that are the problem. For some reason British TV seems incapable of making thrillers that are actually thrilling. The quirky, quasi comedic ones do better – Down Cemetery Road and Slow Horses and the extremely daft Assassins are notable exceptions – but our attempts to be be classy or genuinely exciting tend to sputter on an altar of suburban parochialism. Our cars are too functional, our streets look as if they smell of over-cooked cabbage, our politicians just aren’t important enough, our spies are either public school stereotypes or unlikely streetwise wastrels. And if I see another series about a fish-out-of-water detective arriving in a small town, usually after a divorce/bereavement/breakdown/rehab/corruption accusation (delete where not applicable) uncovering the community’s ‘dark secrets’ I think I may just give up and watch nature documentaries for the rest of my life.

The ‘parfum de’ an awful lot of British TV Drama

As for British TV’s toe-curling forays into science-fiction… aside from Black Mirror, no, just no.

We’re on safer ground when we stop trying to pretend to be something we’re not and focus on human drama – often journalistically inspired – and what it tells us about the human condition, hence excelling at shows like Adolescence, Prisoner 951 and in previous years Baby Reindeer or Mr Bates vs the Post Office. We do ‘issues’ like no one else on the planet, perhaps because there’s less of a disparity between the aspirations of the drama and the fumbling mundanity of British life – and little requirement for dodgy special effects.

Of course, a lot of what my viewing habits reveal is just about me. Once you’ve been around the TV block a few times – and then a few times more – the medium gets harder and harder to watch. I spent the best part of 25 years writing Long Running Series (aka Soaps) and while I’m proud of my work and respect the commitment and industry of all involved in producing the sheer volume of drama that they do, I just have to turn onto any one of the soaps for about ten seconds to know that character x is being abused by their partner; that the bride/bridegroom-to-be is sleeping with character y in the wedding congregation; that character z is about to discover they have dementia/a.n.other terminal/hereditary disease; that character c has a secret lovechild (played by someone who got the axe from another soap); that character b is about to discover the true identity of their father/mother (possibly due to the need for a new kidney); and that character a is about to get punched by a man/slapped by a woman/have a drink thrown over them and get ejected from of a pub. If it’s a medical soap then someone who suddenly can’t breathe will be saved by a coat-hanger and a biro (niftily inserted into the 2nd intercostal space) and that anyone in a hospital bed talking about their garden or the holiday they plan to take next year will be dead by the end of the second act. All of these stories are executed to the best of everyone’s ability and are perfectly charming first or even second time around but once you start to lose count then it’s time to look elsewhere for one’s entertainment.

Similarly with one or two notable exceptions (Ludwig and Bookish) whodunnits – and especially cosy crime – make me feel as if my life is draining into oblivion (which of course it is, but who needs reminding?). I know how incredibly popular they are – I wouldn’t dare to argue with the figures – but they are a mystery to me, and not in the way intended by the producers. The deaths never seem to matter to anyone, so why should I care?

Enjoyable Cosy Crime for someone who doesn’t like Cosy Crime

We British are also lauded for our period dramas, but – and again this is a factor of my age and cynicism – I can never get past the sense that they are a) wandering around a National Trust Property looking for the tea room; b) their teeth are too white or c) intercourse is probably ill-advised as the breathlessly passionate characters are bound to have at least one sexually transmitted disease for which there is no cure, not to mention appalling halitosis.

On the subject of sex, why is it that British TV sex tends to imply that a man’s penis is eighteen inches long and shaped like a U-bend?

The main thing I conclude from watching period dramas is that whatever the merits or otherwise of the storytelling, the past sure as hell wasn’t remotely like this – it was another country altogether where they definitely did pretty much everything differently from how it is written, acted and designed for modern TV consumption. And if we’re not going to treat our own history seriously then what’s the point of it? And don’t cite Shakespeare’s lack of historical accuracy to me. He was a genius, he doesn’t count.

So while some reading this might fairly conclude that I need to take a break from telly drama and go and sit in a darkened room for a few years, there is a serious point to be made. There’s a mismatch between what British drama aspires to make and what it can actually achieve. Some of it is about cash. Too much of our drama looks cheap – because it is. We sit in front of our unforgiving UHD flat screens and we know what the show is supposed to look like and that disparity outpaces any chance that our disbelief will be suspended. American TV money is just better at making the fundamentally unreal look real.

