Thomas Hellum: The world's most boring television ... and why it's hilariously addictive
Thomas Hellum is an award-winning television producer who works at NRK Hordaland in Norway. Full bio
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that lasts for hours and days,
from Al Jazeera's Listening Post.
gets relatively little media coverage.
passed without much drama.
media in a nutshell:
of a seven-hour train ride --
according to the ratings, loved it.
of TV engagement.
a cruise ship's journey up the coast,
National Broadcasting Service
a night of knitting nationwide.
Marcela Pizarro to Oslo
but first a warning:
in the following report disappointing.
an eight-minute story on Al Jazeera
TV programs in little Norway.
got a great idea.
a radio program
of Norway in 1940.
during the night.
before the invasion day.
can you tell as they evolve?
100-year anniversary that year
to eastern Norway,
as it did 40 years ago,
in Oslo, and we said,
about the Bergen Railway,
very, very good laughter,
should be seven hours and four minutes.
to be seven hours and 14 minutes
at the last station.
to the beautiful nature.
some information.
We will arrive at Haugastøl Station.
to do some archives.
flirting while the food is digested.
before we reach our destination.
we have a brilliant program.
train spotters in Norway.
in Norway on a normal Friday,
the Bergen Railway show:
watched part of this program.
nearly reached Myrdal station."
just jumped on the train
(Laughter)
in terms of social media.
of Facebook and Twitter users
on the same train together.
It's a 76-year-old man.
to pick up what he thinks is his luggage,
in his own living room.
minute by minute on a Friday night,
Why be a chicken?
when you can expand that
from Bergen to Kirkenes,
covering most of our coast.
very interesting history,
and death along the coast.
and we started planning for our next show.
it's all Ål Station --
and he waved to the camera,
that we were on board that train?
it should be live.
and on the screen at the same time.
NRK had been on board a ship.
have suits and ties
on board a ship,
transmitting the signal back,
they talked to the machine guy,
splendid entertainment.
it's not the first time.
and live, we wanted some help.
what do you want to see?
How do you want this to look?
What do you want on it?
from you out there,
to build the program.
the Hurtigruten coastal ship
from that week, and it's all about people.
at the University in Tromsø
who took a firm grip of our program,
of others along the route,
late for school tomorrow."
in the school at 8 a.m.
get a note from his teacher,
had watched the program.
on board the Hurtigruten.
a complete TV control room.
to professional people
Run it up and down.
important drill right now.
camera in NRK's live production,
great shots from the MS Nord-Norge.
on different camera solutions.
used in a different context.
It's normally used for sports.
close-up pictures of people
how is this man doing?
people waving at us,
thousands of them,
and they get the message,
they start waving back.
for five and a half days,
to their loved ones.
on social media.
Her Majesty the Queen of Norway,
more than 100 years of video
and they will be forever, actually,
UNESCO list of documents,
the Guinness Book of Records
like the Prime Minister.
my bed for five days."
and he hardly slept.
something might happen,
of viewers along the route.
channels in Norway during June 2011,
to put Hurtigruten on top of it.
watched part of this program,
the Hurtigruten coastal ship --
instead of turning 90 degrees
part of people's living room
we could make Slow TV about.
and make it a topic,
It's the peep show.
on a TV screen,
of live salmon fishing.
before we got the first fish,
into the beautiful Telemark Canal,
with the northern railway,
we did it in four seasons
another experience on the way.
some attention outside Norway.
on Comedy Central.
on a wildly popular program from Norway
chatting and chopping in the woods,
burning in a fireplace. (Laughter)
top Norwegian shows,
You Can Watch Paint Dry"
of the Norwegian population tuned in,
can be that interesting,
to go live from a sheep to a sweater,
on the show are falling asleep,
the knitters actually failed
or lose that counts.
and death is coming for us all.
to other TV programming.
that happens right now in real time,
of actually being there,
why they're doing that
we don't edit the timeline,
that what we make Slow TV about
that the viewer can relate to,
a root in our culture.
again for seven weeks.
this is a lot of logistics.
for 150 people last summer,
take your cameras with you.
the whole running order
just written on one page.
when we left Bergen.
make the stories themselves,
you can cut to the next one.
it really starts hurting your stomach,
have noticed the cow.
is the farmer at home?
you keep a picture like this,
the stories in your own head.
one nice way of telling a TV story,
can continue doing it,
so we keep the feeling of an event,
the good Slow TV idea,
a very good slow idea,
when it's a bit strange.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Thomas Hellum - Slow television advocateThomas Hellum is an award-winning television producer who works at NRK Hordaland in Norway.
Why you should listen
Thomas Hellum has worked at NRK Hordaland since 1992. The former lighting designer moved into photography and then began work as a producer, specializing in documentaries. In 2009, he became one of the driving forces behind the "Slow TV" movement, filming and broadcasting apparently boring events as they happen and turning them into genuinely thrilling television drama.
In 2008, Hellum won the Grand Prix Golden Prague at the International Television Festival in Prague for the documentary Ballad for Edvard Grieg, which tracked the composer's travels through Europe. He also won the Rose d'Or Award for The Sound of Ole Bull at the Rose d'Or Festival in Lucerne in 2012. His personal motto: "Life is best when it's a bit strange."
Thomas Hellum | Speaker | TED.com