News

Steven Moffat reveals truth behind Douglas is Cancelled and link to real TV presenters


Douglas is Cancelled creator Steven Moffat.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web
browser that
supports HTML5
video

Up Next

Steven Moffat’s latest TV project tells the story of a news presenter facing a possible career-ending mistake after apparently being caught telling a sexist joke at a wedding.

The four part-series Douglas is Cancelled stars Hugh Bonneville as Douglas Bellowes, a widely respected anchor who presents the fictional programme Live at Six alongside Madeline Crow, played by Karen Gillan.

However, after a nameless social media account reveals they overheard him saying something inappropriate in public, Douglas faces an online storm while also trying to convince his colleagues and family that whatever he said wasn’t actually that bad.

Despite the show’s title, the story takes a turn and is about far more than the rise of cancel culture.

However Steven has responded to questions about whether his script was inspired by any real presenter whose career ended in tatters.

‘Not much, because the incidents I assume you’re referring to don’t have much in common with what we’re talking about,’ he told Metro.co.uk.

Steven Moffat has described the inspiration behind his new series Douglas is Cancelled (Picture: Alan Chapman/ Dave Benett/ Getty Images)

‘It doesn’t hurt in terms of I suppose talking about the show, but the reality is TV presenters have been getting themselves in trouble all the time forever.

‘I could have proposed this show in any time, and someone would have said “isn’t there a story related to this?”. That’s just the reality of what happens if you insist on recruiting humans to do jobs where human frailty is regarded as a deficit.’

Instead, he explained that the script, which was initially conceived as a play more than five years ago, came about after he heard an anecdote that piqued his interest.

The screenwriter was told that a ‘prominent individual was being rehearsed for an interview by a junior colleague’.

‘That’s exactly what happened, someone told me, and I can’t give you names. I just thought, “Oh, wow I would love to be in that room” to see what goes on there because surely the junior colleague is going to stick it to the senior colleague as best they can. I mean, that’s just an extraordinary psychological challenge there,’ he explained.

The four-part show stars Hugh Bonneville as Douglas Bellowes and Karen Gillan as Madeline Crow (Picture: ITV)

After working on shows like Doctor Who and Sherlock in the past, Steven said he loved writing a script where there wasn’t a clear hero figure, if any at all.

‘The story of the perfect hero is never told because the perfect hero is boring,’ he said, but adding that by the end, one character does ‘decide to play the game better than anyone else’.

He also said that the series challenged him to ‘keep the tension all the time’ as he couldn’t ‘rely on somebody jumping out of a window or a giant monster rearing up or something’.

However, when it came to filming the series, the …read more

Source:: Metro

      

(Visited 6 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *