logo
Attenborough gives 'family feels' in new show Parenthood

Attenborough gives 'family feels' in new show Parenthood

BBC News2 days ago
Sir David Attenborough's latest BBC One series documents how parents from across the animal kingdom sacrifice everything in order to raise their young.And in the case of the African social spiders, in Namibia, it is quite literally the final sacrifice.As we discover in Parenthood, the mother spider gives her life for her spiderlings, who, when the time is right, slowly but surely creep up on her and their other elderly relatives en masse and eat them alive... making room for the new generation.Known as matriphagy, for director Jeff Wilson this moment provided the scene for "the perfect natural history sequence", as well as "the best narration I've ever heard him [Sir David] do.""David knows exactly what is needed to tell the story," says Wilson."It's a story about the ultimate commitment of a parent. How far do you take your parenting commitment?"I'm not asking any human parents to go that far," he clarifies. "But we all know that if you turn up at the school gates without a snack that you're verging on being eaten by your child anyway!"So there's a damn good lesson in that."
'Amazed with the wonder'
Capturing such a scene in a "non-intrusive way" requires a huge collaborative effort from a top team of scientists and cinematographers, he adds."The spiderlings are about the size of a grain of sugar, and the adults are about the size of your thumbnail. So it's a very small world that you're in."Wilson warns viewers will be left "shivering with disgust" while also "amazed with the wonder of it all".
Parenthood - not to be confused with the 1989 Steven Martin family comedy film - mines the rich well of universal truisms around parenting, he notes, something that lends itself nicely to storytelling.Wilson realised the unique angle of exploring parenting in the wild had potential, after previously working with Sir David on another BBC and Silverback Films collaboration called The Mating Game.The filmmaker was "inspired" by observing "how adaptable other parents" in the wild are, and how alive they are to changes in the natural world.So he went looking - in jungles, grasslands and oceans - across six continents for where more "lessons could be learned" about parental change, dedication and ingenuity."The world is changing for everybody really quickly," he stresses, with a nod to the serious threats caused by climate change. "We wanted to tap into that idea that there is an uncertain future for both animals and humans."How do we adapt to a world that is changing around us? It's so relevant to all of us."He continues: "As a parent myself I constantly worry, what is the world that my children are going to grow up in?"
Aside from the heroically maternal spiders, other potential breakout viral stars of this series include:Orangutans who spend up to a decade teaching and showing their young various behaviours and foodsBoxer crabs which clone an anemone underwater to protect their young, creating weapons so they can protect themselves from predatorsElephant mothers navigating unpredictable waterways with their babies, and the challenges they face to keep their family alive during droughts, deluges and flash floodsAn old fish which climbs waterfalls to build nests for its young, while being overtaken by younger, fitter malesA poison dart frog father who carries his tadpoles on his back – one-by-one - up huge trees, from pools on the rainforest lawns to much safer and better ones on the treetops. "It's like watching [US rock climber] Alex Honnold free solo," jokes Wilson
As hi-tech, close-up images draw us into their worlds, their stories are also driven along in dramatic, heart-rending fashion by a bittersweet musical score courtesy of British composer Tom Howe (who also worked on Mulan and Ted Lasso).The series also includes a theme song by Sam Ryder, recorded at Abbey Road, which Wilson hopes will become a hit.All of which brings us back to the show's famous narrator, Sir David, who - at 99 years old - is still providing "special" and "unique" TV moments, his director tell us.And always in no more than two takes."There can be very few people on Earth who have the ability to communicate to an audience from two [years old] to 102, and feel like they're communicating it at their level," says Wilson, who is also series producer."And that's not [just] Sir David as we see him on screen, that's Sir David in real life."He continues: "When you're working with a partner who understands the natural world as well, if not better than you do, that's always exciting."
'Relatable parental dilemmas'
Wilson is proud to have been involved in creating what he calls a "generational gift" that parents like him can watch and learn from, alongside their own children."I think it's got all the feels; it's got great behaviour, it's got great emotion, it's got great humour, it's got relatable parental dilemmas."And it has a nod and a wink towards 'helicopter parenting' and 'snowplow parenting' - all those different terms that we bandy about as to what type of parent you are."He's equally pleased with having delicately explored "perhaps the most sensitive relationship that is present in the natural world" - that between a parent and their young.To capture that, he explains, relies on "absolutely top class field work", patiently watching and getting shots in "an observational, non-invasive way.""You have that extra challenge in parenting," he says. "It's less hard if you're covering a hunt, as more often than not, the animals couldn't care less whether you're there because they're in the zone."But in parenting behaviours, you're dealing with something that's very sensitive, and if you get it wrong, you're stepping over a line that you shouldn't."So we're very proud of what we've put on screen in that way."During one such scene, Sir David's famous voice is heard declaring: "Success for all parents has perhaps the greatest of consequences… It ensures the future of life on our planet."In other words: respect your elders.Parenthood, which has five episodes, begins at 19:20 BST on Sunday 3 August on BBC One and iPlayer.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tributes paid to 'legend' James Whale after death aged 74
Tributes paid to 'legend' James Whale after death aged 74

