logo
Farewell pooping elephants! Goodbye Shep on the spoons! It's the sad end of an era for Blue Peter

Farewell pooping elephants! Goodbye Shep on the spoons! It's the sad end of an era for Blue Peter

The Guardian24-03-2025

Life has changed beyond all recognition over the last 67 years. The way we live, the way we communicate, the things we eat; if you were to grab someone from 1958 and bring them forward in time to 2025, the sheer scale of change would blow their minds. Except, perhaps, for one thing. Everything else might be unrecognisable, but Blue Peter has always been broadcast live. Until now.
It has been reported that the last live episode of Blue Peter has aired, ending a tradition that has endured for nearly seven decades. It isn't the end of Blue Peter, which will continue, albeit in a prerecorded format, but it is the end of an era. The show may be an institution, but even the longest-running children's programme in the world isn't immune to change.
The BBC has cited changing viewing habits as the reason for the switch, but that feels like code for something sadder. Blue Peter used to be watched by millions of children, all excited and eager to learn. But there are so many other choices today – not just on streaming platforms, but the monolith that is YouTube – and the staid, earnest, eat-your-vegetables approach taken by Blue Peter no longer holds the same appeal. In other words, it isn't financially sustainable to put on a weekly live show for a declining audience that is more likely to watch it on iPlayer anyway.
The BBC says that viewers are unlikely to notice much difference, because the show has been mixing live and prerecorded segments for decades, but plenty of people have pointed out that the show might lose some of the magic you only get with live TV. What they mean, I suspect, is that elephants won't poop all over the floor any more.
This, to some, is the quintessential Blue Peter moment; the episode in 1969 when a baby elephant called Lulu started acting up in the studio. After dragging John Noakes and Peter Purves around the floor, Lulu narrowly missed Valerie Singleton's shoes with a stream of urine, crapped everywhere, then caused her keeper to slip on it and fall over.
There have been other live catastrophes. In 1971, someone had the smart idea of having a campfire singalong, despite the show being filmed indoors. Dozens of Guides and Brownies looked increasingly worried as the flames grew higher and the studio filled with thick black smoke before someone rushed in with a fire extinguisher. A year later, Roy Castle's attempt to play the spoons was frustrated and derailed by Shep the dog leaping up at him and trying to join in on the drums. Also, let's not forget the show's 1966 attempt at a Dalek cake, the result resembling a sort of floppy sponge dildo. All these moments will be lost in time, like tears in the rain.
Except they won't. One pile of elephant poo every 67 years hardly justifies keeping Blue Peter live and, besides, most of its indelible moments were prerecorded anyway. When John Noakes climbed Nelson's Column in 1977 – without a harness, on some rickety tied-together ladders, on a windy day while wearing flares – it had been recorded. It's also worth pointing out that prerecorded segments don't have to be sanitised. In a filmed piece in 2008, presenter Andy Akinwolere was tasked with putting the star on top of the Trafalgar Square Christmas tree. He dropped the star, which fell 70ft to the ground. Blue Peter still kept it in the final broadcast.
That is extremely heartening. Blue Peter may not be live any more, but it is entirely in keeping with the spirit of the show to leave all the accidents in anyway. If a presenter is recording an episode and there's a power cut or a fire, or a zookeeper starts skidding around in piles of animal excrement, Blue Peter is smart enough to keep all that stuff in. After all, nothing gets more eyeballs than a cock-up gone viral. This might be the end of an era, but Blue Peter is going nowhere just yet.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dave Myers' widow warned star not to fall in love despite his 'generous heart'
Dave Myers' widow warned star not to fall in love despite his 'generous heart'

Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Dave Myers' widow warned star not to fall in love despite his 'generous heart'

Dave Myers, who with Si King was part of the Hairy Bikers, married Liliana Orzac in 2011 after the pair met in Romania when he was filming the famous series for the BBC Hairy Biker Dave Myers had "such a generous heart" and "so much love to give," his grieving widow has said. Liliana admitted she was "helpless" to fall in love with the TV chef after she met him when he was filming The Hairy Bikers ' Cookbook in Romania. However, she said she fought to "warned him (Dave) not to fall in love" with her because she felt they "were from different worlds". ‌ She was a single mum with two children, working long hours at a modest hotel in Maramures, Romania while Dave, then 47, was a popular face on TV, whose programme was about to attract millions of viewers. Yet, the chemistry was there and, within two years, Liliana moved to the UK to live with Dave. ‌ "I understood that he was a truly special person, full of warmth, wisdom and spark. I knew we were developing strong feelings for each other, but I warned him not to fall in love with me. There were too many obstacles stacked against us. We were from different worlds and I was a single mother with two children to think of: my son Sergiu, 16, and my daughter Iza, ten," Liliana said. Yet, the couple tied the knot in 2011 in Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria, in front of 150 guests. Marriage bliss was rocked, though, in 2022 when Dave was diagnosed with cancer. The popular TV presenter died in February 2024 with Si by his side. Liliana added: "We'd hold hands and cry, sometimes unable to move or talk, just despairing at the unfairness of it all. I knew so well the depth of Dave's pain: the desperation, the helplessness, the anger. "Desperation for the loss of the peace and safety we'd both worked so hard for and would never get back. Helplessness in the face of this invisible enemy we'd been told was going to conquer us, no matter what we did or tried. ‌ "Anger at the injustice of having his life cut short and for being dragged through all this pain, the hospital appointments and the invasive treatments, knowing there was no way out." The mum has a new book out, called Adapted from Dave And Me, in which the widow shares her journey from meeting Dave to his tragic demise. In it, she recalls how Dave fancied her in Romania - but she didn't realise. In her interview with the Daily Mail, Liliana said: "I kept my guard up and treated what we had as a friendship, but Dave exuded so much charm and happiness that I gradually realised how much had been lacking in my life. I'd never known anyone with so much vivacity, so much love to give and such a generous heart. "It was impossible not to like Dave Myers. And, so it turned out for me, impossible not to fall in love with him, either. Despite my warnings, both of us were helpless to it. So in 2007, I moved to the UK with my daughter. My son stayed behind to finish his exams and came a year later."

