Television is Here Again (1946) part one

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  • Опубликовано: 10 янв 2010
  • part two is here:
    • Television is Here Aga...
    British television was born in 1936, however it was short lived being closed down three years later for World War II - and right in the middle of a Mickey Mouse cartoon. One of the early presenters was Jasmine Bligh - chosen from1,122 hopeful applicants.
    With the war over, the television service re-started. Just one channel, the BBC. To open it, there was Jasmine again. "Good afternoon everybody. How are you? Do you remember me, Jasmine Bligh?"
    This 70 minute 35mm film was made "in the Spring of 1946" to be both broadcast on BBC television and shown to cinema audiences. The concept was to explain what television really is... As Jasmine says, it is to be watched at home in front of a fire.
    Due to RUclips's policy of only accepting 10 min. video here is part one.
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Комментарии • 156

  • @WondrousEarth
    @WondrousEarth Год назад +11

    So much went into these early TV productions, true quality control and people who truly wanted the best for their TV viewing audiences.

  • @ShakepearesDaughter
    @ShakepearesDaughter 12 лет назад +15

    Amazing, isn't it? Before she was a 60s hits maker, she was a singer on BBC radio, a child prodigy during WWII. Touring and cheering the British troops, raising morale the way Shirley Temple raised American morale during The Great Depression. She had a full career before her adult career ever came to be.

  • @Davyfb75
    @Davyfb75 6 лет назад +8

    It is just coming up to 80 years since my father purchased his first Television set a Cossor 1210 with a15 inch Tube. Ilford still had DC mains so we had to have a rotary converter to be able for the set to work. I used to watch the original demonstration film avidly. I did not know at the time I would spend my working career in television. Still obsessed and watch too much TV and now Talking Pictures grabs with old films.

  • @vancouverman4313
    @vancouverman4313 3 года назад +5

    Jasmine Bligh who was the lady who was speaking at the beginning was a descendant of Captain William Bligh of The Mutiny of the Bounty fame.

  • @badreality2
    @badreality2 11 лет назад +8

    This video is great for showing us how much engineering went into transmitting television signals, even in the earliest years of television.

  • @IlanBoy2
    @IlanBoy2 8 лет назад +9

    She is the great singer Elizabeth Welch - wonderful American singer who electrified pre-war Paris and London. She was still singing as late as 1985 when I heard her sing Smoke gets in your eyes at one of London's benefits for People with AIDS. I'm sure there is more of her here on Wonderful Wonderful Yoooo Toob ........!

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 3 года назад +16

    1:12 I was thinking "I won't recognize any of these names from 75 years ago and 5,000 miles away." Then Petula Clark scrolls up. She really did get in at the ground floor.

    • @LogoMan7777
      @LogoMan7777 Год назад +1

      Yeah, Petula Clark. That name threw me for a loop.

    • @pegasusactua2985
      @pegasusactua2985 Год назад +1

      She's still alive too.

    • @anonUK
      @anonUK 11 месяцев назад

      Danny Green was the big clumsy man in the original Ladykillers film.

  • @anautisticpersonxd3324
    @anautisticpersonxd3324 3 года назад +5

    Very clear and impressive pronounciation and audio for 1946!

  • @srfurley
    @srfurley 3 года назад +7

    I’ve been in one of the old Alexandra Palace studios, I think it was the one which was originally used for the Baird system. Amazing how small it was.

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh 11 лет назад +5

    Interesting that this British program opens with a medley of all-American songs, including the aggressively swinging "Bounce Me Brother With A Solid Four".
    The visual quality of this would've been far less on a TV then than the way this 35mm film copy looks.

  • @sitarnut
    @sitarnut 8 лет назад +9

    Stefan, I cannot thank you enough for putting this gem up for all to see. What a wonderful look back.. that studio is out -o sight! …Jasmine is the cats, and we and the Mouse lived. I'd rather see this and British rail Locomotives than all the new soulless junk. Bon chance.

  • @ron101346
    @ron101346 Год назад +1

    For mid-40s television, it sure beats Milton Berle's mugging on our side of the pond!

  • @Onlymusical
    @Onlymusical 12 лет назад +3

    Christ, I had no idea. She was hugely famous during my own childhood but no one here in America knew that her first career had even existed, although her name came up ten times a day the year that "Downtown" hit the charts here.

  • @DavidCase-ov5uo
    @DavidCase-ov5uo 5 месяцев назад

    How wonderful to have watched TV without incessant ads and banal deafening background “music” which ruin documentaries today.