Leader Live

time14 minutes ago

  • Leader Live

Tributes paid to 'legend' James Whale after death aged 74

Whale had fought a long battle with kidney cancer, having been first diagnosed in 2000, with doctors predicting he had three months to live. However, he had surgery to remove one of his kidneys and six years later, he launched the James Whale Fund for Kidney Cancer to fund research and raise awareness of the disease. His cancer returned in 2020, and it was revealed that it had also spread to his spine, brain and lungs. We are sad to announce that James Whale MBE died earlier today aged 74, following a lengthy battle with cancer. As a broadcasting legend for over 50-years, James will be missed by so many at TALK and the wider News UK family. The broadcaster's final column was published just hours before he passed away, in which he revealed he's "happy to go now and feels at peace" after moving into a hospice. He is survived by his wife Nadine and his two sons James and Peter. Whale first came to prominence in the 1980s as the host of The James Whale Radio Show on Radio Aire in Leeds. From 1995 to 2008, he hosted a night-time radio show on talkSPORT (Talk Radio 1995–2000), followed by stints on LBC 97.3 and various BBC radio stations. He covered shows on talkRADIO from October 2016, including James Whale Unleashed. Very sad to learn of the passing of broadcasting legend @THEJamesWhale after his long battle with cancer. He will be greatly missed. Honoured to record his final interview just weeks ago. Quite a few people within the media industry paid tribute to Whale following the news of his death. MP and Reform UK leader Nigel Farage was among those who had some warm words to share about the presenter. He posted on X (formerly known as Twitter): "James Whale was a broadcasting pioneer, legend and the king of late night talk radio. But most importantly, he was a friend who will be missed." James Whale was a broadcasting pioneer, legend and the king of late night talk radio. But most importantly, he was a friend who will be missed. Programme editor at Talk TV, Christian Mitchell, said: "Very said to learn of the passing of broadcasting legend @THEJamesWhale after his long battle with cancer. He will be greatly missed. "Honoured to record his final interview just weeks ago." Fellow Talk TV presenter Julia Hartley-Brewer wrote: "So sad that my amazing, wonderful @TalkTV colleague James Whale has died. Recommended reading: Ex-Celebrity Big Brother 'legend' James Whale dies aged 74 Zoe Ball set for new TV role just weeks after returning to BBC Radio 2 BBC presenter and comedian Romesh Ranganathan 'taking a step back' from career "He was a legend both on air and off air. It was a pleasure and an honour to know him. Sending Nadine and his family all my love xxxx". Journalist and broadcaster Dawn Neesom shared: "So sad to hear that James has gone. God bless you Whaley, at peace & free of pain. Thoughts with the amazing @nadine_lamont & James family." Media commentator and columnist Charlie Mullens posted: "This morning I heard the sad news of the passing of the broadcasting legend and my dear friend - the one and only James Whale MBE James mate rest in peace now."

From Emily in Friends to Che Diaz: the TV characters so bad that they ruined shows
From Emily in Friends to Che Diaz: the TV characters so bad that they ruined shows

The Guardian

time43 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

From Emily in Friends to Che Diaz: the TV characters so bad that they ruined shows

