Author: Michelle

  • Quite A Big Drop: An Enjoyably Stupid Record By A Band Who Were Just Stupid

    Quite A Big Drop: An Enjoyably Stupid Record By A Band Who Were Just Stupid

    Howard Is Bald” is a record by the notorious grindcore band Anal C*** (as you can guess, those asterisks are not in their full name). Produced in an extremely limited edition of 53 7″ vinyl copies, it was recorded entirely on a boombox while the band were drunk.

    There are no distorted guitars, drums, or typical metal vocals. There aren’t even any over the top offensive song titles or lyrics – which was the band’s main draw (and I don’t feel like copy-pasting any of them here, so you might as well swing by Rateyourmusic for that if you absolutely must). What you actually get is the band singing over various records karaoke style, playing pastiches of other songs using acoustic guitar (and a Casio keyboard preset), and semi-improvised spoken-word comedy.

    The lyrical content of every single one of these tracks is about some bloke called Howard Wulkan, and how he’s bald. That’s basically it. This record is, without any doubt in my mind, the best thing AC (as I’ll be referring to them from now on) ever managed to make.

    Simply from reading the lyrics to this, years before I actually got to hear it, I instantly recognised a very particular mindset. In the comedy sketch track “A Conversation With Howard Wulkan”, lines like “Hey, Howard, I was breathing oxygen today” are the same kind of deadeningly basic and non-starter attempts at heightening comedy that teenage boys use when improvising skits while trying to amuse themselves.

    I can remember people I knew at school indulging in the same kind of dopey banter. I’d sometimes try to join in, and my results were feeble enough to pass. Even the way that the introductory dialogue is spoken and written has that same awkward feel.

    AC were teenage boys who never grew up – they were adolescents well into middle age. They had pretty much no talent other than they could at least sort-of kind-of play guitars and drums, and if it hadn’t had been for the initial hang-on-lads-I’ve-got-an-idea of playing very very fast and incomprehensibly, no one would have ever noticed them in the first place.

    Their music is frequently described as unlistenable. I wouldn’t describe it as that myself, but there are other bands who did the same kind of thing and managed to do it far better. The sole remaining USP of their music was their calculatedly offensive song titles and lyrics. It must be said that those lyrics don’t really count as for the most part they’re not even actually sung in any given track, and are merely printed in the lyric sheet to pointlessly flesh out the title’s conceit in much the same way as an article from The Onion does for a headline from The Onion.

    When we attempt to take the music on their other utterly useless records on their own merits, it doesn’t match up to other groups in roughly the same field. Compare the majority of their stuff to actual grindcore bands, or for that matter “noisecore” groups, of which I prefer the latter. (Noisecore is best described as basically being pure chaos in metal / punk form.) Here’s a good example from Seven Minutes Of Nausea:

    Secondly, the legendary Japanese group The Gerogerigegege, who are my personal gold standard for this kind of thing (when that band was being a noisecore band rather than making sound collages of piano and homeless people talking, or gluing octopus tentacles to cassette sleeves, which I also really like):

    Full discolosure: I have a copy of this.

    (Now, I know some people are going to get angry about me comparing grindcore and noisecore in an article about a grindcore band. My response is: I do not care.)

    There’s something vital (and in Gero’s case, genuinely loopy) about those acts that’s missing from AC. Seven Minutes Of Nausea have a really strange sound for an extreme metal album in that particular record: scrappy and barely-distorted guitar twinned with a drummer falling down several flights of stairs. Meanwhile, the Gerogerigegege appear to be attempting to beat up their own instruments. On other Gero releases, they appear to be recording a jet engine at full throttle beside a Casio drum machine. By comparison, AC’s albums are just standard grindcore with titles informing the listener that something is “gay”.

    But in the case of “Howard Is Bald”, all this doesn’t matter, as it’s something quite different – it’s a bunch of people yelling into a cassette recorder while a disco record plays in the background. It’s terrible, but a fascinating and enjoyable kind of terrible, a terrible that anyone who had a Walkman with a record button in the 80s or 90s (and happened to be either a child or teenager) will recognise.

    This record is exactly like those old cassette tapes of friends just dicking about that you may have made in the distant past. In-jokes, singing over records, shrieking, yelling, banging on nearby instruments, poor quality comedy sketches. It’s the kind of stuff I was recording between the ages of about 3 to 16 (though the stuff I did had way more attempts at ripping off Monty Python).

    Freed from having to produce some kind of actual original music, and with their shittier impulses taking a back seat for once, AC created a particularly fine example of a messing-around-on-a-cassette, made by overgrown teenagers. And compared with the hum-drum nastiness that makes up the rest of their output, it’s a shining gem in a minefield of dog turds.

