BBC accused of capitalising on misery with documentaries

 BBC boss Piers Wenger called for fewer ‘dark dramas’ on television just as the corporation announced plans for a new series on gay serial killer Stephen Port

A BBC boss has called for fewer ‘dark dramas’ on television just as the corporation announced plans for a new series on gay serial killer Stephen Port. 

Speaking at the Edinburgh TV Festival, Piers Wenger said: ‘I think there is an awful lot of very dark drama across all channels and I would love to see some more inspiring stories.

‘So I would love a Sunday night show which examines heroism and what it means to be a hero….it just feel really exciting to be in a world that isn’t about dead bodies.’

Mr Wenger’s comments come as the BBC revealed it was producing a drama about Port’s killing spree, during which he murdered four young men by poisoning them with lethal doses of a date rape drug. 

The Barking Murders, which is a working title, will be a three-part factual drama from Jeff Pope and Neil McKay, the team behind The Moorside and Appropriate Adult.

Writer McKay told the Edinburgh International Television Festival: ‘Four young men with their entire future ahead of them lost their lives in a brutal and tragic way.

‘This is a story not only of the consequences of that loss but also of the extraordinary courage and resilience shown by those who loved them as they sought truth and justice. It is a privilege to be able to tell it.’

 Mr Wenger's comments come as the BBC revealed it was producing a drama about Port's killing spree

 Mr Wenger’s comments come as the BBC revealed it was producing a drama about Port’s killing spree

The BBC also announced new documentaries about the Grenfell Tower fire and the murder of Stephen Lawrence

The BBC also announced new documentaries about the Grenfell Tower fire and the murder of Stephen Lawrence

Pope, executive producer at ITV Studios, added: ‘I think this is an opportunity to say something about how we don’t always have to accept what we are told by those in authority, and how determination, sheer bloody-mindedness and – above all else – love, will always triumph.’

BBC One also announced two new dramas set in Scotland – psychological drama The Cry, adapted from the Helen FitzGerald novel which chronicles the collapse of a marriage in the aftermath of a tragedy and explores the myths and truths of motherhood, and The Victim, a contemporary legal thriller told through the eyes of the plaintiff and the accused.

Stephen Lawrence was murdered in a racist attack in Well Hall, Eltham, in April 1993

Stephen Lawrence was murdered in a racist attack in Well Hall, Eltham, in April 1993

Donalda MacKinnon, BBC Scotland Director, said: ‘We’ve been very public about trying to boost our drama output as part of our strategy of providing programmes that are more relevant for audiences in Scotland – but which can also be enjoyed as compelling stories no matter where you live.’

The BBC also announced new documentaries about the Grenfell Tower fire and the murder of Stephen Lawrence.

Alison Kirkham, head of factual commissioning, told the festival: ‘They become moments we all remember where we were and see history through those points in time.

‘With both of those documentaries, incredibly important moments in time, we are really proud. They are complicated and ambitious.’

Kirkham also unveiled the footage from Blue Planet II and trumpeted the success of Planet Earth II earlier this year.

An episode of Sir David Attenborough’s hit nature show did better with the important 16-34 demographic than The X Factor final, she said.

The channel also showed off footage from new game show The Button, which will see five families complete five challenges in one day.  

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