  • @joncn005
    @joncn005 3 года назад +2

    Now I'm watching this on my computer.

  • @anthonymoralee454
    @anthonymoralee454 7 лет назад +13

    Beautiful voice.
    Crystal clear pronunciation.

  • @didiask4485
    @didiask4485 3 года назад +2

    Broadcast: 7th June 1946

  • @DennisMathias
    @DennisMathias 10 месяцев назад

    You've done us all a great favor by preserving this presentation. Great!

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh 11 лет назад +70

    It's amusing - in a pathetic way - to read a comment here about "wonderful" this time was, "before the insanity we suffer from today". Seriously?!
    World War II had ended the year before this film was made, in which at least 50 MILLION people had died, most under horrific conditions. The suffering was on a scale which is unbelievable today. And despite the happy people seen in this movie, Britain would still be undergoing great hardships for years to come. "Wonderful"? NO.

    • @leocomerford
      @leocomerford 4 года назад +3

      The winter of that year was a corker: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_of_1946%E2%80%9347_in_the_United_Kingdom .

    • @theprogressiveatheist7024
      @theprogressiveatheist7024 3 года назад +1

      But the SJWs had yet to destroy western civilization, don't you know?

    • @pcno2832
      @pcno2832 3 года назад

      @@theprogressiveatheist7024 Europe was almost destroyed by a mad man put in power by the effects of the vengeful reparations imposed on Germany after WWI, a mad man who said, as quoted by Albert Speer, "The Is--- too would have been much more compatible to us than Christianity. Why did it have to be Christianity with its meekness and flabbiness?" Well, 80 years later, the Is---, with its dedication to a 7th century mad man whose behavior was remarkably similar to that of the guy who almost destroyed Europe, is gaining more power and influence each year. How much progress has really been made and how long will you continue to feel so smug about the future of your "progressive atheism"?

    • @vancouverman4313
      @vancouverman4313 3 года назад +2

      @@pcno2832 Why is it that some people can't look at a variety program broadcast over a new technology in 1946 without getting into the politics of WW2? It's time to stop picking at scabs and get over something that ended 75 years ago.

    • @smadaf
      @smadaf 2 года назад +1

      Is it possible for some things to get worse while others get better? Is it possible that sometimes the meaning of getting worse and the meaning of getting better are matters of opinion?

  • @fijnvrij
    @fijnvrij 11 лет назад +11

    Ah, she was Elisabeth Welch, African-American Father, Irish mother. Lived until 2003.

    • @lizzieallen2284
      @lizzieallen2284 Год назад

      Father of African & Native American Indian descent; mother Scots & Irish

  • @alisdairmclean8605
    @alisdairmclean8605 11 месяцев назад +2

    I just wonder whether the cigarette smoke from the technicians interfered with the signal.

    • @DaveColes
      @DaveColes 11 месяцев назад +1

      I think they all must have been issued with a Woodbine prior to recording this.

  • @Oxfordclassicjazz
    @Oxfordclassicjazz 9 лет назад +11

    Delightful...amazing how as the technology has become streamlined and superior by far, the quality of entertainment has gone down hill...sign up that girl right away!

    • @Travalma
      @Travalma 8 лет назад +2

      +Oxfordclassicjazz Well said! :)

    • @neville132bbk
      @neville132bbk 3 года назад

      an aside,,, I am impressed also by the visual clarity and quality of the recorded programme

  • @nathanmoser1
    @nathanmoser1 11 лет назад +4

    The sound quality is superb for a film this old- The soundtrack must have had magnetic tape?-

    • @andyhowlett2231
      @andyhowlett2231 4 года назад +1

      Very much doubt it. Magnetic tape recording was a German thing and wasn't even seen here until after the war and not developed until the late 40's. Probably a standard optical track.

  • @dynahzm
    @dynahzm 4 месяца назад

    youtube only accepted 10 minutes of video in 2010? we can upload up to an entire 24 hours now!

  • @tomweiss7198
    @tomweiss7198 7 лет назад +4

    Why have I not heard of that knockout singer Elizabeth Welch until just now ? Goes to show that fame requires more then just being super talented. At least she was properly promoted on this video. Also did not know that she sang Stormy Weather , one of my all time favorites.

    • @esmeephillips5888
      @esmeephillips5888 3 года назад

      Yesrs later, she sang it at the end of Derek Jarman's film of 'The Tempest', accompanied by a camp chorus of sailors. It was her signature tune.

