The Net (British TV series)
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The Net | |
---|---|
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
Original release | |
Release | 1994 1998 | –
The Net is a TV series made by Illuminations for the BBC and shown from 1994 to 1998. It ran for four series, beginning with a premiere episode broadcast on BBC2 on 13 April 1994, produced by Stephen Arkell, edited by John Wyver, and with reportage by Rajan Datar and Susan Rae, a discussion of audio design for games by Thomas Dolby, and a 5-minute segment with IT expert Davey Winder explaining how to dial into Internet services of the time like Compuserve and CIX.[1][2]
The focus of the programme was primarily the Internet explosion of the time, though it also dealt with other emerging technologies and series one had a computer games review section. The series was responsible for one of the BBC's earliest efforts at establishing an online presence, when the BBC Networking Club launched a website to coincide with the first episode and a BBS named "Auntie" later in 1994.[3]
Following viewer complaints, the games review was dropped for series two – which began on 15 May 1995 – and replaced with a Hotlist segment. It was felt that games reviews were already well catered for by other programmes, such as Channel 4's GamesMaster and that they did not really fit into The Net.
References
[edit]- ^ "The Net: BBC Two England, 13 April 1994", BBC Genome (Retrieved 27 May 2017).
- ^ Andy Baio, "BBC2's The Net, first episode from April 1994", Waxy.org, 31 March 2008.
- ^ John Browning, "Prime Time Online", Wired, 1 November 1994.