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It’s
a very Black and White World… It’s the
height of Martins’ independent lavishness, with new and colourful branches
being opened all over the country. The
UK is in the grip of World Cup Fever, as the tournament is about to be hosted
at Wembley stadium! England swings like a pendulum do (according to the
song), you get a whopping 8% on your savings, and it seems just about anything,
including swapping your toothpaste carton for a steak knife (yes, REALLY) is
possible. Life is just so COLOURFUL – except of course on TV, where the word
“multichannel” has also yet to be invented.
Still, as we settle down in front of the box for the evening of Sunday
10 July 1966, the world is our oyster.
A lucky few have BBC2, although we’ll have to wait until 1967 for
programmes in colour. |
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What’s on… |
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BBC 1 |
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BBC 2 |
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6.50
Songs of Praise 7.25
Perry Mason 8.15
Billy Cotton’s Music Hall 9.00
Thirteen against Fate 10.00
THE NEWS 10.10
The Drinking Party 11.00
World Cup Grandstand 11.45
Meeting point 12.15
Weather & Closedown |
7.00
News Review 7.25
Theatre 625 9.00
Life in the animal world 9.40
The Road to the Isles 10.25
Watch the Birdies 10.50
News Summary 10.55
Late Night Line-Up |
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BBC 1 11.00 World Cup Grandstand: with David Coleman |
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ABC WEEKEND TELEVISION |
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6.55
In View 7.25
The Rifleman 7.55
FILM: Caravan 9.55
News from ITN 10.05
The Blackpool Show 11.05
The Human Jungle Weather
Epilogue
and Closedown |
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BBC 2 9.40 The Road to the Isles: Kenneth McKellar |
ABC 10.05 The Blackpool Show: Terry Hall and Lenny the Lion |
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Images
© Radio Times, TVTimes, TVARK 1966 to date. |
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Children’s Television also lacks colour, but one
or two programmes try at least to capture the imagination – Southern
Television’s “Freewheelers” provides an adventure based serial that lasts
into the early 1970s. Blue Peter,
which started in 1958, keeps our children busy with washing-up liquid bottles
and sticky backed plastic. A new
pretender arrives in the late 1960s, in the form of “Magpie” – (Blue Peter in
all but name), but this is a show that is prepared to ask children for MONEY
(instead of collecting milk bottle tops) when charity fundraising is in the
offing. There are no computers, no
mobile phones, no social networks.
Children actually read BOOKS – “Heidi” is still popular, and “The
Famous Five” (first written of in the 1940s by Enid Blyton) are very busy
dispensing their own brand of middle-class do-gooding…
The ITV Regional borders* are, rather oddly, based
on the layout of the Regional Electricity Boards, which, along with the cookers
and other retail kitchen gadgets sold in their local shops are still
NATIONALISED! Although owned by the
Government, our electrical devices bear individual brand names, such as
Tricity, GEC, Bendix and Electra – a
complex bureaucracy redolent of communist Eastern Europe - to give the idea
of choice. Teenagers have had the pill
since the early 1960s, but NOT using it remains a long term problem, as some
doctors apply an almost Victorian view of who should or should NOT be helped
by contraception – being married and going to church are two things in a
girl’s favour, yet at a time when
freedoms of all kinds are being achieved, religion and class work together
more than ever before to pry into the lives of others. Homosexuality is
illegal for much of the decade, and unmarried mothers can still be locked
away in homes for “fallen women”.
Watch out! Your “sins” will
come back to haunt you! Stereo sound is still a geeky hobby, with stereo reproduction
equipment only sold to a wealthy minority.
All this, and despite a few aborted attempts,
we actually manage to send a man to the moon!
There are waiting lists for mortgages, and to have a telephone in your
home. It’s no wonder the youth of the
late 1960s are crying out for colourful change! *The BBC and ITV Regions still cause problems
today DESPITE digital systems, with anomalies such as tens of thousands of people in Norfolk
receiving programmes from Leeds! M |