Harman Patil (Editor)

The Route Masters: Running London's Roads

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Genre
  
Factual

Country of origin
  
United Kingdom

First episode date
  
18 June 2013

Number of episodes
  
6

7.8/10
IMDb

Composer(s)
  
Sam Hooper

Original language(s)
  
English

Final episode date
  
2 February 2014

Narrated by
  
Julian Barratt

The Route Masters: Running London's Roads httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbd

Also known as
  
'The Route Masters: Keeping London Moving'

Directed by
  
Frankie Fathers Matt Pelly Clare Johns Kathryn Tregidgo Simon Gilchrist James Ross Arthur Cary

Executive producers
  
Matt Pelly, Alistair Pegg, Edmund Coulthard, Simon Gilchrist

Nominations
  
British Academy Television Award for Best Factual Series

Similar
  
Airport Live, The Tube, Supermarket Secrets, The Billion Dollar Chicken, The Genius of Invention

The Route Masters: Running London's Roads is a British documentary television series produced by Blast! Films for the BBC. Narrated by Julian Barratt, the series launched on BBC Two on 18 June 2013. The series shows how Transport for London keeps London's traffic moving.

Contents

Production

On 6 June 2013 Janice Hadlow, the controller of BBC Two, announced the series along with several other documentaries. The series was filmed over a year.

The series is now repeated on Watch.

Ratings

The first episode attracted 2.45 million viewers for BBC Two. It was watched by 10.7% of television viewers during its original broadcast. The second episode was viewed by 1.90 million people, attaining an 8.2% share of the audience during broadcast. The third episode was viewed by 1.96 million people, with an audience share of 8.0%. The fourth episode received 1.87 million viewers, an 8.3% share during broadcast. The penultimate episode was watched by 1.95 million people, with an audience share of 8.2%.

Episode 1

Writing in The Independent, Tom Sutcliffe was disappointed by the way the events were presented and said that the episode "was saved by its characters". Keith Watson of the Metro said that the episode "may have intended to arouse our sympathy for those who keep our streets moving – it didn't". The Guardian's John Crace said that the episode "did have its moments" and that the gridlock theme was "hard to make interesting – and it wasn't very." David Crawford said that Airport Live should have been more like this episode, where you "find the one person who can describe well the complexities of the job, to give you the nuts and bolts of your doc; then find all the characters among the workers who perform the myriad tasks" to make it more interesting. Phil Harrison said that the episode was "perfectly watchable but, with the best will in the world, very missable too". The Daily Star said the episode was "a sobering reminder of what can happen to any big city once its traffic system reaches overload".

Episode 2

Bim Adewunmi, writing for the New Statesman, said the episode "was simply excellent" and that London was "nowhere more beautifully portrayed than on BBC2's The Route Masters: Running London's Roads". Bryan Scott wrote a guide in the Metro on who to avoid on the night bus home based on this episode.

Episode 3

Writing in The Independent, Tom Sutcliffe said that the episode "was much funnier and sweeter than the original [Episode 1]".

Episode 4

The Express & Star said the episode "provided a fascinating insight into one of the country's busiest stations showing you the hard work that goes into ensuring journeys run smoothly and keeping the city moving".

DVD

The Route Masters: Running London's Roads was released onto DVD by Delta Entertainment on 25 August 2014.

References

The Route Masters: Running London's Roads Wikipedia