But that mismatch speaks to something else as well. Too often the worlds British television tries to imagine for us aren’t just removed from the realities of the human condition, but fall so far short of life’s complexities as to strip them of any reason to go on watching whatsoever. They recast our experiences as a succession of melodramatic clichés seen through a washed out prism of woolly liberal media dinner party values. Drama can either challenge or reassure, and there’s definitely space for both, but those moments of challenge seem to be increasingly few and far between. Perhaps it’s just another symptom of the digital age. Just as politicians are no longer able to make anything resembling a difficult decision for fear of an online pile-on, broadcasters stick to narrower and narrower tried and tested genre boundaries for fear of digital desertion. Pretty much any TV writer can tell you of having projects rejected on the basis that ‘we’ve already got something with a disabled character in development’ or ‘we’ve already got an eco thriller’ as if there can only ever be one of those at any one time when there seems to be an infinite amount of air time available for curmudgeonly detectives to be uncovering a community’s dark secret. Any TV writer will tell you of the conversation they had with a commissioning editor insisting that ‘we definitely don’t want any more cops or docs!’ only to see their next new show centre on a detective in an emergency ward.

I’m certainly not a believer in the sentimental idea of a lost Golden Age of television drama. I’ve been watching telly since the mid 1960s, and our screens have always been filled with endless amounts of dross. The myth of bygone golden ages is largely a product of having disposed of all the crap and remembered the good stuff. ‘2025 was the year of Adolescence,’ we will say in ten years time, ‘truly a Golden Age!’ …having conveniently forgotten the 31 unwatchable series that failed to tempt us past episode one.

In that respect things are, arguably, the same as they ever were, but… but… today’s broadcasting landscape is different. There’s so much of it. It ought to be an opportunity, a chance to broaden our horizons, to explore true diversity.

Choice? What choice?

I’m not talking about diversity of identity, not tickbox diversity, but a diversity of the imagination. That’s something different altogether. Counterintuitively, the more choice we have, the less choice there seems to be. And on reflection, I think that’s why I wearily abandoned so many shows last year.

So, for the year ahead? Will the ratios be the same, better, or will I simply not bother to watch – and abandon – so much stuff? Check in this time next year, and I’ll let you know.

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My Exploded Bladder: Is The Royal Exchange Taking the P***?

16 Friday Feb 2024

Posted by Martin Jameson in Cancer, Criticism, Incontinence, Manchester Home, Manchester Royal Exchange, Manchester Theatre, Sexual Politics, Theatre, Writing

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Incontinence, london, manchester, review, reviews, Theatre, theatre-review

A few weeks ago I booked to see a preview of Shed: Exploded View at Manchester’s renowned Royal Exchange Theatre.

I’d overcome my reservations about the somewhat off-putting promotional graphic, because Phoebe Eclair-Powell’s new play had won the prestigious 2019 Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting and as a fellow scribe, and sometime producer, it’s professionally important for me to keep up with new work and emerging talent.

The day before the show, however, I received an email telling me that the play was one hour and forty minutes long – without an interval. This immediately filled me with anxiety. I am a survivor of Prostate Cancer – the single most common cancer in men in the UK today – and, as is well known, one of the long term side effects of treatment can be certain issues with bladder control. I’m one of the lucky ones, and by no means incontinent, but after about 75 minutes or so I’m going to need the toilet. Of course you don’t have to have cancer to worry about your bladder. According to the House of Commons Library, about 14 million people in the UK are affected by some degree of incontinence, and I’m not sure I’d even fit into that demographic, so in reality the number of people who would view this running time with concern could well be much greater. Lots of men have benign but enlarged prostates. Needing frequent access to a loo is an extremely common issue for older woman – not to mention anyone in the third trimester of pregnancy. In fact, it’s perfectly normal for anyone to need the loo after an hour and a quarter or so, especially if you’ve had a drink before the show (which theatres encourage you to do).

But the running time of Shed: Exploded View is nearly half-an-hour past my Bladder Klaxon, so when I say the prospect of one hour and forty minutes without an interval made me anxious – it’s not some trivial thing. Perhaps I should rephrase – it filled me with dread.

The friend I was coming with had to bail at the last minute (for other, non bladder-related reasons) but I struggled to find someone to pick up the ticket, and the reason two of them gave was that they simply couldn’t risk sitting through a show that long. Others said they might make it through, but they knew that they would spend the last half-an-hour struggling to concentrate, and therefore were unlikely to enjoy the show.

I posted my dismay on Facebook and was astonished by the chorus of agreement that came back, from people of all ages, including a young friend in the 27th week of pregnancy who had passed up on an offer of a ticket to see the Exchange show precisely for this reason.

A highly respected writer and director (over ten years younger than me I should add) posted the following, confirming how easy it is to solve this problem:

‘It’s a huge issue. [My last play] was one act, with no interval initially, and I found that 72 minutes was the official cut off time – we were guaranteed walk outs to the loo (annoying, as the show was 76 minutes). Luckily I was allowed to rewrite it as a two act play with an interval and the theatre made money; the audiences were happy; and the flow of the play worked so much better. I don’t think I’ll be visiting Shed unless I hear great reviews and sit at the end of a row.’

