America in Primetime explained

Genre:Documentary
Director:Lloyd Kramer
Composer:Peter Nashel
Country:United States
Language:English
Num Seasons:1
Num Episodes:4
Executive Producer:Tom Yellin
Lloyd Kramer
Producer:Susan Schaefer
Linda Hirsch
Joanna Cohen (assoc.)
Mark Kachelries (assoc.)
Editor:Scott Chestnut & Jon Vesey
Cinematography:Logan Schneider
Runtime:54 minutes
Company:The Documentary Group
Network:Public Broadcasting Service (US)
BBC Two (UK)

America in Primetime is a 2011 four-part documentary series, focusing on television in the United States. Originally produced for and broadcast by the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), the series is a production by The Documentary Group, in collaboration with the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Foundation and WETA-TV.[1] The rights to the series were purchased by the United Kingdom's British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in 2013. The episodes were re-edited and clips of Alan Yentob introducing different segments, shot on location in different areas of America, were added. Exploring both old and new television series, each episode centers on the evolution of certain character archetypes – such as female and male archetypes, misfits, and heroes – in primetime TV. The series features interviews with a wide variety of influential people in television, including actors, creators, writers and executive producers, talking about their own shows and others. The documentary features a lot of footage from the programs discussed.

Release and reception

America in Primetime was met with favourable reviews. David Bianculli, a regular contributor to the NPR radio talk show Fresh Air, lauded the series, and called it "the smartest TV show about television I've seen in about 20 years."[2] In the Houston Chronicle, television writer David Wiegend praised the fact that viewers can not only learn about the history of television, but about the changes in American culture as well.[3]

Episodes of America in Primetime originally aired in the United States on four consecutive Sundays in late 2011, on PBS. The episodes were also made available on the PBS Video website. The series was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on January 17, 2012, and features bonus interviews.[4] [5]

The BBC bought the UK rights to the documentary and aired it in spring 2013 under the title The United States of Television: America in Primetime. The series was re-edited to a 58-minute run time and hosted by Alan Yentob and broadcast on BBC Two from 20 April 2013. They were shown in a different order to the original US transmission: Man of the House; The Misfit; The Independent Woman; The Crusader.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: America in Primetime . . December 2, 2011.
  2. Web site: 'Primetime' TV, Like You've Never Seen It Before . Bianculli . David . . . October 28, 2011 . December 2, 2011.
  3. Web site: TV becomes a lens on U.S. cultural history in PBS documentary . Wiegand . David . . October 24, 2011 . December 2, 2011.
  4. Web site: America in Primetime DVD . shopPBS.org . December 2, 2011.
  5. Web site: America in Primetime Blu-ray . shopPBS.org . December 2, 2011.
  6. Web site: BBC Two - The United States of Television: America in Primetime . May 5, 2013.