With friends, colleagues and ex-colleagues at the end of the Treasure Quest 'wake' after the final show, at the Coach and Horses pub near the BBC in Norwich
It’s been an emotional week for me, and for several of my
colleagues – some of them now, sadly, former colleagues, but still close
friends – as last Sunday we said goodbye to Treasure Quest, the BBC
Radio Norfolk programme which I have produced for the past 15 years, ever since
its regular run started in May 2008.
Or rather, which I did produce. It still feels
strange to refer to it in the past tense. It ran for 732 quests across 808 episodes – taking in 11
two-parters, five shows where the weather stopped us going out, and 60 ‘Virtual
Quests’ during the pandemic – and I was involved in all but about nine of them across
that time. I’ve written before on this blog about how much the show has meant to me, and that’s been a big part of the wrench of it ending, of course. I’m very proud of so much that we were able to do after I wrote that piece, too: keeping it going through covid with the Virtual Quests which really seemed to mean so much to people; turning it into an on-air mystery game for a Boxing Day special; having the new team of Sophie and Julie together for a final three years. But what’s also made the final end emotional, and moving, has been
seeing how much it means to other people. I knew it was a popular show which
had built up a community of listeners around it who really valued it and felt a
part of it, but seeing the hundreds of comments come in about what it means to
people and how much they’ll miss it has been quite humbling. It’s very sad to
think of that ‘community of the air’ now having been dispersed, forever. I wrote last year, for the BBC’s centenary, about what a
privilege it has been for me to be a part of the BBC. And a large part of that feeling
has come from the opportunity to be a part of the team making a show which
really did mean something to people, and became a part of their lives – a very
rare and special honour. I think all of us lucky enough to have been in the ‘TQ
Family’ felt that way, all through the years. And we were very proud of everything that we did together. So it’s been a strange and sad week, and left me feeling
a little adrift – especially sitting here typing this at home on a Sunday
morning, when for over a third of my life so far I’d have usually been at work
producing TQ. But there have been some brighter spots, relating to the
continuing positive reaction I’ve had to Pull to Open. Two reviews of the
book appeared this week, both of them extremely pleasing. Paul Mount for Starburst says in his review that “Books about the history of British TV in general
and Doctor Who in particular don’t get much more essential than this
one.” For SFX magazine, meanwhile, Nick Setchfield gives it
four-and-a-half stars out of five and says it “succeeds in turning the
facts of a TV legend’s birth into a freshly engaging narrative.” Mount also
calls it a “formidable work of long-form investigative journalism”,
while Setchfield praises my “cultural historian’s eye for context.”
So that has all been nicely ego-boosting!
As have the continuing images on Twitter of people
sharing their pictures of having received the book, and commenting on either their excitement
at looking forward to reading it or their positive thoughts after they have done
so. I was particularly flattered to see the very kind tweet from Richard Marson, whose own writing on British television history is widely
admired. He’s very much an expert in this area, so to see him refer to the book’s
“great job of contextualising the birth of Doctor Who and navigating the
available sources to form a clear picture of the key events and characters”
was very nice.
What happens next, I don’t know – on most scores, really.
My future at the BBC is still currently to be decided. In writing terms there
are a couple of little irons in the fire for pieces coming up related to Pull
to Open, about which more before too long hopefully. People have been
asking about and suggesting ideas for future non-fiction books, but there isn’t yet
any concept which really strikes me as one I’d like to get my teeth into. I do
have one idea for a non-Doctor Who non-fiction book, again related to
British television history, but I’m not sure whether it would really have
enough of a potential audience for anyone to want to publish it.
Finally, on a literary note, on Thursday evening I was at
the joint book launch in Norwich for the married authors Rachel Hore and DJ
Taylor, whose new novels The Hidden Years and Flame Music were both
released that day. I was quite pleased with the resulting radio piece, particularly
my idea of pitting them against each other in a sort of Mr & Mrs
game asking them questions about each other’s new books. This seemed to go down
quite well – have a listen to see how they did!
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