It’s not just Manchester’s Royal Exchange. A friend described an embarrassing incident at The Cursed Child in London, which apparently has a long act. They managed to get out of a tightly packed row, but then they felt too self conscious to return to the auditorium, missing the rest of the performance. This person has also vowed to eschew such long productions unless they can sit at the end of a row as well. We’re going to need a lot of rows.

And spare a thought for the poor actors. Another friend of mine was in a play at the Bristol Old Vic a few years back. He was on stage for the best part of ninety minutes without a break, and it was a challenge for him too.

The fear of urinating uncontrollably is a visceral one – with the prospect of terrible humiliation.

Theatres like the Exchange are rightly going to a lot of trouble to improve diversity and accessibility. All theatres have signed or captioned performances for those with hearing difficulties. Most theatres run ‘relaxed performances’ for people who are neuro-divergent. Some have audio described performances for the visually impaired.

But at the same time, more and more shows run without intervals often far exceeding 90 minutes at a stretch. Personally I’d put a limit of 75 minutes on any single act. I would contend (and it would be interesting to do the research) that the number of people for whom this is an issue far exceeds the numbers of hearing impaired, visually impaired or neurologically divergent in any given audience – because of course bladder issues can and do affect anyone in any demographic. 

In terms of accessibility, if I am blind or deaf or autistic or have mobility issues, a theatre will care for me – but if I’m an older man who has had cancer, I simply don’t matter.

A few years ago I was excited to see Circle Mirror Transformation at Home – another of Manchester’s theatres – where I was told by the usher on the way in, that the show was 1 hour 45 Minutes, but if I left for the toilet midway I would not be readmitted. I questioned whether that was even legal. The reason the theatre gave me for this stipulation was as follows:

‘The request […] was made by the actors who found it disruptive when patrons walked down the aisle to look for their seats.’

Well… as long as they get their priorities right. Perhaps the audience should just stay at home so the actors can concentrate.

There was later a concession that I should have been allowed back in, but would have had to watch the rest of the show from a row of seats reserved for toilet sinners right at the back – basically a sort of pant-wetters naughty-step. The ticket had been a birthday treat so I was in the most expensive seats with my wife, which I would lose access to because the show was too long for a normal human bladder. Seriously? As a footnote to that story, by way of apology, the theatre offered me complimentary tickets for their upcoming production of… (wait for it) … Long Day’s Journey Into Night – a play that famously runs for well over three hours. I kid you not.

(Note to reader – I’m about half way, if you need to pop out for a second.)

This trend in theatre for long single acts is – and I choose this word carefully – discriminatory. It discriminates against me, and anybody from the millions-strong cohort of those with similar issues. I wonder if earnest theatre makers believe it to be a trivial side-issue, perhaps even amusing. Yes, we make jokes about it, but that’s precisely because it’s frightening and humiliating. I know that many people are simply too embarrassed even to talk about it, let alone complain. They’d rather stay at home.

I’ve heard creatives argue: ‘We can’t possibly have an interval! It’ll destroy the atmosphere! It’ll break the flow!’ Well there’s nothing more distracting than a dozen people going to the toilet, even if you’re not personally worrying about your own bladder. Oh yes, and please don’t say ‘FLOW’!!!

It is often argued that films are regularly two hours plus in length, so what’s the problem? Well in a cinema it’s easy to pop out to the loo. Cinemas are loud and spacious. You’re not going to disturb anyone. There’s even an app called RunPee for this very purpose.

At the Royal Exchange, the seats are so tightly packed you fear for a DVT at the best of times. Your cramped knees are pressing on your bladder which exacerbates things – and on Tuesday night, I was wedged into the middle of a row. It was impossible to ask everyone to stand up for me without causing a major disruption. In a modern multiplex you are in a much more relaxed position so I can last a lot longer. At least a dozen people went to the toilet during Shed: Exploded Bladder, but they were all seated at the ends of rows. There was quite a sprint for the gents after the curtain-call for the rest of us! But even if a theatre makes it possible for people to come and go, I’ve paid to see the whole play. Why should I have to miss any of it because the theatre hasn’t had the consideration for its audience to provide an interval or wee break?

There are other issues too. I read, almost weekly, about the plight of theatres in these cash strapped times. But it’s hard to be sympathetic when, by insisting on not having an interval, surely the theatre loses a major revenue stream. This is a self-inflicted financial wound. Is the director’s and writer’s desire to have their play performed uninterrupted more important than the financial well-being of the theatre?

