Big Allotment Challenge: does a perfect radish make perfect TV?

New BBC2 show makes Great British Bake-Off seem dangerously subversive by comparison

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WITH The Great British Bake-Off on its way to BBC1 later this year, BBC2 has been casting around for the next hardy perennial. The Big Allotment Challenge, which arrived last night, seeks to fill the gap in its schedule with the minimum of fuss.

Inattentive viewers would barely have noticed the difference. The action, such as it is, revolves around three challenges set in the grounds of an English country house and interspersed with swooping shots of lawns, wildflowers and walled gardens. As if to prove its lineage, one of last night’s challenges involved making jam.

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Holden Frith is The Week’s digital director. He also makes regular appearances on “The Week Unwrapped”, speaking about subjects as diverse as vaccine development and bionic bomb-sniffing locusts. He joined The Week in 2013, spending five years editing the magazine’s website. Before that, he was deputy digital editor at The Sunday Times. He has also been TheTimes.co.uk’s technology editor and the launch editor of Wired magazine’s UK website. Holden has worked in journalism for nearly two decades, having started his professional career while completing an English literature degree at Cambridge University. He followed that with a master’s degree in journalism from Northwestern University in Chicago. A keen photographer, he also writes travel features whenever he gets the chance.