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Encyclopedia > A Life of Grime

A Life of Grime (play on the expression A Life of Crime) is a BBC docusoap following the work of environmental health inspectors. Launched during an explosion of reality television, the apparently unpromising idea found something of a cult following. With Louis Armstrong's What a Wonderful World as the ironic title music, the episodes were narrated by John Peel and later Arthur Smith in sardonic tones. Its appeal was due to a disgust factor and the eccentric but often lucid characters encountered either hoarding rubbish or keeping huge numbers of animals, most famously Edmund Trebus. The idea has been worked to death with sequels in Salford, Sheffield, Tower Hamlets and New York adding little to the Haringey original. The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) was formed in 1927 by means of a royal charter from the Crown. ... Reality television is a genre of television programming in which the fortunes of real life people (as opposed to fictional characters played by actors) are followed. ... Environmental health is defined by the World Health Organisation as: Those aspects of human health and disease that are determined by factors in the environment. ... Reality television is a genre of television programming which generally is unscripted, documenting actual events over fiction. ... Louis Armstrongs stage personality matched his flashy trumpet as captured in this photo by William P. Gottlieb. ... ... John Peel John Robert Parker Ravenscroft, OBE (30 August 1939 – 25 October 2004), known professionally as John Peel, was a British disc jockey and radio presenter. ... This article is about the British comedian. ... Edmund Trebus (1918-2002) Edmund Trebus (November 11, 1918 - September 29, 2002) was an octogenarian Polish émigré to Britain and compulsive hoarder who came to fame when he was featured on a British television documentary called A Life of Grime. ... This article is about the city of Salford in England. ... Sheffield is a city and metropolitan borough in the north of England. ... The London Borough of Tower Hamlets is the London borough to the east of the City of London, north of the River Thames in East London. ... State nickname: Empire State Other U.S. States Capital Albany Largest city New York Governor George Pataki Official languages None Area 141,205 km² (27th)  - Land 122,409 km²  - Water 18,795 km² (13. ... The London Borough of Haringey is a north London borough. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
An Interview with Philip Grime (2304 words)
Grime: I have tried to maintain a balance between demography and ecophysiology--to keep the approach as broad as possible at a time in research when the tendency is for research to become narrower in many fields.
Grime: No. One of the reasons I have stayed in Sheffield a long time is to build up a team around me who have expertise in all areas of ecology, so that we can analyze in the greatest possible detail the nature and requirements of individual species or populations.
Grime: It was Roy Clapham, in his presidential address to the British Ecological Society in the 1950s, who first put forward the idea of "screening" plant species, though he did not use the term at that time.
Edmund Trebus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (262 words)
When he was in his eighties, Trebus lived alone in a run down house in Haringey, London that regularly attracted the attention of the local council's health department due to the complaints of neighbours about the mountain of rubbish in his garden.
A Life Of Grime showed the frequent arguments Trebus had with council workers who attempted to clean his house, who he would try to chase away by waving his walking stick at them.
Despite his initial objections to such a move, in later series of A Life of Grime Edmund Trebus professed to be very happy in his new home and gave a tearful thanks to the social worker who placed him there.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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