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Holby City / Casualty
dollymix53
Posts: 9,128
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I don't really watch Holby city but regularly watch Casualty, I thought are they same hospital,? So why does it look a completely different hospital from the outside shots. ;->:(. I see sometimes they cross over with the staff/actors,
Can any one enlighten me please.
Can any one enlighten me please.
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In theory same hospitality but they are filmed in different places.
Holby is Elstree.
Casualty is in Cardiff.
Think of it this way many hospitals cover many buildings in large grounds and so can look to be in different places.
Thanks for that, I did wonder if that was it! I've watched Casualty more or less from the start but never got into Holby, only got it on while waiting for M/Chef>:(
Yes, in Casualty, when they go into the lift they are effectively delivering somebody to Holby. However the lift only ever goes in one direction. It must do as never in the field of recorded history has any surgical team from another part of the hospital ever found there way to A and E when they are desperately needed. It always boils down the A and E staff performing heroics -something they have never done before and shouldn't do really but...............
Put up better bloody signage, that's what I say
Last Saturday was that Live at Edinburgh Castle special. The next couple of weeks will be the Commonwealth Games. So don't expect anything before Aug 9th which is probably a bit far in the future for the TV guides.
I half expected to see it shown on Sunday instead ...oh well, more sport to disrupt things - wish they'd put sports on one of their other channels then everyone would be happy
Well Sunday had the Golf and F1, more sport
Trouble is if the Beeb stuck the sport on BBC 3 or whatever you'd only get the sports fans winging and moaning. If they stick the sport on BBC 1 you get the "where are my normal programmes" crowd winging and moaning.
So no matter what they they do they are stuffed
It is totally illogical but going by some of the, often heated, debates in other sections of DS it seems that some people believe that the BBC must only ever show major sporting events on BBC 1 and at a pinch BBC 2. Putting such events on BBC 3 or 4 is the gravest insult to the nation and should result in the instant dismissal of the BBC Director General, the BBC Trust and the immediate closure of the BBC. Or something like that.
And an equally vociferous bunch of people believe that the BBC must never ever disrupt the normal schedules and have much the same reaction as above if they have to retune to BBC 3 or whatever to get their fix of Eastenders.
As I say totally illogical as everybody who can receive BBC 1 can get BBC 3 so does it really matter if you have to change channel once in a while?
I quite agree with you: as long as it's on somewhere, what does it matter as long as programme schedules/listings are kept updated for information
I've been waiting since October 2012 to hear if surgery is right for me, at present I take Cabergoline which is meant to shrink the tumour (it isn't!).
I guess that Prof Hope was fast tracked into theatre!
Yes. It's because Casualty ran out of steam years ago and its ever-outlandish 'crises' are now laughable.
Holby was once decent but is now treading water and should also be put out of its misery. Is Jac still denying Johnny access to the sprog? She was a year ago and it's still ongoing. Zzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
Get the feeling both have turned into more of a soap type programme (maybe they were always intended to be as such) with more action between the staff than about the patients.
Casualty does not get a 52 weeks a year commission. It gets around 46/48 episodes a year I believe. As such the BBC refer to them as 'series' and times them to end late summer and restart late summer/early autumn. AKA around August.
This is to allow for episodes missing weeks - such as over Christmas and during Summer sporting events.
There used to be a 3/4 week gap between series in around August but they seem to have started losing more and more episodes (eg one for Eurovision) earlier in the year and creating only a small gap now between series.
Of course, it is effectively a continuing drama but not in the sense of East Enders which is commissioned to run year round. Holby has that kind of status, too. But Casualty still has the missing weeks built in by ordering less than 52 episodes per year.