Sometimes, all it takes to change your relationship to a TV show is one character. Viewers are all enjoying the One Day-meets-High Fidelity vibes of BBC Two's nostalgic romance Mix Tape. However, none of them can stand the cassette-crossed lovers' spouses. Yes, for every role that becomes a firm viewer favourite, another is reviled by the show's fanbase. Lena Dunham's latest creation, Too Much, seems to be entirely populated by unappealing characters. Meanwhile, Peppa Pig devotees are in a porcine pickle over the imminent onscreen arrival of a new little sister, baby piglet Evie. Cartoon swine devotees fear this gimmicky addition will upset the delicate balance of the four-way family unit that has been beloved by preschoolers for 21 years. If the oinking blockbuster ain't broke, why fix it? The current hate figures won't be the last to spoil a successful programme. We name and shame the unlucky 13 characters who ruined TV shows … Vanity Fair dubbed the character 'divisive'. The New York Times called them 'polarising'. Just two of the euphemisms for being downright awful. As Miranda's love interest in the Sex and the City sequel, so-called comedian Che was much maligned as an unsubtle caricature of a non-binary person. The character simply made no sense, let alone as a match for the hitherto heterosexual Miranda. They spoke as if they had swallowed a gender studies textbook. They laughed at their own non-jokes. They generally jarred with fans. Some feel similarly about Carrie's rekindled relationship with Aidan, with his mullet, whispery tones and cringe-inducing phone sex. Shudder. That noise isn't dire wolves; it's howls of protest from fans. The problematically named 'Bran the Broken' spent most of HBO's fantasy saga on the sidelines – wearing furs, sitting in trees and making gnomic pronouncements like a creepy schoolkid in the corner of the playground. He even disappeared for an entire season and wasn't much missed. No wonder it was, ahem, 'controversial' when this passive fringe figure was suddenly picked as Ruler of the Six Kingdoms. A widely reviled choice. With mega-rated Christmas specials and a dodgy lock-up full of lovely jubbly catchphrases, the Trotter brothers once ruled the sitcom roost. Cushty. While they ducked 'n' dived around Peckham, Grandad rarely left his armchair in Nelson Mandela House but added a bass note of world-weary, hat-clad, croaky-voiced craftiness. When the actor Lennard Pearce died in 1984, he was replaced by the wackier Uncle Albert – a salty old sea dog with Captain Birds Eye's beard and precisely one joke, which was starting every sentence with 'During the war … ' The decline began, hastened by Del finding love with Raquel and Rodders falling for Cassandra. You plonkers. 'Puppy power! Lemme at 'em, Uncle Scoob! Scrappy dappy Doo!' Pipe down, you insufferable brat. When the Hanna-Barbera cartoon suffered a ratings slump, producers brought in Scooby's rambunctious nephew to join the ghost-hunting gang as an uncalled-for comic foil. The annoying ankle-biter sparked an immediate backlash. 'Zoinks,' indeed. Scrappy was so hated that The Simpsons mocked him with the rapping, surfing Poochie in cartoon-within-a-cartoon The Itchy & Scratchy & Poochie Show. Crowbarring a token British actor into an American show rarely works. So it proved when Helen Baxendale earned a big-money transfer from Cold Feet to Friends. Intended to turn the Ross 'n' Rachel saga into a love triangle, Emily was an unfunny wet blanket who just got in the way. She spent most of her screen time storming out of rooms in jealous huffs. Her arrival led to the ropy London episodes, complete with cameos from Sarah Ferguson and Richard Branson. Emily's sole saving grace: the gasp-inducing moment when Ross accidentally said Rachel's name at the altar. Pivot! The Apple TV+ hit is a feelgood sports-com about teamwork, optimism and compassion. Did it really need to turn one of its supporting characters into an unconvincing panto villain? Shortly after arriving to manage AFC Richmond, our titular hero spotted the kit man's tactical nous, promoted him to assistant coach and nicknamed him Nate the Great. How did Nate repay him? By demanding all the credit for Richmond's success, bullying colleagues and mocking his mentor's panic attacks – before leaving to manage the club's arch rival. Nate the Grate, more like. Physiotherapist-cum-housekeeper Daphne Moon may have been lovable, but whenever her family from back home in Blighty turned up, it was painful to behold. Her brother Simon was a regular visitor to Seattle, appearing in nine episodes as a boozy, boorish numpty, but the actor Anthony LaPaglia inexplicably spoke in a ropy cockney accent, rather than a more logical Mancunian one. Even more inexplicably, he won an Emmy for the role. Equally bad was their battleaxe mother, Gertrude (Millicent Martin). The Showtime series was a tense, knotty espionage thriller about the cat-and-mouse relationship between CIA spook Carrie Mathison and Marine-turned-al-Qaida sleeper agent Sgt Nicholas Brody. Homeland wasn't an angsty teen soap. Yet this is exactly what it turned into during scenes involving Brody's sulking, whining daughter Dana. She at least met her petulant match in the vice-president's hit-and-run driver son Finn, played by a 16-year-old Timothée Chalamet. Wonder what happened to that guy? In other 'annoying offspring of TV action men' news, see Jack Bauer's daughter Kim from 24 – notably when she got trapped in a snare and menaced by a wild cougar. Dammit, Jack! The Office: An American Workplace wasn't just a rare US remake worthy of the British original. It became a truly great sitcom in its own right. Cracks appeared, however, when Dunder Mifflin boss Michael Scott departed and preppy sales rep Andy Bernard was promoted to regional manager. Arrogant and anger prone, he lacked Michael's bumbling humanity and drained the show of its gentle charm. It was like replacing David Brent with Finchy. The first two series of the border-straddling Nordic noir were all-timers, following the unlikely duo of neurodiverse Swedish sleuth Saga Norén and her slobby, sarky Danish counterpart Martin Rohde. When the second run ended with Martin jailed, Saga needed a new sidekick, hence the arrival of the handsome but haunted Henrik. The pair soon entered into a relationship (eyeroll). With more focus on the detectives' private lives, the crime drama lost its way. Back to Sarah Lund's jumpers, then. Recurring character Elsbeth was a Chicago defence attorney for whom words such as 'quirky' and 'kooky' might have been invented. All 'I'm so random!' pronouncements and primary-coloured outfits, she was a tryhard irritant who somehow became a fan favourite. Amid the high-class legal drama, it felt as if she had wandered in from a tonally different, inferior show. Which she then got, landing her own spin-off, the Ronseal-titled Elsbeth. There's no accounting for taste. The disastrous introduction of this previously unmentioned Brady family member coined the US terms 'Cousin Oliver syndrome' and 'add-a-kid' – shorthand for a failed bid to boost flagging ratings with a supposedly cute child. This blond, bespectacled devil spawn is among the most hated characters in sitcom history. Six episodes after Oliver's arrival, ABC axed the show. A decade later came another example: Sam, the bowl-cut best friend of Gary Coleman's Arnold, who joined the Diff'rent Strokes cast for its final two series. It might take diff'rent strokes to move the world, but Sam could do one. The pointless polar bear. The hatch. The Others. The Dharma Initiative. The giant foot statue, Jack's tattoos. Flashbacks, flash-forwards and sideways flashes. There were many points at which the plane crash drama disappeared up its own rear propeller but the clincher came when a middle-aged man in black became the personification of evil. He had previously appeared as the Smoke Monster, then was able to inhabit the dead. He turned out to be the villainous twin of the mysterious Jacob, white-clad protector of 'The Heart of the Island'. All clear? Thought not.

