Naturalist to help viewers ‘handle’ objects from Natural History Museum, as broadcaster also unveils new HBO deal

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

Sir David Attenborough is to be turned into a hologram for a virtual reality tour of the Natural History Museum in London that promises to allow users to “handle” rare fossils from the comfort of their own home.

Sky has commissioned the new experience, called Hold the World, which it says is a marriage of interactive video game technology and TV documentary. The public will be able to take the tour, which offers an up close and personal experience with fossils, bones and skulls, with insights from Attenborough, if they have a VR set, controller and phone app.



“Hold the World offers people a unique opportunity: to examine rare objects, some millions of years old,” Attenborough said. “It represents an extraordinary new step in how people can explore and experience nature, all from the comfort of their own homes.”



Sky, which has plans for 12 VR film projects and released two linked to its Formula One coverage, wants to showcase the potential and bolster the popularity of the technology.



“VR and augmented reality have good long-term potential in the market,” said the Sky chief executive, Jeremy Darroch.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Sir David Attenborough wearing a Sky VR headset. Photograph: Sky

Sky also announced the launch of a global production partnership with HBO, maker of Game of Thrones, with a $250m (£195m) initial investment to make high-end dramas.



The business, which aims to produce about two major series a year, is at least partly a response to the billions of investment in quality programming made by newer entrants such as Netflix.



“This will give us an ongoing slate of high-quality drama to exploit at home and globally,” said Darroch. “Hopefully it will mean we can create take a lot of our high end drama to the next level.”



Sky has a separate existing deal to exclusively air HBO programming, such as Billions and Game of Thrones, which runs until 2020.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Sky airs Game of Thrones in the UK as part of its deal with HBO. Photograph: AP

Sky reported an 11% decline in operating profits to £1bn in the nine months to the end of March. Its UK business, which accounts for almost all of its profits, fell by 20%, from £1.15bn to £918m.



The broadcaster partly blamed the drop on a major increase in Premier League rights payments, which have ballooned to £494m this year in line with the start of its new £4.2bn three-year contract.



Darroch said a significant increase in total revenues, which have grown 11% to £9.6bn in the nine months to March, and cost savings helped it tabsorb the higher programming bill, which pushed total costs up 8% to £8.6bn. Stripping out currency effects Sky’s revenues rose by 5% year on year for the nine-month period.



The company said it had battled a tough UK ad market, which fell by 8% in the first quarter of this year, outperforming the conditions with its ad revenues down by just 3% in its home market.



TV ad revenues across Sky’s total business, which includes operations in Germany, Austria and Italy, grew by 4% to £613m in the nine months.



Sky said its German operation performed strongly: its profits of £4m mark the first time the business has been in the black at the nine-month stage. Its Italian operation produced its fastest rate of revenue growth in eight years, up 7% to £1.8bn for the nine months, as profits tripled year on year to £91m.

