Not Quite Midway Between Liverpool and Harrogate

LAMs (Libraries, Archives, and Museums)
MLIS (Master’s of Library and Information Science)

Week Five
Day Twenty-Eight: The National Science and Media Museum
EXTERMINATE!

“It only works when the metadata is correct”

Paul Coleman
Associate Curator of Television and Broadcast
The National Science and Media Museum
Dalek exhibit in the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford
The “salt cellars”, the Daleks from Doctor Who, wreak havoc in young minds.
I’ve seen the children of my friends hide behind the couch, terrified by these creations.
For more history on the long-running series, check out A Brief History of Time (Travel)

Vicky, Vicky, Vicky. I owe you a frosty adult beverage of your choosing the next time we meet in person (if that ever comes to pass…)

Your recommendation of The National Science and Media Museum did not disappoint. Paul Coleman and colleague Claire Mayoh gave me a good overview of how they use media in their facility. Their own archive is limited, as they rely heavily on the British Film Institute, the BBC, and other media sources for their exhibits. Though Claire Mayoh discussed wanting to do more with the media they do have on hand. Paul Coleman mentioned the media they have from an early, early broadcast format from the late 1920’s called Phonovision. Paul told me he had the complete transfer of the recordings “on a CD in my desk”. Tidbits like that never cease to amaze me. A CD holds up to 700 megabytes. That is a tiny, tiny amount of data in the video world. For the entire contents of the NSMM’s phono vision archive to fit on a CD, the means the images are very low resolution compared to today’s HD, 4K, and 8K media

Advertising exhibit in the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford
Advertising exhibit in the National Science and Media Museum

The way the NSMM weaves media into their exhibits helps tell the story of broadcasting, though I was privy to the planning for new exhibits and how they will be changing up how they use media in the exhibits. Paul and I lost access to that room before he could give me too much insight, as the conference room with the plans outlined on the walls was scheduled to be used for another meeting, so we had to vacate within a few minutes of our arrival.

Timeline exhibit in the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford
Timeline of British Broadcasting

Walking through the exhibits with Paul and getting the individualized tour was excellent! I had the chance to ask my “weirdo” questions, but I found myself a bit too fascinated a few times to remember why I was there, and I was just geeking out over the exhibits and the gear.

Iconic Moments of TV exhibit in the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford
We sat in this isolated screening room and talked about content a bit.
I remembered many of the moments, but the eras are changing for future museum-goers.
How will this exhibit change to meet the way people consume media?
Moon landing from the Iconic Moments of TV exhibit in the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford
One of my favorite stories is telling my co-worker (earlier in my career) that I wasn’t yet born for the moon landing.
His expression was priceless. This is one moment, obviously, that I don’t remember firsthand.

Paul brought me to the archive room to show off the daguerreotypes, the calotypes (which he called “the Talbot photography”. For a little background on the difference, read this short article). The big draw for me, and where we spent the lion’s share of our time, was in the large equipment storage room. In here was where we first discussed the phonovision archive, and wandered the physical technical history of broadcasting from the very beginning of the medium. This room was fascinating to me for the obvious reason that it not only contained gear I knew and used in my career, but things I’d only heard about. And they may or may not have had the optical device used in Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody video. Paul wasn’t optimistic that it would be authenticated, but he did have a relationship with the archivist for Brian May, so if it can be authenticated, he already has the connections to do so.

Panorama of the various ratios and television broadcasting equipments in storage at the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford
My panorama of the history of media storage room

3.9 miles/10,100 steps/8 flights climbed
Total miles driven London to Bath to Liverpool to Bradford to Harrogate to Edinburgh: 729 miles

That was a Roundabout Way to Get There

LAMs (Libraries, Archives, and Museums)
MLIS (Master’s of Library and Information Science)

Week Five
Day Twenty-Seven and Twenty-Nine: BONUS Colleague Interviews
Vicky Gets TWO Shout-Outs This Trip!

“Oh, great. I got a haircut for this.”

Graeme Hanks, Freelance Editor

My intrepid road trip to interview additional sources for my paper began the Sunday after classes concluded. I left London via a shiny red rented automobile to swing though Bath, Liverpool, Bradford, and Harrogate before ending up in Edinburgh to meet my friend Shauna for some Scottish Holiday Hijinks.

View of Bath from a hill
Overlooking Bath

An American colleague (VICKY!!) recommended I visit the National Science and Media Museum (NSMM) in Bradford, and originally after consulting “The Googles”, I figured it was just too far away to fit into my limited time between end of school and traveling with a dorm-room’s full of luggage on trains seemed like a lot of extra work… but when I started talking with my other colleagues in Liverpool and Harrogate, it turned out that they were perfect candidates to interview for my paper, yet I never knew this! The things we don’t talk about on Twitter or Facebook! Then I noted Bradford, the home of the NSMM, is smack-dab between the two. A plan was hatching!

The more I mapped out the best way to fit in interviewing Graeme, Rick and the staff at the National Science and Media Museum, plus adding a trip to see my retired BBC colleagues in Bath, whom I visited on my last visit in 2008, the more a road trip seemed to be the only rational solution.

So learning to love driving on the other side of the road from the other side of the car was apparently inevitable.

Photo of a Honda Civic rental car
I didn’t do too badly for driving for the first time on the other side of the road from the other side of the car.
Hopefully most of the people sharing the road with me couldn’t tell…

Though sitting in restaurants talking to Graeme and his wonderfully patient and funny partner, Charis, and then Rick were fascinating for me, describing a conversation in a blog is probably not quite as dynamic for the reader, so I will just say they are both knowledgeable in their own right(s), and each will add to the information in my paper. Both are considered freelance. Graeme’s main client is a film company in Liverpool, and Rick’s primary clientele are corporate entitles doing live events. Their different perspectives and use-cases will add to the comprehensiveness of my paper.

So with this, I’ll just leave you with a few pretty pictures from my road trip, and The National Science and Media Museum gets its own blog entry!

View of Bath from a hill
Another view of Bath from the hill (oh, yes. We walked up that hill, too…)
View out the author's window, Liverpool
My view in Liverpool. It was a “cozy” room. Quite a lovely stay, actually!
The Iron Men of Crosby Beach installation, Liverpool
The Iron Men of Crosby Beach Installation overlooking the sea
Over the shoulder, looking out to sea of the head and torso of one of The Iron Men of Crosby Beach installation, Liverpool
Standing on the Sea
The author standing among the Beatles bronze sculptures, Liverpool
I ran into some new friends. They’re rather tall

Bath: 2.6 miles/6,100 steps/8 flights climbed
Liverpool: 6.1 miles/16,400 steps/16 flights climbed
Harrogate: 6.5 miles/17,400 steps/18 flights climbed