Log in

View Full Version : Top of the Pops to return –as public service TV


Red Moon
14-11-2008, 10:03 PM
Top of the Pops to return –as public service TVIt started with the Rolling Stones, ended with Shakira – and music fans thought that it would never return in the era of YouTube and the MP3 player.

But after heavy lobbying from artists, managers and record companies, Top of the Pops is expected to return to BBC television in the next year amid claims that there is not enough popular music on television.

Music executives are increasingly confident that the BBC is ready to bring back a show that was last broadcast on BBC Two in July 2006, although to win back the viewers it will need to change, with songs being featured before they are released.

Expect a return of miming – which was banned in the chart show’s latter years, upsetting some pop acts – and an end to the “three-minute rule”, which forced rock bands to play edited versions of their hits.

“There is only one chance for a comeback, and the programme will fail again if it returns exactly as before,” one music industry insider said. “It needs to be more populist and have exclusive content, new songs, that can be put up on YouTube and shared around the internet.”

Top of the Pops was axed after its ratings – which had been 15 million in its 1970s heyday – fell to close to a million.

The revival of the show has been discussed ever since.

Mark Cooper, head of music entertainment for BBC TV, “would personally love to have a weekly music show on the BBC,” he said. “It’s a Sleeping Beauty,” he added. “One day it will come back, in the way that Top Gear and Doctor Who came back.”

In the old days the show was judged a success in ratings terms – but the audience figures today would be unlikely to persuade BBC commissioners to bring it back. Mr Cooper said: “It’s probably no longer the case that Top of the Popscan be revived on the basis of it being an entertainment programme – instead it may have to be judged as a public service.”

A Christmas special remains under consideration – after Simon Cowell ruffled BBC feathers with an offer to take control of the rights to transmit the show for a one-off on ITV. The BBC is not prepared to give up its licence to use the official charts, which includes the right to show a television programme, even though Top of the Pops is not on air.

Lemar, the R&B star, broached the matter with the Prime Minister and the Culture Secretary at a Downing Street breakfast this month. Lemar told The Times: “I spoke to Andy Burnham and I said, ‘We should bring back Top of the Pops’. He replied that he thinks the same. Any aspiring artist wants to be on Top of the Pops.”

Mr Burnham declined to comment yesterday, but last month, while attending a music industry conference, the Culture Secretary said that broad-casters must “promote and champion new music in this country rather than having just safe options on prime-time TV. We should bring back programming that puts before the public a mix of stuff that is new and that mums can talk with kids about – that’s what Top of the Pops did in those days.”

Last month Noel Gallagher, of Oasis, advocated a revival of the chart programme, a show on which he once switched roles with his brother Liam – miming the singer’s words to Roll With It while Liam pretended to play guitar. He argued that the loss of the programme was contributing to social breakdown, saying: “Because people don’t have that shared experience of pop music, and it being their own. So people start getting into weird s***, like knifing each other.”

The loss from the schedules of Jonathan Ross, who is under suspension, has also acted as a reminder of how few slots there are for live pop performances on peak-time, main-stream television. Aside from Ross’s talk show, the only remaining slots are on Strictly Come Dancing, on which Beyoncé performed last week, and The X Factor.

The inclusion of digital downloads has also helped to give the charts more of what the music industry describes as “a narrative”. Three years ago, when only physical sales were counted, singles typically entered at their peak level before tumbling down the charts a week later.

That made it particularly difficult for a show that at its peak stuck to the rule that it would never play a song that was dropping down the hit parade. However, with downloads included, songs are beginning to climb the charts again.
Source: The Times (http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article5158587.ece)

Callum
14-11-2008, 10:04 PM
OMG YES!!!!!!!!!!! :cheer2:

[b]I know your excited but less of the cap lock posting - Red

MarkWaldorf
14-11-2008, 10:06 PM
Is this true?

Red Moon
14-11-2008, 10:09 PM
Originally posted by Markus
Is this true?

I don't know, it only just appeared as a story, but it is the Times which is normally a paper to trust.

Locke.
14-11-2008, 10:10 PM
I'd rather have a saturday morning music show back on, like CD:UK or TOTP Saturday; still good to see it back though.

Angel.D
14-11-2008, 10:21 PM
Yes i hope so i love top of the pops. my partner was only saying a month a go it should be back :thumbs2:

Tom
14-11-2008, 10:22 PM
Originally posted by David
I'd rather have a saturday morning music show back on, like CD:UK or TOTP Saturday; still good to see it back though.

Sound, BBC2, 12pm

I do miss CDUK though. Was never really a fan of TOTP Saturday. I liked it when it was part of The Saturday Show but not when it was its own programme. Didn't mind it when it turned into Reloaded though

M X
14-11-2008, 10:29 PM
Oooo..soo excited! :hugesmile:XD

xDramatick
15-11-2008, 07:58 AM
I want it to happen, but I want them to sing live.
EVERYONE.
I don't enjoy watching people mime =|

It made me LOL what Oasis&Nirvana did regarding to miming on TOTP.

Red Moon
16-11-2008, 08:54 AM
TOTP 2009Top Of The Pops will return to TV next year.

Beeb bosses are developing a new format for the weekly chart show after intense lobbying from Oasis star Noel Gallagher, X Factor judge Simon Cowell and soul singer Lemar.

Mark Cooper, BBC TV's head of music entertainment, said: "It's a sleeping beauty. One day it will come back, in the way that Top Gear and Dr Who came back." First broacast on January 1, 1964, it was axed in 2006 after audiences fell from 15million to one million.

Cowell forced the BBC's hand by offering to buy the rights when it was announced there will no TOTP Christmas special this year. He said: "If the BBC don't want it, I'll take it."

Gallagher even blamed knife crime on the show's demise.

An industry expert said: "Digital downloading has reinvigorated the charts. There's a huge appetite to see acts performing singles."

PICK OF THE POPS

1971 The Faces' Rod Stewart and Ronnie Wood have a footie kick-about as they sing Maggie May.

1978 Bob Geldof rips up poster of Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta, who he knocked off No1.

1982 Dexy's Midnight Runners sing a tribute to soul legend Jackie Wilson in front of a giant picture of darts ace Jocky Wilson.

1991 Nirvana's Kurt Cobain 'eats' the mike in protest at having to mime Smells Like Teen Spirit.
Source: Sunday Mirror (http://www.mirror.co.uk/sunday-mirror/2008/11/16/totp-2009-115875-20898918/)

Barbie
16-11-2008, 09:41 AM
They need to revamp it.. for me everytime i saw it although it was new music the show felt dated