Posts Tagged ‘bbc’

STS-1

Posted 22 Jun 2011 — by admin
Category space, Uncategorized

For your listening pleasure, here is a recording straight off the radio, of the launch of the very first Space Shuttle that was numbered STS-1. NASA are just about to launch the final Shuttle in to orbit, numbered STS-135, on July 8th, so I thought this would be a good way to remember how far they’ve come since 1981.

 

Launch of STS-1 by mistersnappy

Mercury Freedom 7

Posted 28 Apr 2011 — by admin
Category space

A long time ago there was a cupboard in a curious little boy’s bedroom. It was a cupboard that contained technology from a bygone era and media to match.
I remember when my Dad let me loose on his reel to reel tape player, about the same time as I got my first tape recorder. Mine was sleek and black with a single speaker and a big red record button. I was so proud. My Dad’s was huge and grey and had the coolest neon light to signify it was recording. It lived in the cupboard with all of its’ tapes but there was one tape that was special. A 3.5 inch reel in a red case marked ‘EMITAPE’. It was set apart from the rest because it was the only reel that was in it’s own special plastic case. A perfect time capsule from the 5th May 1961. The day when Alan B Shepard became the first American in space in the Mercury Freedom 7 rocket.
In the days before the Space Shuttle I would listen to this tape and be completely consumed by the excited voices. They were all pioneers, not only Shepard but the guys from NASA and the broadcasters themselves. They had only just covered Gagarin’s orbit and within a matter of weeks the West followed suit.
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Shepard’s flight I have managed to digitise this tape, with the help of an old colleague (you know who you are) and am posting it here for your listening pleasure. It’s 34:27 of pure adrenaline. Enjoy.

mercuryfreedom7 by mistersnappy

I’m Proud of the BBC

Posted 18 Oct 2010 — by admin
Category bbc, Uncategorized

Get this song to number one!!

Next…

Posted 24 Aug 2010 — by admin
Category employment opportunities

Just over a week ago I said goodbye to my former employers, those seriously playful folk (no not the Jameson ones!), with a tear in my eye. Could have been raining, or maybe it was the whiskey chasers, who knows. Either way I am now what some would politely describe as ‘inbetween jobs’.

So what to do next? Well, I’ve been in this old new media lark since it was really new so I know quite a lot of stuff about quite a lot of stuff and hopefully that is where my next challenge will take me. I’ve checked the stats for this blog and there is a slim possibility that my reader might work for a cool company who is looking for someone a little like me. A senior producer who’s been hiding in HoxDitch for the last two years making nice things for cool people. My special power is understanding BBC speek, kinda like Harry Potter and parseltongue but with less hair and no lightning shaped scar, and I love getting my hands dirty on great projects.

So for the benefit of the search engines, I’d like to say…

producer, senior producer, BBC, experience, web, internet, project management, products, development, iphone, flash, creative, jobs, challenge, career.

Direct your kind offers to simon[at]mistersnappy[dot]co[dot]uk – do a switcheroo with the bracketed stuff and we’ll be in touch as quick as a flash.

That is all.

I am not a Spook

Posted 10 Dec 2008 — by admin
Category Uncategorized

I am not a Spook, originally uploaded by mistersnappy.

OK, so I met Harry Pearce the once in 2005 but I don’t know where he is now.

Harry Pearce, last seen in the boot of a car.
www.bbc.co.uk/spooks

Do these people ever learn.

Posted 30 Oct 2008 — by admin
Category actual, bbc

Another talented and experienced staffer is sacrificed at the altar of Thompson and the BBC. Will these people ever learn. Instead of spending all your time apologising whenever something goes wrong, get some balls and stand up for and stand by your staff.

Listen to Thompson squirm and tell me why it’s not time for him to go.

edit: btw… no one died!

The grass is greener

Posted 13 Aug 2008 — by admin
Category work

So now I’m at my new job. I’ve moved from West London to East London, from a big corporation to a small collective. The trousers are baggier and the t-shirts are more expressive. I’m now a Senior Producer at milo creative who are based in Hoxton E2.

I’m in week two and here is what I’ve learned.

