(Edited with treatment)
"Congratulations, your submission for the TV factual Pitch has been shortlisted. The panel would like to hear more from you so you will pitch your idea in the following session:
Wed 28th March
CCA5
14.00 - 16.30
PERFECT PITCH: BROADCAST COMMISSIONING IN SCOTLAND"
So apparently I will be pitching a programme idea I had directly to Ewan Angus (Commissioning Editor, BBC Scotland), Harry Bell (Creative Director, Tern Television) and Nick Low (Managing Director, Demus Productions).
To put it simply:
HnnngngkRHAsjrgrvjspvoszpozkmsxc (nervous breakdown)
Here's the treatment I submitted that got shortlisted.
‘Brought Up to Believe’
A one-off 30 minute factual programme for the Creative Loop
As scientific innovations become more ground-breaking and more questions get answered, the world is starting to rely less and less on the outdated beliefs of organised religion. In 2005, a Eurostat poll of the UK found that only 38% of Scots believe in a god and in the seven years since then we can only assume that the number has decreased further. Even rarer is the number of people who follow their religion to the letter – most choosing a compromise between belief and modern understanding. So what would make an ordinary Scottish boy in his late teens suddenly decide to become a creationist?
Douglas Pollock, a twenty year old Glaswegian has always believed in the Christian God, but only recently decided to interpret his religion literally and became a self-proclaimed creationist. Following this personal revelation, he spent a year in Ukraine conducting missionary work emphasising the massive change in his life.
From living a relatively normal life, Douglas has now chosen to live his life under an extremely strict rule book and takes no shame in trying to spread his new-found beliefs. From being an open-minded, bright lad he now openly denounces homosexuality and promotes abstinence.
Brought Up to Believe will explore the reasons behind Douglas’ sudden transformation and will follow him on his return to Ukraine as we find out what it’s like to go abroad to evangelise and aim to discover why he feels the need to spread his interpretation of the Christian Bible. We will also briefly explore the morality of children being raised in religious families and whether or not they really have a choice in their faith. Being raised in an extremely Christian household where he would receive a new bible every year for Christmas from his grandparents and being told to attend church every Sunday must have seriously influenced Douglas, so is it morally correct to indoctrinate kids from such a young age?
As the topics covered can be somewhat controversial, the programme will spark debate and discussion which could be facilitated in an online forum. Religion is always a relevant topic and it still plays a massive role in worldwide politics and culture – people always love to have an opinion about it. There is also plenty of room to expand upon the basic idea of the programme and perhaps get a series exploring the same topic from the viewpoint of various different religions.
The target audience is men and women in their late teens to early thirties of all social grades and should attract an audience of both religious and atheist viewers as both would potentially be interested in the reasons behind Douglas’ revelation. BBC Three at 20:00 would be an ideal slot for such a programme as the BBC Three audience is around Douglas’ age and the channel often airs a factual show during this after-dinner slot.
Stylistically the programme would be a mix of guerrilla-style filming while following Douglas in Ukraine and traditional sit-down interviews with his family, minister and other relevant characters. A presenter’s voice-over would be used to transition segments and Douglas would be prompted on-the-fly by the director during his mission, questioning, but not undermining his actions. Visually similar to docs like ‘1 Giant Leap’ and ‘Brave New World’ with some stylistic visual effects used to add flair.
Best of luck, I drink to your good fortune
Archie, are you sure you're not me from the future?
Pretty objective | Not very objective | What does that mean?
Choose wisely!
EDIT: Congrats, by the way.
Although if you want to present a full picture of the subject, it wouldn't hurt to read up on some authors from the field of sociology, anthropology, religious studies, etc. People like Max Weber, James George Frazer, Claude Lévi-Strauss, or as a light read, the outrageously funny The Year of Living Biblically by A. J. Jackobs, who also appeared in TED btw http://www.ted.com/talks/a_j_jacobs_year_of_living_biblically.html
Quite the opposite of your idea, as an agnostic, he tried to follow the rules of the Bible literally, and failed. He didn't join any religious group and remained skeptical, but developed a better understanding of religious people.
It would be quite interesting to see your Douglas Pillock, who's strongly fundamentalist and narrow-minded I presume, to meet some open-minded religious people at some point. Just a thought
Strideh: My original pitch really stressed how unbiased I would be, but the first few people I pitched it to said it didn't have enough meat and that I should try to cause more controversy. Happily, BBC3 is the only BBC channel willing to take such risks.
So to answer your question, I will not be openly arguing with anything he says/does. I will simply question it. All of it.
Tayleh: Believe me, I'm very well read on the topic already. I like to know what I'm talking about before I openly denounce it. A. J. Jackobs is a good guy. I really like what he did, but boy is his voice annoying or what?
Also "open-minded religious people" is a bit of an oxymoron. People who have belief but are still open minded tend not to actually follow any specific religion.
But anyways, keep us posted!
This shortlist is the absolute last stage - if it succeeds here then it will be made, but the final hurdle is also the most difficult!
Would you get an all-expenses-paid trip to Ukraine?
I don't know where his 'mission' will take him, Striker, but it'd be great to grab a beer if we cross paths