    • @lizzieallen2284
      @lizzieallen2284 Год назад

      Read Stephen Bourne's fabulous biography Elisabeth Welch: Soft Lights & Sweet Music (Scarecrow Press, 2005)

  • @grahamroberts1442
    @grahamroberts1442 5 лет назад +1

    Just wonderful iconoclastic historical material, we must save for ever. Graham Roberts

  • @clemstevenson
    @clemstevenson 10 лет назад +9

    Only 17 years before Doctor Who :-)

    • @ewaf88
      @ewaf88 10 лет назад +1

      He was there!

    • @clemstevenson
      @clemstevenson 10 лет назад +2

      ewaf88 Yes, it's that timey-wimey, wibbly-wobbly stuff again. The Doctor probably visited the 1946 studio in 1981 by mistake, whilst trying to download a Times newspaper from 2003. He had tried to generate a time data corridor, in order to access the internet from 1981. But it went wrong.

    • @ewaf88
      @ewaf88 7 лет назад

      1. That's the name of the television program
      2. The Doctor is part of a race called the Time Lords
      3. Time And Relative Dimensions in Space (It can travel through time and space) Current shape a blue UK Police box
      4. Not sure what you mean by Fully Functions in this context.
      5 It began in 1963 and so far 835 episodes

  • @tripjet999
    @tripjet999 3 года назад +5

    My uncle managed a television control room back in the 1960s. The few smokers who were hired were sent outside to get their tobacco-drug fix, since the toxic tobacco smoke damaged bodies and equipment.

    • @DoctorKamino
      @DoctorKamino Год назад

      You seem like an unpleasant person

    • @BavonWW
      @BavonWW 11 месяцев назад

      No, not bodies and ALL smoke damages early equipment. At that time doctors advertised cigarettes and asthma sufferers got cigarettes on the NHS to help.
      Stop living in a dream.

  • @ChristopherSobieniak
    @ChristopherSobieniak 11 лет назад

    The real different I usually see is in the differences in how TV was used initially. The UK of course saw it as a public service, and thus how the BBC was structured, while America saw entrepreneurial commercialism attached and that flourished more.

  • @altfactor
    @altfactor 11 лет назад +4

    A "Mickey Mouse" cartoon was telecast by the BBC on September 1, 1939, but there is a dispute as to whether the BBC abruptly went off the air in the middle of the cartoon.
    Other accounts suggested the cartoon aired to conclusion, and that the "Beeb" didn't sign-off until a short time later,m when it's afternoon schedule of telecasts had ended.
    Supposedly, the "Mickey Mouse" episode was included when the BBC resumed telecasts in 1946.
    London was the only British city with TV until about 1949.

  • @DL-kc8fc
    @DL-kc8fc 3 года назад +1

    From 02:18 to 02:33, the already well-known film trick of image in image was used. Probably to make it look good on film. The other presentations of the TV screen are already in order.

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines 13 лет назад +1

    ....in Britain, the fledgling BBC television service was suspended, at the start of World War II in Europe, on September 1, 1939...and did not sign on again until September 1, 1946. This film attempted to recapture the anticipation when BBC-TV finally went back on the air. Note: all TV images in this film were "simulated".

    • @esmeephillips5888
      @esmeephillips5888 Год назад +1

      BBC TV resumed in July 1946, not September. The first evening was the night before London's Victory Parade, for which an ambitious remote broadcast was put on air.

  • @jonhoughton372
    @jonhoughton372 5 лет назад +2

    The Mickey Mouse cartoon wasn't interrupted, it ran to the end, believed to be because the BBC didn't want to frighten the younger viewers and anyway, a few seconds wouldn't stop Mr Hitler would it?

  • @MrWEWE5
    @MrWEWE5 12 лет назад +1

    WHAT ARE THOSE BELLS CALLED AT 0:04?

  • @akilmoore
    @akilmoore 28 дней назад

    the way they pronounce television and talk quick paced

  • @ChristopherSobieniak
    @ChristopherSobieniak 10 лет назад +1

    "Television use to be 3 channels and free"
    Although in the UK, and even to this day you still have to pay a license fee annually to operate a TV set.

    • @Pauldjreadman
      @Pauldjreadman 10 лет назад +3

      Television was never free, In the documentry i just saw and i know from what i have been told, you paid £1 a week or in some cases put money in the back of a TV. There is no such thing as free. Somewhere, things are being paid for

    • @ewaf88
      @ewaf88 10 лет назад +4

      Yes but it makes the BBC channels ad free - and costs less than one month's subscription to SKY which is so full of them some of the programs are unwatchable.

