James Burke stood on the roof of the World Trade Centre in
1977, looked out across Manhattan, and asked the most
dangerous question in television: what happens when the
electricity stops? Not as a thought experiment. Not as
speculative fiction. As a documentary premise — grounded in
the 1965 New York blackout
that had stranded eight hundred thousand people on the
subway and turned one of the most technologically advanced
cities on earth into a dark, confused village.
That was the opening of Connections, the BBC series that
first aired in October 1978 and quietly became the
most-watched programme in PBS history up to that point.
I wrote a brief note about it
years ago, but the series deserves more than a passing
mention. It deserves the kind of attention we reserve for
things that were right before their time and remain right
long after everyone has stopped paying attention.
Burke's central argument was simple enough to state and
almost impossible to accept comfortably: modern civilisation
is a trap. Not a conspiracy, not a design flaw — a trap in
the structural sense. Every convenience we rely on depends
on systems we don't understand, maintained by specialists
we'll never meet, powered by infrastructure so complex that
no single person comprehends the whole of it. The 1965
blackout was his proof of concept. Millions of people
discovered in the space of twelve hours that they could not
feed themselves, heat their homes, or navigate their own
city without a continuous supply of electricity that they
had never once thought about.
Nearly fifty years later, we still don't have a good answer
to his question.
The format of the show was its genius. Each episode began
with some historical event or invention — the plough, the
watermill, Arab astronomy — and traced a chain of
consequences forward through centuries until it arrived at
something recognisably modern. A loom leads to computing.
A medieval need to keep food fresh leads to refrigeration
leads to air conditioning leads to the demographic
transformation of the American South. The connections were
never obvious and never forced. Burke had done the research.
He walked through historical sites, handled objects in
museums, and talked directly to camera with the confidence
of someone who had spent years verifying each link in the
chain before committing it to film.
What made this work as television — rather than as a
lecture — was Burke himself. He moved. Physically, I mean.
The man was never still. He'd begin a sentence in a
thirteenth-century Italian church and finish it in a
twentieth-century laboratory, the cut happening mid-thought
so that the viewer experienced the jump as a continuation
rather than a disruption. No other documentary presenter
has ever used location quite like that. Bronowski stood and
reflected. Sagan sat and marvelled. Burke walked and
connected, and the walking was the argument.
The production values were extraordinary for 1978. Mick
Jackson directed with a restlessness that matched Burke's
own energy — crane shots, tracking movements through narrow
streets, occasional aerial footage that must have cost the
BBC more than they'd budgeted. The score by David Cain had
a synthesised unease to it, something between library music
and early electronic composition, that made even the most
benign historical segment feel like it was building toward
a revelation. Which it usually was.
Episode five, "The Wheel of Fortune," is the one I return
to most often. It traces how the invention of the stirrup
changed warfare, which changed feudal land distribution,
which changed agricultural practice, which eventually — and
this is the part that makes you sit forward — contributed to
the development of the printing press. The logic is
airtight at every step and completely invisible until Burke
lays it out. That's the trick. He wasn't inventing
connections. He was revealing ones that had always been
there, hidden by the way we compartmentalise history into
tidy subjects that never speak to each other.
I think about Sagan's The Demon-Haunted World sometimes
in the context of Burke's project. Sagan worried about
scientific illiteracy — about a public that couldn't
distinguish evidence from superstition. Burke's worry was
different. He wasn't concerned that people didn't
understand science. He was concerned that people didn't
understand dependence. That we had built a world so
intricately networked that the failure of any single node
could cascade through systems in ways nobody had mapped. The
technology trap wasn't ignorance. It was trust — blind,
unexamined trust in systems that had no obligation to keep
working.
The series spawned two sequels. Connections2 arrived in
1994 with twenty episodes, and Connections3 followed in
1997 with ten more. Both were good. Neither was essential
in the way the original was, partly because the format had
been absorbed into the culture by then — every pop-history
show owes something to Burke's method — and partly because
the original had the advantage of genuine novelty. Nobody
had told history that way on television before. By the
nineties, plenty of people were trying to.
In 2023, CuriosityStream
revived the format
with Burke himself presenting, now in his late eighties and
working within a CGI environment they called MindSpace.
The ambition was admirable. Whether a virtual set can
replace Burke walking through actual historical locations
is a question I haven't fully resolved. Something about
the physical presence mattered — the dust on the stones,
the particular light in a medieval corridor, the sense that
Burke was there and had come specifically to tell you
why this place connected to something you'd never
considered.
The first episode remains the most prescient. "The Trigger
Effect" opened with that blackout and closed with Burke
asking whether we were prepared for the next one. In 1978,
that felt like a provocation. In 2026, after rolling
power crises across multiple continents and a global
infrastructure so interdependent that a blocked canal in
Egypt can disrupt manufacturing in Stuttgart, it feels
like a description of daily life. Burke wasn't warning
about something that might happen. He was describing
something that had already happened and that we had
collectively decided not to think about.
I rewatched the full series last month. Most of it is on
the Internet Archive.
The picture quality is what you'd expect from late-seventies
BBC film stock — warm, slightly soft, with that particular
amber cast that British television had before everything
went digital and cold. It doesn't matter. The arguments
don't depend on resolution. If anything, the visual
distance helps. It reminds you that someone was saying all
of this forty-eight years ago, and that we built everything
he warned about anyway.
Sources: