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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
We make serious documentaries for British TV - BBC and Channel 4
mostly, and are now working on programme about cycling accidents involving heavy goods vehicles around the UK. There have been several accidents, and deaths, in London so far this year which have been comvered, to some extent, by the press. But what about accidents outside London around the rest of the country? We have found these very hard to find. If you know of such accidents involving heavy good vehicles, outside of London, please get in touch. Many thanks. We would like your help. |
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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
ed wrote:
We make serious documentaries for British TV - BBC and Channel 4 mostly, and are now working on programme about cycling accidents involving heavy goods vehicles around the UK. There have been several accidents, and deaths, in London so far this year which have been comvered, to some extent, by the press. But what about accidents outside London around the rest of the country? We have found these very hard to find. Are coroners reports not available in some form? BugBear |
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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
On Oct 7, 10:38 am, ed wrote:
We make serious documentaries for British TV - BBC and Channel 4 mostly, and are now working on programme about cycling accidents involving heavy goods vehicles around the UK. There have been several accidents, and deaths, in London so far this year which have been comvered, to some extent, by the press. But what about accidents outside London around the rest of the country? We have found these very hard to find. If you know of such accidents involving heavy good vehicles, outside of London, please get in touch. Many thanks. We would like your help. Could you post what production company you are, your company address and proper details etc... You will get a better response and it seems only polite if you are looking for information that posters know who they are posting to so they can make an informed decision about whether they wish to participate. IE: the production company that tried to get homeschool parents to participate in a documentary turned out to be a hatchet company with a bad reputation which used some very underhand techniques and reporting styles that non of that community wished to engage with. If you have nothing to hide then post the details so members can check you out. If you don't then I would have to advise others not to respond. Sniper8052 |
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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
On Tue, 7 Oct 2008 02:50:05 -0700 (PDT)
" wrote: Could you post what production company you are, your company address and proper details etc... You will get a better response and it seems only polite if you are looking for information that posters know who they are posting to so they can make an informed decision about whether they wish to participate. A quick look online supports his gmail address: a Dr Ed Harriman at that IP address, who seems well-respected as a documentary maker. If he's that one, he writes for the London Review of Books, which must count for something. ;-) You're right, though; it would at the very least be polite to tell us who he is. -- Mark, UK |
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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
On Tue, 7 Oct 2008 11:05:57 +0100, Mark McNeill
said in : A quick look online supports his gmail address: a Dr Ed Harriman at that IP address, who seems well-respected as a documentary maker. If he's that one, he writes for the London Review of Books, which must count for something. ;-) Seems fair enough. He's unlikely to find many interview subjects, though, as being crushed by a truck tends to limit your future participation in TV documentaries :-( Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk 85% of helmet statistics are made up, 69% of them at CHS, Puget Sound |
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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
On Oct 7, 11:25 am, "Just zis Guy, you know?"
wrote: On Tue, 7 Oct 2008 11:05:57 +0100, Mark McNeill said in : A quick look online supports his gmail address: a Dr Ed Harriman at that IP address, who seems well-respected as a documentary maker. If he's that one, he writes for the London Review of Books, which must count for something. ;-) Seems fair enough. He's unlikely to find many interview subjects, though, as being crushed by a truck tends to limit your future participation in TV documentaries :-( Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting.http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk 85% of helmet statistics are made up, 69% of them at CHS, Puget Sound I may be exhibiting 'once bitten twice shy syndrome' but best people know what they are getting involved with. It may be there are not that many large vehicle collisions outside of major urban areas particularly as they tend to be 'anacdotally' left turn collisions from stationary. Sniper8052 |
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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
In article ,
ed wrote: We make serious documentaries for British TV - BBC and Channel 4 mostly, and are now working on programme about cycling accidents involving heavy goods vehicles around the UK. As a responsibile documentary maker, would you please consider the secondary message you're sending ? Obviously it is important to reduce risks. But, overall, cycling is not a dangerous activity. If we concentrate too much on bad accidents people will tend to think that cycling is very dangerous. This reduces the number of people who want to cycle. Fewer people cycling is bad for congestion and bad for the environment; conversely the more cyclists there are the more pleasant (and safer) cycling becomes. I don't know the planned structure of your programme, but it might be worth you thinking about how to avoid making your viewers pessimistic about the safety of cycling. -- Ian Jackson personal email: These opinions are my own. http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~ijackson/ PGP2 key 1024R/0x23f5addb, fingerprint 5906F687 BD03ACAD 0D8E602E FCF37657 |
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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
On 7 Oct, 12:06, "
wrote: On Oct 7, 11:25 am, "Just zis Guy, you know?" wrote: On Tue, 7 Oct 2008 11:05:57 +0100, Mark McNeill said in : A quick look online supports his gmail address: a Dr Ed Harriman at that IP address, who seems well-respected as a documentary maker. If he's that one, he writes for the London Review of Books, which must count for something. ;-) Seems fair enough. He's unlikely to find many interview subjects, though, as being crushed by a truck tends to limit your future participation in TV documentaries :-( Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting.http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk 85% of helmet statistics are made up, 69% of them at CHS, Puget Sound I may be exhibiting 'once bitten twice shy syndrome' but best people know what they are getting involved with. It may be there are not that many large vehicle collisions outside of major urban areas particularly as they tend to be 'anacdotally' left turn collisions from stationary. And in hyper-busy environments. |
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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
"Ian Jackson" wrote in message ... In article , ed wrote: We make serious documentaries for British TV - BBC and Channel 4 mostly, and are now working on programme about cycling accidents involving heavy goods vehicles around the UK. As a responsibile documentary maker, would you please consider the secondary message you're sending ? Obviously it is important to reduce risks. But, overall, cycling is not a dangerous activity. If we concentrate too much on bad accidents people will tend to think that cycling is very dangerous. This reduces the number of people who want to cycle. Fewer people cycling is bad for congestion and bad for the environment; conversely the more cyclists there are the more pleasant (and safer) cycling becomes. I don't know the planned structure of your programme, but it might be worth you thinking about how to avoid making your viewers pessimistic about the safety of cycling. I think I can see your concerns, but one could just as easily as you to consider the 'secondary message' that *you* are sending; which is "don't give people information that will improve their safety because that only makes them think it's dangerous" There is particular risk for cyclists from left turning lorries, and as most newbie cyclists have probably not received training or read Cyclecraft they are likely to be unaware of the danger. |
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Cycling accidents - British TV documentary
On Tue, 7 Oct 2008 04:06:34 -0700 (PDT), "
said in : It may be there are not that many large vehicle collisions outside of major urban areas particularly as they tend to be 'anacdotally' left turn collisions from stationary. True, this does seem to be mainly a London problem, but as you say that could just be reporting issues. I know there are high level meetings about the issue of LGV collisions going on in London right now. Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk 85% of helmet statistics are made up, 69% of them at CHS, Puget Sound |
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