    • @julianhanc8272
      @julianhanc8272 3 года назад +1

      In analogue was 2 BBC channels and 3 commercial channels

  • @CB-RADIO-UK
    @CB-RADIO-UK 11 лет назад

    Did everyone in the back rooms smoke all the time or just when the camrea's were turned on ?

  • @davidstein1376
    @davidstein1376 23 дня назад

    Delightful!

  • @marshalltherion
    @marshalltherion 7 лет назад

    Reasons to be cheerful....part one....luvin it....

  • @theprogressiveatheist7024
    @theprogressiveatheist7024 3 года назад +1

    What are those spots on her tongue at 7:31?

  • @BungKanKid
    @BungKanKid 12 лет назад

    The Song is Cambridge Chimes from the (Now) Elizabeth II Tower aka Big Ben. Specifically, the Big Bell is the actual "Big Ben" and the little bells are Westminster Quarters, I think. Ah, the stuff you learn during the Olympics

  • @djhutcherson6761
    @djhutcherson6761 4 года назад +4

    When this was filmed, there were still people around who were alive during the Civil War! 😮

    • @WedgePee
      @WedgePee 4 года назад +1

      Britain's oldest person then, Sarah Fitt, was A HUNDRED AND SEVEN!

    • @jeffjefferson1503
      @jeffjefferson1503 4 года назад +2

      wow, they lived to fight in a war that happened 300 years before this broadcast?

    • @WedgePee
      @WedgePee 4 года назад +2

      @@jeffjefferson1503 He meant the American Civil War.

    • @djhutcherson6761
      @djhutcherson6761 4 года назад +1

      @@jeffjefferson1503 yes I meant the American Civil War which took place from 1861 to 1865.

    • @djhutcherson6761
      @djhutcherson6761 3 года назад +1

      @@R_Jackson yeah I think you're right. 🙂

  • @georgefranklin8905
    @georgefranklin8905 8 лет назад

    Who's the singer at 6:00? - the first song on this historic broadcast is St Louis Blues - followed by Stormy Weather!

  • @jerryg50
    @jerryg50 10 лет назад +4

    Compared to today, television equipment was terribly large and consumed a lot of power in relation to the quality of pictures and sound that could be reproduced.
    With today's equipment the total production would be a lot simpler, much lower in cost, and the quality of reproduction would be hugely superior. The technology has come a long way!

    • @RatPfink66
      @RatPfink66 4 года назад

      And the mystique has dropped to zero, or less.

  • @LaptopLarry330
    @LaptopLarry330 11 лет назад +1

    I believe they are called the "Westminster Chimes".

  • @jacksugden8190
    @jacksugden8190 4 года назад +1

    This is now 2020, and I would be 79 if born in 1941, if they could have seen the mess now in 2020 at the bbc of it’s own making, the service should have used a crystal ball instead.

  • @ferociousgumby
    @ferociousgumby 8 лет назад

    How many parts does this HAVE?

    • @robertm2000
      @robertm2000 3 года назад

      As many as it takes to present the whole program! When this was put on RUclips, they had a limit of 10 minutes per uploaded segments, so to get a full hour and a half on RUclips you'd have to edit the program into 7 or 8 segments and upload each one separately.

  • @effyleven
    @effyleven 9 лет назад +8

    Amazing how much SMOKING was going on in the backstage zones...the smoke, ashes and tobacco litter must have made the workplace stink!

    • @Blubatt
      @Blubatt 9 лет назад

      ahh yes, the smell of tobacco, film, and paedophillia. And a scent of industrial uproar every now and then. BBC was the bee's knees

    • @ForeverVachon
      @ForeverVachon 8 лет назад +2

      +Ben Attwood There weren't pedos or gays in the 1940's because they didn't have widespread drug use back then.

    • @effyleven
      @effyleven 8 лет назад +2

      The Phoenix Hmmm.... You think tobacco isn't a drug? (strange) And I should imagine paedophilia was about as prevalent in the past as it is now ... (we just didn't hear about it very much). I am also puzzled that you see a connection with drugs.... ?

    • @effyleven
      @effyleven 8 лет назад +1

      The Phoenix ughh!! What a nasty piece of work YOU are...!! (You are ignored)

    • @rodmunch69
      @rodmunch69 6 лет назад +1

      You know who didn't have people smoking around him in the workplace, that would be Adolf Hitler, literally the worlds first anti-smoking NAZI.