    This record presents the band, and especially frontman Seth Putnam, at their most okay-as-a-person-esque. Which is to say, they still all sound like a bunch of bell-ends, but it’s a type of bell-endry that is acceptable, even fun. They’re taking the piss out of someone who presumably didn’t give a shit about it and who would just laugh back at them, and all over something as childish as the deathless lyrical theme of “ha ha bald”.

    It’s way easier to deal with than the jokes on their other records; the ones that reveal how much the men who made them subconsciously fear women, and how much they fear minorities, and all the other things they fear because they’re too thick to figure out how society managed to fuck their minds up so thoroughly and completely. (And that sound you heard just then was the noise of certain types scrambling to the comments section, discovering I’ve turned all the comments off, and proceeding to seethe.)

    Yeah, they did have some kind of self-awareness (after a long, long string of songs called “[thing they hated] Is Gay”, they released a song called something like “Being In Anal Cunt Is Gay”), but they weren’t self-aware enough to realise the moral considerations and the difficulties of the tightrope you walk when you make such “gags”. It’s a lesson that a lot of American stand up comedians seem unwilling to learn.

    It’s possible to make these kind of near the knuckle gags in such a way that ultimately lampoon and puncture the dreadfulness of the times you live in. For one example, the comedian and satirist Chris Morris made plenty of jokes that were beyond the pale in his various programmes and radio shows, but they were always tied to a fiercely moral outlook. With AC, such vile thoughts are used purely to generate a basic “ha-ha-they’re-different” laugh, and as a result they don’t get to get away with that.

    Such twattishness is not entirely absent from this record – other than their sublimated horror at hair loss, the impression of Wesley Willis is possibly a bit dubious in the context of its producers. But for the most part, it’s easy to deal with. Like I said, it’s just a bunch of overgrown boys titting about. And it’s far more interesting to listen to than all their usual dopey blurs of sound. Anyway, there ends the sermonising.

    Apparently the reason why only 53 copies of this record were made was that, according to frontman Seth Putnam, “it sucked so bad”. I beg to differ – it was the nearest he came to creating his band’s equivalent of “Revolver” or “Sgt. Pepper”. Well, maybe more “Live! at the Star-Club in Hamburg, Germany; 1962”.

    Seth Putnam himself succumbed to illness after a long period of ill-health, and the band instantly fell apart when he died. Their long time guitarist, who had been with the band on-and-off since 1996 until their Putnam-croaking finale, went out in decidedly more spectacular fashion. From People Magazine, in 2018:

    A 45-year-old man lost his balance and fell to his death at a Rhode Island mall on Monday night.

    The man plunged to his death shortly after he was seen “clowning around and riding the rail of the escalator” a witness told authorities, according to a police report obtained by WPRI.

    The man — who was later identified as Josh Martin, a veteran guitarist from the Massachusetts grindcore scene, by Pitchfork — fell from Providence Place Mall’s second floor around 10:45 p.m.

    Martin landed in the mall’s food court, slamming his head on a table. He was treated for head trauma at the scene and was transported to Rhode Island Hospital by paramedics, where he was later pronounced dead, WPRI reports.

    The Providence Police Department did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request to confirm Martin’s identity as the victim.

    “It’s quite a big drop,” Providence Police Maj. David Lapatin told WPRI. “Anybody who has been to the Providence Place mall in the food court, you see the two escalators going up to the movie theater and Dave & Buster’s, you know how high that is.”

    From what I recall reading at the time, his last words were: “Hey, check this out!”.


    The record discussed here can be heard on this Youtube upload. An earlier version of this piece was published in 2018.

  • An Obscure Video Game Adaption Of Neighbours (And An Obscure Bit Of Video Game Magazine History)

    An Obscure Video Game Adaption Of Neighbours (And An Obscure Bit Of Video Game Magazine History)

    There are not one, not two, but three entire games based around the Australian soap Neighbours. Also, only the first one is licensed!

    One of those unlicensed games was a freeware Amiga point-and-click game, which has recently got a bit of attention online for the sheer oddness of it existing. (You can see the full story here.) The other one has been mostly forgotten about, apart from a few playthroughs and things on Youtube. We’ll be looking at the latter in this post.


    A Nightmare On Robinson Street

    Release Year: 1990
    Format: Sinclair ZX Spectrum
    Developers / Distributors: Players Software / Your Sinclair

    Apparently retitled due to copyright worries, Nightmare On Ramsey Robinson Street is basically a quick asset flip done for the benefit of the popular computer magazine Your Sinclair. Players Software simply took one of their existing titles – “LA Drugs Bust” – and cut out loads of levels, redid the graphics, and considered the job a good’un. The whole thing was given away on a free tape which came with the February 1990 issue of Your Sinclair.

