Bill Cran: at the top of documentary producers

Bill Cran, in the upper ranks of television documentary producers

Bill Cran was a colleague and a friend. He ranked among the best documentary producers anywhere. There seemed no subterfuge, no matter how illegal or immoral, that he could not reveal in an hour of broadcast daylight. Bill, 79, died in London on 4th June 2025. His life received generous obituaries, in Britain (BBC, ITV), … Read more

Power of a Woman: the Turbulent Life of Eleanor of Aquitaine

Book Cover

‘Power of a Woman …’ ~ Melissa Snell reviews ‘a monumental challenge’: Mr. Fripp has taken on a monumental challenge. Not only does he handle the delicate balancing act of telling a good story while maintaining accurate historical detail, but he does so by getting inside the head of someone who actually lived more than … Read more

A Mid-March Robin (poem)

A Mid-March Robin, a poem by Martin Jones, takes our Guest Post. First published in Juniper magazine (Summer 2024).

The Becoming

A galaxy revolves in dark space

Excerpt from ‘Let There Be Life’ (published by Paulist Press, 2002) By Robert Fripp

Robin Taylor

Robin Taylor was my boss for nearly ten years. Too bad it wasn’t longer; he was a model for Canadian journalism. Robin died on June 12 2013, in Basingstoke, England. One of six children to William and Joan (née Hendry) Taylor, Robin was born on Boxing Day 1932, in South Shields, County Durham. A Labour … Read more

Hans Küng on TVOntario’s Speaking Out (1985)

Hans Kung

TVOntario (TVO) ran a live 90-minute current affairs program, Speaking Out, for 14 seasons, produced by Carol Burtin Fripp. On October 10, 1985, ‘the controversial Catholic theologian Hans Küng’ was the show’s featured guest. Controversial? A word the media still love. However, Dr. Küng dealt with life as a priest confronting the real world. After the … Read more

The Intelligence of Microbes

 ‘Science’ (25 November 2017) published a story I thought both weird, wonderful —’Seeing the Beautiful Intelligence of Microbes …’ It was also strangely familiar. [1] The story begins: “Bacterial biofilm and slime molds are more than crude patches of goo. Detailed time-lapse microscopy reveals how they sense and explore their surroundings, communicate with their neighbors … Read more