  • @calvinforcejr2382
    @calvinforcejr2382 Год назад

    I do have to say that Great Britain had Television Way before the United States did. And that's the truth.

    • @pegasusactua2985
      @pegasusactua2985 Месяц назад

      Not true, we were demonstrating TV as a technology since at least 1926 and the first successful experimental TV drama was The Queens Messenger which was broadcast in New York in 1928. Most of the technology that kickstarted the tech was invented in the 1920s by a teenager from Idaho.

  • @TheSason666
    @TheSason666 4 года назад +3

    And they have no videorecorder back then until late 50s!

    • @RatPfink66
      @RatPfink66 4 года назад +1

      Only in 1947 did the Beeb put kinescope recording into operation. Even that - just filming an image off a tv tube - took tremendous time and effort to engineer.

    • @esmeephillips5888
      @esmeephillips5888 Год назад

      If the BBC had retained Baird's 'intermediate film' process from the 1936-37 trial, far more original programing would have survived. As it was, all the 17.5mm film (standard gauge split in two) was melted down for its silver content.

  • @gustavoceballos5327
    @gustavoceballos5327 8 месяцев назад

    After World War II ended, the television broadcast returned in 1946

    • @SundaeExpress
      @SundaeExpress 7 месяцев назад

      As explained in the video description, lol

  • @paulmason8352
    @paulmason8352 6 лет назад +4

    Elexarndra Pelass.

  • @garyfrancis6193
    @garyfrancis6193 5 месяцев назад

    It’ll never catch on.

  • @Davyfb75
    @Davyfb75 5 лет назад +2

    Some of the act date from the original demonstration film of 1936. I t is just coming up to 80 years since my father purchased our first television set. I watched the film a lot. Little did I know thanks to Adolf eventually I spent my working life in Television .

  • @SantiagoRevecoLepeReborn
    @SantiagoRevecoLepeReborn 4 года назад +1

    Television. Who can afford these things?

  • @Harp4803
    @Harp4803 5 лет назад +1

    How many televisions were at people’s homes at the time. Apparently this film was shown at the cinema. To prepare the public of what was to come. Know the British be the most advanced at the time to transmit transmissions.📺

    • @martinhughes2549
      @martinhughes2549 4 года назад

      Bit late here, my understanding was there was 15,000 TV licenses in 1939 before the service was suspended. So about 15,000 ish receivers possibly.

    • @esmeephillips5888
      @esmeephillips5888 Год назад

      ​@@martinhughes2549 The figure usually given was 20,000 sets reaching c. 60,000 home viewers at the 1939 closedown. Sales were beginning to take off, and costs falling, when Herr Hitler crashed the party.

  • @farhannaufal9409
    @farhannaufal9409 4 года назад +1

    Will like television 2019

  • @Lockemeister
    @Lockemeister 11 лет назад +1

    Petula Clark shows up in part 5 !

  • @FreeBird-ws2ye
    @FreeBird-ws2ye 6 лет назад +1

    Before Beatles

  • @Pauldjreadman
    @Pauldjreadman 10 лет назад +2

    In regards to quality, this is film, a recording. Depends on the transmissions quality. Sometimes it is different, Its kind of the same comparison with Video tapes and TV broadcasts, video is always inferier. Depends on the quality back then

  • @BavonWW
    @BavonWW 11 месяцев назад

    Get those wooden dancers, Daddyo! Only the Afro lady's singing is doing good.

  • @FaerieCrone
    @FaerieCrone 11 лет назад

    Probably all the time back then.

  • @LaptopLarry330
    @LaptopLarry330 11 лет назад +2

    The makeup crew may have put on a lot of makeup to make her "pass for being white". I believe that the woman that was singing was black. She looks somewhat like a cross between Anita Baker and Alicia Keys.

  • @bluegrassbarry
    @bluegrassbarry 8 лет назад +1

    that's entertainment.

  • @LaptopLarry330
    @LaptopLarry330 11 лет назад

    I don't know about the UK, but in the US in the mid-20th Century, half of the adult population were smokers (male and female).

  • @rolandcolyer5199
    @rolandcolyer5199 3 года назад +1

    ark never lived this one down!

  • @altfactor
    @altfactor 11 лет назад

    Didn't Jasmine Bligh work as an announcer on BBC Radio while the TV service was shut down??
    With so many male staffers off to war, Ms. Bligh may well have been on radio during the war, returning to TV when it was resumed.

  • @johnthefinn
    @johnthefinn 8 лет назад +15

    Early television seems to have been powered by nicotine. The pipe or ciggy in nearly every mouth looks as dated as the technology.

    • @clarissamcpigeon7857
      @clarissamcpigeon7857 8 лет назад +4

      Even in the very early 1970s you would see people smoking in the studio. I've seen late 1960s gameshows with people casually puffing away during the action.

    • @RatPfink66
      @RatPfink66 4 года назад

      Everything consumable was rationed for years after the war - including smokes of course, but they at least cut your craving for food.

  • @farhannaufal9409
    @farhannaufal9409 4 года назад +1

    Its from bbc world news documentary 2019

  • @Onlymusical
    @Onlymusical 12 лет назад

    Petula Clark!!! God, she's appearing somewhere here in NYC right now, I think.

  • @mollyfilms
    @mollyfilms 5 лет назад +1

    Sadly they all died of lung cancer.

  • @georgestrum3478
    @georgestrum3478 8 лет назад

    Well we have the British Lena Horne and Fred Astaire.

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines 13 лет назад +1

    There had been commercial television in New York as early as July 1941, when NBC's experimental station W2XBS became "WNBT", and CBS' W2XAB was officially licensed as "WCBW" (and DuMont's W2XVW eventually became "WABD"), but the beginning of World War II drastically curtailed all three to just a few hours a week {mostly for Civil Defense and "military" programming}, until just before the war ended. Then, TV stations and set ownership slowly began to expand across the United States...

    • @trevordance5181
      @trevordance5181 3 года назад +1

      The BBC television service actually commenced in 1936, but closed down in 1939 when WW2 broke out. It restarted in 1946.

    • @semiramisbonaparte1627
      @semiramisbonaparte1627 2 года назад +1

      Germany had television before everyone

  • @peterdilworth3110
    @peterdilworth3110 2 года назад

  • @farhannaufal9409
    @farhannaufal9409 4 года назад +1

    Doctor who 2019

  • @EnergeticWaves
    @EnergeticWaves 5 лет назад +2

    guys smoking lol

  • @ronaldhall1237
    @ronaldhall1237 5 лет назад +2

    It was better entertainment then than it is now.

  • @JENDALL714
    @JENDALL714 5 лет назад +1

    I noticed the credits listed a Petula Clark, probably not the singer.

  • @fijnvrij
    @fijnvrij 11 лет назад

    Well aren't you just fucking charming.

  • @johnking5174
    @johnking5174 5 лет назад +3

    Typical BBC Television Service schedule for Wednesday 28th August 1946 - that is 72 years to this day, as I type this on Tuesday 28th August 2018:
    11.00am until 12.10pm - Demonstration Film, specially designed to demonstrate television to shoppers in the high street during the mid morning.
    3.00pm - Tour of the Zoo, Freddy Grisewood assists viewers
    3.30pm until 4.00pm - Sidney Lipton and his orchestra perform for the viewers
    8.30pm - Tour of the Zoo, same programme line up which aired at 3.00pm
    8.45pm - Entre Nous, an intimate revue with Avril Angers, Mario Lorenzi and more
    9.15pm - Guest Night - A G Street invites well know sports personalities to his home
    9.40pm - Cartoon Film
    9.45pm - Composer at the Piano - Vivian Ellis
    10.00pm - The News in sound only
    10.10pm - Closedown
    So only 3 hours, 50 minutes of television that day.

  • @iwanyagwakiya8048
    @iwanyagwakiya8048 2 года назад

    Again?????? 🤔

  • @spottydog4477
    @spottydog4477 12 лет назад +1

    I miss chics with sniffy voices..........

  • @QuaaludeCharlie
    @QuaaludeCharlie 11 лет назад

    boogie woogie sent me Here ! :) QC

  • @Thomass7586
    @Thomass7586 10 лет назад +1

    Television use to be 3 channels and free. Now its thousands of channels of nothing but crap that they charge for. R.I.P. Boob Tube.

  • @martynewport
    @martynewport 10 месяцев назад

    wow women were so slim and beautiful. I guess less food is better for society health...

  • @SundaeExpress
    @SundaeExpress 7 месяцев назад

    And then Jimmy Savile came along and ruined it 🥴

  • @peterlustig4047
    @peterlustig4047 4 года назад

    Trannywood Land 😎😍

  • @miisu111
    @miisu111 Год назад

    Probably looted from Germany that equipment

  • @cathydowns5442
    @cathydowns5442 10 месяцев назад

    All the smoking people! Funny...