Barry McIlheney was joyously rock ‘n' roll, memorial service told
Barry McIlheney was joyously rock ‘n' roll, memorial service told

Western Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Western Telegraph

Barry McIlheney was joyously rock ‘n' roll, memorial service told

The service at St Mark's in Dundela, Belfast, allowed former friends and colleagues to gather and celebrate the life of the journalist, broadcaster and publisher, who also launched Heat magazine. Mr McIlheney, originally from Belfast, died in May at the age of 65. Among those paying tribute at the service on Monday was Mike Edgar, formerly a BBC producer, who said Mr McIlheney had been a 'very special man'. Mourners leave St Mark's Church in east Belfast after the memorial service for former Smash Hits and Empire magazine editor Barry McIlheney (Liam McBurney/PA) He said: 'Barry had an unstoppable passion for music and everyone you could think of in the world of music had respect for him, and rightly so. 'Without Barry I would never have encountered the crazy worlds of Vince Power or The Pogues. 'They all loved him.' Mike Edgar (right) leaves St Mark's Church after reading a eulogy at the memorial service for former magazine editor Barry McIlheney (Liam McBurney/PA) He added: 'Barry was a true journalist, someone who exuded confidence at the right time and never missed a good opportunity if it presented itself. 'On one occasion he was live on the radio with me doing a report from a phone box on Carnaby Street in London and as ever feeding in the 10 pence pieces and entertaining us royally. 'Whilst chatting live on-air, Barry looks out the phone box window and spots Depeche Mode walking down Carnaby Street. 'As quick as anything Baz kicks the door of the phone box open and shouts: 'Hey lads, come and talk to the good people of Northern Ireland on the radio!' – which unbelievably, they dutifully did. 'There then followed a Guinness Book of Records-style moment with three members of Depeche Mode and Barry stuffed into a phone box for what turned into a great moment of showbiz madness 'Only Barry McIlheney would have the brass neck to carry off same!' Mr Edgar said McIlheney, despite his success, had always remained passionate about Belfast. He said: 'Like his contemporaries David Hepworth, Mark Ellen or Niall Stokes, Barry might have worn a suit on occasion but no one could ever call him 'a suit'! 'Barry was a leader, but he was also joyously rock 'n' roll and punk rock.' He added: 'He was well read, brave in his work, always curious, never boring, always kind and always impressive. 'Barry was larger than life, he always greeted us with a smile on his face, wearing his big coat with an upturned collar, a cheeky glint in his eye, a smart one-liner up his sleeve, and a well-earned loveable Belfast swagger.' Drummer Paul Burgess (centre) from the band Ruefrex, leaves St Mark's Church (Liam McBurney/PA) Delivering the homily at the service, Archbishop of Armagh Rev John McDowell said 'the good that Barry did will not be interred with his bones but will live on in your memories forever'. He said: 'Barry never forgot where he came from, but he didn't talk nonsense about it either. 'It wasn't everything and it wasn't nothing.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store