Creation The co-production between the
BBC and the
Open University was announced in June 2009 and was commissioned by
Jay Hunt, controller of
BBC One, for ten 30 minute episodes. It promises to "put scientific theory to the test" and examine "how science shapes the world around us". During the announcement, Hunt stated that the series "brings popular science back to the very heart of BBC One", Comparing
Bang Goes the Theory to ''Tomorrow's World'', series editor Dermot Caulfield said, Dr. Stephen Serjeant (Reader in Cosmology at the
OU), and Dr Ian Johnston (Lecturer in Engineering for the OU) were the two academic team leaders for the production, covering disciplines including
geology,
astrophysics,
neuropsychology and
zoology. They were later recorded in the old linear accelerator building on the University of Sussex campus near Brighton, where Jem Stansfield has his workshop. As of Series 6 (from March 2012) no studio was used and linking sections were filmed on location. To "inspire the audience to get hands on with science", the series was supported by a number of free events across the country organised by
BBC Learning. Over time, the programme moved from being an educational entertainment format in which short films were interspersed with "street science" demonstrations (mainly presented by Yan Wong) and stunts (mainly presented by Jem Stansfield), to a current affairs-style format. Distinct changes occurred in series 6, when each episode explored a single theme, the studio setting was dropped, several guest presenters appeared over the course of the series (one of whom, Maggie Philbin, subsequently joined the show as a regular presenter), and Jem Stansfield's stunts were phased out, with his attempt to build a pedal-powered flying machine (featured across two episodes) being the last such item to appear.
Presenters Bang Goes the Theory was originally presented by
Dallas Campbell (series 1–6);
Liz Bonnin, a biochemist with a Masters in wild animal conservation;
Jem Stansfield, an aeronautical engineer, inventor and designer of museum exhibits; and
Yan Wong (co-author of ''
The Ancestor's Tale''), an
Oxford-educated evolutionary biologist.
BBC One ident From 27 July 2009 until 5 May 2014,
Bang Goes The Theory was the only programme on BBC One to have its own ident. It depicted a group of people using bicycles to generate electricity to illuminate a ring of lights, into the centre of which the BBC One logo was superimposed. == Live tour and roadshow ==