Is the BBC(entertainment stuff) as inbred as it seems?

My wife makes the same kind of joke, only hers is about U.S. shows filmed in Vancouver (many of which, she’s a fan of). It seems like there’s a relatively small community of actors based out of that region, and so, they keep popping up on various series.

When my wife is watching, say, Supernatural, she’ll frequently say, “hey, that guy was on Stargate”, or something like that.

I’m American and I still have no idea what Kim Kardashian does. All I’ve been able to puzzle out is that she posed for Playboy at least once. But if that was before or after her show began, I couldn’t tell you.

If you watched the HBO prison drama Oz, you’ll see many of the same actors appearing on one of the Law & Order series, often playing different characters from episode to episode. I think that’s because these shows film in New York and draw on the same crowd of theater actors.

She acts a little, models a little. Daughter of Robert Kardashian (one of O.J. Simpson’s defense attorneys), step-daughter of Bruce Jenner, girlfriend of football player Reggie Bush.

Mostly, she seems to be one of those who is famous for being famous. And, for having a notably curvy butt.

Whenever Joel McHale* mentions her he says she’s known for, “having a big ass and a sex tape.”

*from the tv show The Soup

Thanks to The Soup, I have something else to contribute to this thread: fiancee of Reggie Bush.

Just like Paris Hilton, she got famous for her sex tape, although hers was with a boyfriend instead of a one-night stand.

Bless you for naming Robert Hardy in there. I’ve been rewatching/binging on All Creatures Great and Small and yet again I’ve rediscovered my adoration for this incredibly talented man. He invests so much brio into every role he portrays. (And that’s a lot of roles…and a lot of brio!)

BBC America initially did air EastEnders, and I have hated them forever since they stopped. In the case of a long running soap, you just start airing it and showing all of the EastEnders Revealed episodes so people can catch up. I started watching again after stopping in 1986 and enjoy it, I’m sure, as much as anyone else who’s been watching it continuously. Fortunately there are other ways of following the show besides their poxy channel.

I’ve said this a million times before, but I don’t know who the fuck selects the shows for BBCA. There are tons of great shows on the BBC and ITV that would be fantastic (Cutting Edge, Horizon) that never show up. Do we need more “How Clean is Your House” or “Cash in the Attic?”

I will say this, though: once you’ve established yourself as a TV personality in the UK, that never goes away. I understand Noel Edmunds has a show still. And I think I heard that Jeremy Beadle was hosting a show as recently as a few years ago. Not to mention Terry Wogan and Michael Parkinson. These guys were all on the telly when I was a child in the 70s.

Indeed, albeit not on the BBC (which he “quit” on the grounds that it had a “lack of quality programming”). He currently presents on the culturally impoverished Sky One, and the actually impoverished Channel 4. And he had a lot of years in the wilderness before his recent (inexplicable) comeback. Incidentally, it gives me no end of pleasure that my website is the number one google result for “noel edmonds life story,” primarily because the resulting article is a pack of utter lies.

Terry Wogan is actually amusing, and while no longer really a TV presence still holds down a Radio 2 slot quite nicely; he’s neatly following the typical transition into UK media senescence. Parkinson recently retired, and to be honest went on no longer than a lot of American TV personalities; he really is a television grandee. Jeremy Beadle had pretty much disappeared from view before his recent death; I don’t believe he’d been on TV as a presenter in at least a decade.

The same seems to be true of Canadian shows. There very well may only be 20 or so Canadian actors and they’re all in everything.

I notice a lot of the same characters in the US shows I watch, too. Particularly if an actor’s been in anything vaguely SF, they turn up in a lot of other shows that are vaguely SF.

We’re just more likely to notice someone who has been in something we’ve seen before, ignoring all the dozens of actors who haven’t.

I wouldn’t class Footballer’s Wives as a soap - not in the British sense, at least - primarily because it has seasons, rather than running on and on and on like our soaps do.

The other programmes you mention aren’t BBC originals. Obviously, there’s no reason you’d know that; it’s weird that BBC America is showing so many non-BBC programmes.

Well, I forgot Top Gear, which is IMHO BBCA’s only redeeming quality. And Graham Norton.

BBC Brits aren’t nearly as inbred as Hollywood Brits. One thing I learned from the movies is that 86% of all Britons are Hugh Grant, Michael Caine or Sean Bean.

You ought to try being somewhere as small as New Zealand. There was a builder called Cocksy. He turned up on a diy show & as he was quite personable he started turning up on everything. Didn’t take long before he was overexposed. Now he is just on a series of ads for Carter Holt, thank God.

& almost every NZ actor at some point appears on our soap **Shortland St. **

IIRC, BBCA just licensed the name (and of course some of the programs) from the real BBC. I think they’re actually owned and run by the Discovery Channel.

My wife and I play the “How many actors from the Harry Potter movies can you spot in Brit movie X?” game.

Ian McKellen is the other 14% of British actors. :smiley: