Do their faces look bovvered? (Photo by Ian Tuttle/Comic Relief/Getty Images)

In a properly ordered universe, there would have been a general election in the autumn of 1994. Certainly the country was ready for change. After 15 years in power, the Conservatives were exhausted, divided and lacking the will to govern. Labour, led since July by the youthful Tony Blair, had a 30-point lead in the polls.
There was a new mood in Britain, evident in the buoyant state of popular culture. It was the year of Parklife and Definitely Maybe; of Four Weddings and a Funeral, The Madness of King George and Shallow Grave; the year when Antony Gormley won the Turner Prize, and when the National Lottery and Loaded magazine were launched; when Harry Enfieldās TV show moved from BBC Two to BBC One, while Paul Merton became the first alternative comedian with a residency at the London Palladium.
Cool Britannia (though the term was not yet being used) was already having it large, and over the next couple of years, Blair clung to its Union Jack coattails. āI am part of the rock and roll generation,ā he explained, rather too earnestly, as he made his triumphal tour of awards ceremonies.
By the time he got into power in May 1997, though, it was all pretty much over and done with. The frothy, showy optimism of Cool Britannia was not to be the cultural tone of the New Labour years. It seemed appropriate that Radioheadās OK Computer was released that month, a much darker, more unsettling vision of modern life than Britpop had offered. More significant yet ā though few could have guessed it ā Swedish television was airing the first episode of a series called Expedition Robinson.
This was a show developed by British company Planet 24. Theyād earlier given us The Big Breakfast and The Word, but this was a very different proposition. This was a game show in which a group of strangers were put on a remote Malaysian island, given tasks to complete, and asked to vote on which of the other contestants should be eliminated from the competition. In its English-language versions, the franchise was to be called Survivor, but the Swedish incarnation was the first to reach the screen, and can therefore claim to be the foundation stone of what would become known as reality TV. And that was the cultural trend that would dominate the Blair years.
The point of reality TV was not that it recorded normal life ā as had docusoaps such as Airport or Driving School ā but that it invented an environment and dropped people into it, poking them with sticks to see how theyād respond and encouraging them to gang up on each other. āIt’s life as a game show,ā enthused Granada Television’s controller of entertainment.
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