Paul Rose (writer)

Paul Rose, known by his online persona Mr Biffo, is a UK screenwriter. He was the editor of the Teletext-based video games magazine Digitiser, which ran between 1993 and 2003, and is a BAFTA-nominated writer of children's television.

Paul Rose
Asperger's Are Us with Paul Rose (2nd from right)
BornAugust 1971 (age 49)
Pen nameMr Biffo
OccupationScreenwriter
NationalityBritish
Period1993–present
GenreChildren's, Video games
Notable works4 O'Clock Club, Dani's Castle, Dani's House, Digitiser, My Parents Are Aliens, Pudsey the Dog: The Movie
Notable awardsSony Radio Breakfast Award (2003) Royal Television Society (Best children's show 2015), four-time BAFTA nominee
SpouseSanja Rose
Children3, and 3 step-children

Career

Video games

In 1993 Rose founded the Teletext-based video games magazine Digitiser. This ran until 2003, with the service reaching over 1.5 million viewers a week.[1]

In 2014, the Digitiser brand returned as an online website titled Digitiser 2000, penned by Rose. This was followed in 2018 by a video series, Digitiser: The Show, a retrogaming magazine show funded through Kickstarter.[2] The programme now takes the form of shorter weekly uploads to its YouTube page, titled Digitiser Mini.[3]

Rose has also written for Official PlayStation Magazine and Retro Gamer. From 2003 to 2008 he also wrote a monthly column in Edge entitled Biffovision.

Rose also devised the storyline for the multi-format video game Future Tactics.[4]

Children's television

Rose is the co-creator and lead writer of the CBBC sitcoms Dani's House, its follow-up Dani's Castle and the programme 4 O'Clock Club, which was nominated for 'Best Children's Comedy' at the 2012 BAFTA Children's Awards. Rose has also worked on the CITV series My Parents are Aliens, which itself was nominated for 'Best Children's Drama' at the 2004 BAFTAs.[5]

Rose has also worked on shows such as Half Moon Investigations, Barking!, The Worst Witch and Sooty.[6]

As of 2019, Rose is currently working on the CBBC show Almost Never, a comedy-drama series co-created with Jeremy Salsby and starring Emily Atack and Kimberly Wyatt.[7]

Other work

As well as his work on Children's television, Rose has also contributed to a number of programmes for adult audiences, including The Armstrong and Miller Show, a 2003 episode of UK soap opera EastEnders and the fourth series of Stella. He has also written for numerous film and technology magazines, including Deathray, Empire, Total Film and .net.

In 2003, Rose won a Sony Radio Academy Award for his writing on The Christian O'Connell Breakfast Show on XFM.[8]

In 2007, Rose co-wrote a TV pilot, which was broadcast on BBC Three, titled Biffovision. It was produced by Hartswood Films and is a parody of children's television co-written with Tim Moore.[9] He has also written a number of non-broadcast television pilots, including Too Much Too Young and Now The Weather.

In May 2007, Rose published the book Confessions of a Chatroom Freak through Friday Books, which has since gone into liquidation. In it, Rose posed as a beautiful young woman called LoopyLisa21f who chatted to men online, mostly about sexual acts they wanted to do to Lisa, and then published the transcripts.[10][11]

In 2014, Rose was the screenwriter of Pudsey: The Movie, a film starring the Britain's Got Talent winner Pudsey the Dog. Pudsey is voiced for the movie by David Walliams.

In 2017, Rose successfully funded a Kickstarter campaign to bring together Mr Biffo's Found Footage, a comedy montage series in the found footage style, which culminated in a short sci fi film featuring Violet Berlin.[12][13]

References

  1. "Digitiser Timeline of Events". Super Page 58. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  2. "Bloody forests" : An interview with Digitiser's Mr Biffo". New Atlas. 12 November 2018. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  3. "Digitiser2000". YouTube. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  4. Credits for Future Tactics
  5. Bafta Home – The BAFTA site
  6. "Book Signing: Digitiser's Mr. Biffo, Charing Cross Road". Londonist. 20 June 2007. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  7. "Almost Never (TV Series 2019) - Full Cast & Crew". IMDb. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  8. 2003 Breakfast Award winners
  9. "Biffovision". BBC Three website. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  10. "Book: Confessions of a Chatroom Freak". The Void. 20 June 2007. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  11. Robson, Daniel (31 October 2007). "Loopy Lisa offers a surreal take on cybersex". Japan Times.
  12. http://www.gizmodo.co.uk/2017/08/loads-of-british-nerd-icons-are-teaming-up-for-a-weird-sci-fi-comedy-special/
  13. "Found Footage". Kickstarter website. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
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