3 reviews
It's very hard to adequately describe the concept of "Sendung ohne Namen" (130+ episodes in total, aired late at night on Austrian TV over the course of a decade).
Imagine a narrator covering a wide variety of associated topics (each episode covered one broad topic, revealed in the title of the episode) at the speed of a steel ball bumping around in a pinball machine. A waterhose-like flood of information, coupled with fast image cuts and a string of loosely connected or sometimes even disconnected clips and thoughts.
Sort of "a mindmap or a Wikipedia reader on speed"; a wild experimental mix of parody, satire, and absurdist comedy.
SoN remains a cult classic for its satirical humor and the barrage of random facts presented in a staccato-like manner - there almost are no breaks from start to finish.
Each episode mixed in social commentary from Austrian society, politics, and pop culture on the topic covered (music bands or intellectuals touring Austria were also interviewed, for a wider angle and a more international set of answers and opinions).
The progressive lack of a consistent structure gave SoN a sense of spontaneity that appealed to a late-night audience.
The series kept pushing TV boundaries in terms of both content and presentation style. Its legacy lives on as a testament to the creativity of late-night TV in Austria at the time.
(Other good and outlandish examples from Austrian TV broadcasts from the era include the earlier 1990s' series "Montevideo", the 2000s' sketch/candid camera series "Echt Fett", or the comedic interview format "Wir sind Kaiser" in a royal/courtly setting.)
You can still find many SoN episodes online (in German). They remain a must watch if you feel intrigued by the show's concept (which, again, is very hard to put in words).
Imagine a narrator covering a wide variety of associated topics (each episode covered one broad topic, revealed in the title of the episode) at the speed of a steel ball bumping around in a pinball machine. A waterhose-like flood of information, coupled with fast image cuts and a string of loosely connected or sometimes even disconnected clips and thoughts.
Sort of "a mindmap or a Wikipedia reader on speed"; a wild experimental mix of parody, satire, and absurdist comedy.
SoN remains a cult classic for its satirical humor and the barrage of random facts presented in a staccato-like manner - there almost are no breaks from start to finish.
Each episode mixed in social commentary from Austrian society, politics, and pop culture on the topic covered (music bands or intellectuals touring Austria were also interviewed, for a wider angle and a more international set of answers and opinions).
The progressive lack of a consistent structure gave SoN a sense of spontaneity that appealed to a late-night audience.
The series kept pushing TV boundaries in terms of both content and presentation style. Its legacy lives on as a testament to the creativity of late-night TV in Austria at the time.
(Other good and outlandish examples from Austrian TV broadcasts from the era include the earlier 1990s' series "Montevideo", the 2000s' sketch/candid camera series "Echt Fett", or the comedic interview format "Wir sind Kaiser" in a royal/courtly setting.)
You can still find many SoN episodes online (in German). They remain a must watch if you feel intrigued by the show's concept (which, again, is very hard to put in words).
- helloamazon
- Dec 5, 2024
- Permalink
The "Show without a Name" is the best thing ever on TV, but you need to speak German fluently to understand it, and best be from Austria. (But even then you won't entirely understand it in all aspects, unless you watch each episode several times and perhaps do some research after watching.)
I will not go into the details of the show as those who are interested in it should know anyway, and people outside of Austria will hardly (most probably not at all) get a chance to see it.
10/10
Nothing more to say.
I will not go into the details of the show as those who are interested in it should know anyway, and people outside of Austria will hardly (most probably not at all) get a chance to see it.
10/10
Nothing more to say.
- stormbringer_123
- Feb 18, 2007
- Permalink
The "Show without a Name" is such a progressive TV-Show that it doesn't even fit in any existing genre. It's a fancy mixture of documentary, news, philosophy, weekly column, youth show, music show and so on. A narrator is talking about what he is thinking at the moment, what he experienced in private life, comments on political actualities or is talking about facts nobody knows. In the most episodes there are at least 1 music band or a famous person which got interviewed. The whole show is a huge stream of chains of associations, not just in the spoken words, but also visually. the pictures are sometimes underlining the words, but sometimes even build a 2nd chain of associations, though the words and the pictures never loose their contact completely. Beside spoken words and pictures there are often also written sentences shown, which are really often built a 3rd and separate information line. The flow of pictures and words is extraordinary fast, so there is a good chance that you don't get all the jokes and interesting thoughts with the first sight. if you are not fluently in German, don't even try to understand whats going on - you have unfortunately no chance to understand it (not just because of the language, but also because a lot of these people which are presented in the pictures are just well known in Austria and you will miss some jokes because of it). people from Germany could give it a try, cause the austrian narrator isn't speaking in dialect. target-audience: students, philosophy students, alternative youth culture, independent music audience, young adults, ...