There are artistic implications as well. If I’m writing for itv, there will be ad breaks and I have to make sure that the audience is going to stick around. Even on the BBC, the episodic structure means I have to make the end of each tightly time-limited hour of drama compelling, so the audience will come back for more. In theatre, the act structure has a similar function. Last year I went to see Standing at the Sky’s Edge at the Sheffield Crucible. This was a wonderful show, the first act ended with a bang, and going to the bar (and having a wee!!!!) half way through just added to the excitement. Everyone was buzzing. When the second half started, the audience had gained in confidence and the atmosphere had ramped up several degrees. It was an unforgettable experience. I think this is a really good discipline for writers. Shed: Exploded View has many merits, but if you’re busting for a wee, it is doomed to feel overlong and full of unnecessary repetition, even when that repetition is an important stylistic device. Without a time limit the writer loses their sense of discipline. 

Writers and directors (and I’ve done both jobs) need to get tattoos to remind themselves that the audience is more important than their play. Their play has to earn our attention, not keep us prisoner against our will. Going to the theatre is pricey, so people need a good reason to commit the time and considerable expense. Writers and directors need to put themselves in the shoes of their audiences, who will constantly be asking themselves whether trekking out to the theatre was worth the effort and, in this case, discomfort.

Of course, one of the big reasons we fork out the big bucks, is for the communal experience of simply being in a theatre. Standing at the Sky’s Edge was the model of this – where the interval allowed people to chat and share their feelings… it’s a social activity even when the subject matter is as serious as Shed. Without an interval, you’re scared to have a drink beforehand, you rush to the loo when it finishes, and then you bugger off to a pub where the drinks are cheaper. No wonder people would prefer to sit at home and watch Netflix.

Back to Tuesday night. I went to find the Front of House Manager. He was very, very sweet. I sensed from the weary look in his eye that he was only too aware of the problem. He advised me to put my feelings in writing and email the theatre management. Last night I got a reply, from someone called the ‘Audience Director’. Again, I kid you not. I clearly need to do what I’m told in future! She replied thus:

‘I would encourage anyone with non-visible access requirements to fill in the form on the access pages of our website, this will automatically tag your account with the relevant information and the Front of House team will be able to help. Alternatively, please do flag any concerns upon arrival to a member of our Visitor Experience staff, as we will do everything we can to accommodate any particular access requirements.’

‘Visitor Experience Staff’???

Hmmmm. Does that make me a ‘Creative Pen Operative’?

Anyway, I had talked to the nice Visitor Experience man and he told me to write the email, so I think we’re going round in circles here. Although I suppose he could have fitted me with a catheter.

But, good boy that I am – I was being ‘directed’ by the Audience Director after all – I had a look at the ‘Access Page’ where presumably I was to register the personal details of my Wracked Bladder, for future reference. The only vaguely relevant option was to ask for end-of-row seats, but as I’ve outlined above, that still discriminates against me because I miss part of the play and in an intimate theatre-in-the-round, like the Exchange, I’m still exposed as a theatrical bed-wetter.

The Royal Exchange is a brilliant space but the seating is very cramped.

They’ve got it the wrong way around. The Royal Exchange is turning it back on me when they are the ones who created the problem in the first place. But as my director friend said on Facebook, it’s a very easy problem to fix. Let’s have an absolutely rock solid unbreakable rule that no single act of anything will ever exceed 75 minutes again. Once they make that decision then they’ll be amazed how easy it is to accommodate it, and how much more enjoyable the theatre experience will be for audiences. The running time of Shed is stopping people from coming, who otherwise might have made the effort. Who on earth does that serve? Is it acceptable to exclude audiences like this when the theatre owes its existence to public subsidy?

I love the Royal Exchange but I need to be confident that I can visit the theatre in future for pleasure, not punishment.

Lastly, I am painfully aware that the writer, Phoebe Eclair-Powell could well be reading my urinary burblings, and I want to emphasise that I bear no animus to her or her play. I’m a writer myself, and as a producer and director I’ve worked with new talent throughout my four decades in the industry. It’s vitally important for the future of British Theatre that people support her work and that of other young writers. I want her to have packed houses. I want the Royal Exchange to keep producing new drama. I also appreciate the vulnerability of writers arriving on the country’s most prestigious stages for the first time. So if Phoebe is reading this, then I sincerely and profoundly hope she is not offended. Although she would rightly be pissed off (so to speak) that I haven’t talked about the content of her play at all.

But that’s kind of the point. I can’t think about it, if I need the loo.

Ultimately, though, this isn’t Ms. Eclair-Powell’s responsibility. I would argue that it is the responsibility of the producing theatre to guide and protect newer talent – who are rightly heady with excitement about their creations – as they move forward in their careers.

I will say this, however. Shed: Exploded View is about domestic abuse – an incredibly important topic – but as any writer who has doubtless researched the subject in great detail will be aware, restricting people’s access to the toilet is, in itself, also a form of coercive control.

It’s such an easy problem to fix.

Can I go to the loo, now, please?

It’s a question that has troubled theatre for centuries

Shed: Exploded View runs at the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester until Saturday 2nd March 2024

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