  • Changing jobs was the right thing to do
  • The work is more challenging, more creative and most of all more fun
  • There is life outside the WC canteen and you don’t have to have fish and chips every Friday
  • You can keep in touch with the cool people from your old job even though you all work in different places
  • I can’t go on having vegetable curry from the Japanese Canteen because I’ll kill my diet and bust my trousers
  • Macs are good

The things that have irritated me so far

  • My previous employer thinks I still work for them
  • Apparently I’m going to get paid by them on Friday (good times), but I’m going to have to give the money back next month (bad times).
  • My journey to work doesn’t take as long as I thought it would but come term time the roads are going to be clogged
  • Trains are horrid

So far so good. There are lots of people nearby to lunch with and hopefully the old crew will come up occasionally for lunch or a beer.

Morning Reviews and iPlayer

Posted 24 Feb 2008 — by admin
Category bbc, iplayer, reviews, Uncategorized

While sitting on the Tube desperately trying to avoid falling into the jaws of sleep after another wakeful night thanks to one mini me or the other, I forget which, I was struck by a realisation.

It always seemed peculiar to me to have reviews of last nights TV in the morning free sheet to read on the way into work on the tube. Are the editorial staff of Metro trying to taunt me by telling me how good last nights TV was? Having said that, sometimes they make me feel a little better by telling me how shite it was making me somewhat happier that I didn’t waste 60 minutes of my life watching the live episode of ‘Two pints of larger…’, although that might have been quite good, I forget!

So what has changed? Well the advent of iPlayer, 4OD et all. Now having reviews in the morning papers suddenly makes sense. It’s like all this time they were pointlessly telling me about TV that was so good, I’m never likely to ever see it again once I’d missed in the night before, but now I can. Never mind the big step forward in technology,  now I can read the review for something I’ve missed and log on to bbc.co.uk/iplayer or channel4.com/4od and get instant access to the show I missed. And enjoy it or not, I can still book my place at the watercooler, even if it is a day or two late!

The BBC Diary – An Obituary

Posted 24 Nov 2007 — by admin
Category bbc, calendar, demise, diary

Following the sad departure of BBC Technology, BBC Broadcast and the 10 year service award, we received news recently of the passing of the BBC diary.

As a child I recall the delivery of the BBC diary as an annual event in our house. My Father would bring home his new navy blue diary, smartly embossed with the BBC lozenges, along with an extra one for my Mother (you could get one for your wife/partner in those days). They diligently transfered birthdays and phone numbers from their current diaries to the next years and then used them throughout the year to record arrangements, work schedules and events of import.

The BBC diary is unique in that it contained a variety of BBC specific information, only of use to those lucky enough to work here. Addresses and phone numbers (and laterly email addresses) of all BBC premises across the UK were accompanied by first aid and medical emergency information, the date of the annual Corporation Day and the brithdays of all past DGs. The BBC diary knew how to keep up with the times.

The BBC Diary grew up an only child but was drawn into a larger family in later life. Joined by it’s slim and pocket varieties the BBC diary evolved into a wall calendar and even created extra value through the 15 month calendar complete with its system of BBC weeks. During the late 80′s and early 90′s the BBC diary was joined by its distant cousin the Filofax diary, but with the decline of the Yuppie and the advent of the New Labour government this dairy was lost at a young age. The grand daddy of them all was the A4 day per page diary that sat majestically on many a desk, guiding its proud owner through their daily tasks.

Over the years the BBC diary existed in a range of colours. Its early years were marked by a classic navy blue but as it grew older it grew bolder in its annual outfit. Colours of note include an icky green, a blood curdling red and a peculiar brown which, it was claimed, had no pantone reference at all.

At this sad time we send our best wishes for the wellbeing of the BBC Club, BBC Resources and the holy grave of Petra, the original fake Blue Peter dog.

The BBC diary leaves behind the BBC calendar.

Quote about the BBC Diary:

“I have had a few big fat desk diaries over the years, usually because some firm has given me a big fat one for free. For three years I had a BBC diary. Huge thing. What a mistake. Now, on the shelf where I keep my 40 years of life lined up, the BBC diaries stick out, ruining the symmetry.”

Comment: All you need is life – and a decent diary
Independent, The (London),  Dec 13, 1999  by Hunter Davies  http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_19991213/ai_n14264691

 

 

 

Definition

Posted 18 Nov 2007 — by admin
Category "genius of photography", definition, meaning, photography, quote, words

“Photographers continue to go out into the world in order to photograph life today. Their motives and their methods vary: Colour or Black or White, lightweight 35mm versus heavyweight view camera, film versus digital. But what they have in common is a watchful attentiveness to the world and its ways. They see the things we miss or don’t think about and then report back so that we have a chance to think again.”

The Genius of Photography, 4/6, BBC Four, Friday 16th November 2007