Idris Elba unveils Mobo paving stone at college where he ‘got to dream bigger'
Idris Elba unveils Mobo paving stone at college where he ‘got to dream bigger'

Leader Live

time2 hours ago

  • Leader Live

Idris Elba unveils Mobo paving stone at college where he ‘got to dream bigger'

On Friday, Elba, 52, who hails from Hackney, and is most known for his acting roles in BBC drama Luther and US crime series The Wire, returned to Barking and Dagenham College, which he attended as a young person. His stone forms part of the Paving The Way award, issued by the Mobo organisation, which supports talent in music, film and TV and holds an annual awards ceremony celebrating excellence in black music and culture. The award celebrates cultural pioneers who have made a lasting impact in the arts, with Olympian Dame Jessica Ennis-Hill and comedian Sir Lenny Henry among the recipients. The award winners are asked to choose a location for the stone that holds a deep personal meaning, with Elba choosing the college where he studied performing arts. The event, which included a Q&A with the students, took place inside the college's Idris Elba Studio — a professional film and TV facility named in his honour. Asked by a student if he had ever imagined how successful he would become, Elba said: 'I mean, yes, I think to be here in the first place, you're already imagining what the future can be. 'And so I was always thinking about what success might look like. 'I didn't know how to get there, but I could see it. I could see it on the silver screen. I could see it in my idols, Eddie Murphy, I saw it everywhere. 'But the truth is, what kept me grounded, what kept me focused (as a student) is being in a facility where I get to fall down, get up, fall down, as many times as I want, and I literally found this place, we all did, as a haven, a safe space to actually, not only imagine yourself being a movie star, but try it and fail, and try it, and fail. 'The thing about dreaming is that it happens on a 24-hour cycle. 'So every day I got to come back here, I got to dream bigger. I got to, definitely learn and sharpen how I was going to get there, and that's really important.' Elba unveiled the stone alongside Mobo Awards founder and chief executive Kanya King. It reads: 'Mobo. Paving the way for the next generation. Idris Elba. 'Don't get labelled, labels are for cans'.' Alongside his acting career the film and TV star performs as a DJ and has campaigned against knife crime.

Idris Elba unveils Mobo paving stone at college where he ‘got to dream bigger'
Idris Elba unveils Mobo paving stone at college where he ‘got to dream bigger'

South Wales Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Idris Elba unveils Mobo paving stone at college where he ‘got to dream bigger'

On Friday, Elba, 52, who hails from Hackney, and is most known for his acting roles in BBC drama Luther and US crime series The Wire, returned to Barking and Dagenham College, which he attended as a young person. His stone forms part of the Paving The Way award, issued by the Mobo organisation, which supports talent in music, film and TV and holds an annual awards ceremony celebrating excellence in black music and culture. The award celebrates cultural pioneers who have made a lasting impact in the arts, with Olympian Dame Jessica Ennis-Hill and comedian Sir Lenny Henry among the recipients. The award winners are asked to choose a location for the stone that holds a deep personal meaning, with Elba choosing the college where he studied performing arts. The event, which included a Q&A with the students, took place inside the college's Idris Elba Studio — a professional film and TV facility named in his honour. Asked by a student if he had ever imagined how successful he would become, Elba said: 'I mean, yes, I think to be here in the first place, you're already imagining what the future can be. 'And so I was always thinking about what success might look like. 'I didn't know how to get there, but I could see it. I could see it on the silver screen. I could see it in my idols, Eddie Murphy, I saw it everywhere. 'But the truth is, what kept me grounded, what kept me focused (as a student) is being in a facility where I get to fall down, get up, fall down, as many times as I want, and I literally found this place, we all did, as a haven, a safe space to actually, not only imagine yourself being a movie star, but try it and fail, and try it, and fail. 'The thing about dreaming is that it happens on a 24-hour cycle. 'So every day I got to come back here, I got to dream bigger. I got to, definitely learn and sharpen how I was going to get there, and that's really important.' Elba unveiled the stone alongside Mobo Awards founder and chief executive Kanya King. It reads: 'Mobo. Paving the way for the next generation. Idris Elba. 'Don't get labelled, labels are for cans'.' Alongside his acting career the film and TV star performs as a DJ and has campaigned against knife crime.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store