'Spectrum' - Talking About Things
(Superimposed caption on
screen: 'SPECTRUM')
Presenter: Good evening.
Tonight 'Spectrum' looks at one of the major problems in the world today - that
old vexed question of what is going on. Is there still time to confront it, let
alone solve it, or is it too late? What are the figures, what are the facts,
what do people mean when they talk about things? Alexander Hardacre of the
Economic Affairs Bureau.
(Cut to equally intense
pundit in front of a graph with three different coloured columns with
percentages at the top. He talks with great authority)
Hardacre: In this graph,
this column represents 23% of the population. This column represents 28% of the
population, and this column represents 43% of the population.
(Cut back to presenter.)
Presenter: Telling figures
indeed, but what do they mean to you, what do they mean to me, what do they
mean to the average man in the street? With me now is Professor Tiddles of
Leeds University...
(Pull out to reveal bearded
professor sitting next to presenter.)
Presenter: ... Professor,
you've spent many years researching into things, what do you think?
Professor: I think it's too
early to tell.
(Cut to presenter, he talks
even faster now.)
Presenter: 'Too early to
tell' ... too early to say... it means the same thing. The word 'say' is the
same as the word 'tell'. They're not spelt the same, but they mean the same.
It's an identical situation, we have with 'ship' and 'boat' (holds up signs saying
'ship' and 'boat') but not the same as we have with 'bow' and 'bough' (holds up
signs), they're spelt differently, mean different things but sound the same.
(he holds up signs saying 'so there') But the real question remains. What is
the solution, if any, to this problem? What can we do? What am I saying? Why am
I sitting in this chair? Why am I on this programme? And what am I going to say
next? Here to answer this is a professional cricketer.
(Cut to cricketer.)
Cricketer: (Eric Idle) I can
say nothing at this point.
(Cut back to presenter.)
Presenter: Well, you were
wrong... Professor?
(Pull out to reveal
professor still next to him.)
Professor: Hello.
(Cut to close-up of
presenter.)
Presenter: Hello. So...
where do we stand? Where do we stand? Where do we sit? Where do we come? Where
do we go? What do we do? What do we say? What do we eat? What do we drink? What
do we think? What do we do?
(Mix to stock film of
London-Brighton train journey in two minutes. After a few seconds the train
goes into a tunnel. Blackness. Loud crash. Cut to signalbox as before.)
Signalman: (calling out of
window) Sorry!
(He goes back to wrestling
with bear.)