    This is a first-person 2D “gallery” shooter, modelled on arcade games of the time like Operation Wolf. Instead of killing, I dunno, “commies”, you must shoot very very slightly disguised renditions of the cast of Britain’s favourite Australian soap (yeah, up yours Home & Away!). In the context of the early 90s, this made some kind of cultural sense as not everyone was a fan of the show. The coders at Players Software were clearly among that group, as indeed was Victor Lewis-Smith (at a minute into the video below):

    When you boot the game up (which is designed to work with 48K models for maximum compatibility, backward compatibility fans), we get a loading screen which advertises someone’s Speccy fanzine (“Sinclair Fan”, which I can’t find on archive.org, but maybe you can?) and their upcoming game – Joe Blade 3.

    Joe Blade was a weirdly anonymous yet quite popular Spectrum action game, which was popular because it was a cheap title with decent graphics (by Speccy standards). In it you controlled a cartoony Jesse Ventura-a-like, and you ran around kicking people in the head to collect points, which came in the form of those blow-up numbers you get now for spelling out someone’s age on their birthday. You also had to defuse bombs that were in dustbins for some reason by matching icons that looked like they came from The Krypton Factor. And there were all these old blokes in macs who didn’t bother you, but you could kill anyway, who wandered around the levels seemingly trying to find sex workers. That is the end of my elaboration on Joe Blade 3.

    So when you start the game proper, you get the following scrolling message at the bottom:

    YOUR WORST NIGHTMARE OR YOUR ULTIMATE FANTASY – WELCOME TO “A NIGHTMARE ON ROBINSON STREET” – WRITTEN BY SIMON HOBBS FROM AN ORIGINAL IDEA BY SIMON DANIELS – CLEAN UP THE NEIGHBOURHOOD BY ELIMINATING THE VARIOUS PERSONALITIES – FLEET STREET REPORTERS AND STUDIO TECHNICIANS – THEN GO ON TO FACE THE TERRIBLE END OF LEVEL GUARDIAN

    This is then followed by a long sales pitch for their games (in which the prices are written out in a really weird way – “Nine-ninety-nine”, without even a pound sign?) and then they ask… you written any good games lately? You could contact them about your wares by calling a phone number which I would say was now a sex chat line if such things still existed, but I don’t think they do.

    And then you go into the game itself… and it’s a really crap, quickly knocked out version of Operation Wolf or whatever. Quelle surprise. The celebs you shoot are obviously meant to be poor old Kylie and Jason – the latter of which helpfully has a “J” on his shirt because they weren’t confident in the graphics alone – plus some random smiling nerd (?), cameramen walking down the street, and paparazzi popping up from behind background fences to take photos of, erm… endless clones of Kylie and Jason shooting people who then get murdered themselves? If you’d shown pictures like that to Kelvin McKenzie in the distant pre-AI-slop days of 1990, he’d have gone insane in much the same manner as the protagonist of a Lovecraft story.

    (Oh, and you lose points if you shoot Bouncer, which is the one thing about this scenario that makes sense.)

    Despite the lack of overall effort, it’s notable for simply existing – being distributed nationwide with a popular computer magazine as a weird sort of advert that happens to involve murdering multiple Jason Donovans in cold blood. Oddly, this silly throwaway game fits into a curious sub-sub-sub genre of UK gaming, mostly forgotten, and mostly having nothing to do with Charlene Mitchell or Scott Robinson. It slots in between another couple of free magazine games from Your Sinclair, and their rival Sinclair User.

    Like many 8-bit UK game magazines of the time, YS would frequently give away cover-mounted audio cassettes containing demos of upcoming games and “Exclusive” games, which tended to be shite you’d play for a few minutes and then go back to the demo of the better game on the other side.

    (Later on, the same magazines started re-publishing older, formerly full-price games and triggered a major crisis within 8-bit side of the British games industry… but that’s outside the scope of this article.)

    In their November 1988 issue, Sinclair User gave away a game on their free cover tape called Bear A Grudge. This was a quick and simplistic version of Space Harrier, a popular Sega arcade game that also served as the launch title for the Mega Drive. You piloted the “Kamikaze Bear” – an ideologically dubious teddy bear character who was the half-arsed and boringly realized mascot of Sinclair User – and blew away digitised versions of the cartoon caricatures of the magazine’s staff.

    Or at least, you tried to, but you could only shoot one bullet at a time, and pressing fire again would automatically “cancel” that bullet out and create a new one. And as pointed out by one reviewer on Spectrum Computing, this means that “when you’re autofiring it means you’re shooting entirely blanks!”. And everything else about the game, aside from the music, was awful as well.

    You’re the worst character ever, “Kam”.

    The most notable aspect of the game is the use of digitised versions of the cartoon drawings of the staff, which Sinclair User, er, used instead of photos. Interestingly, YS also did the whole cartoons-instead-of-photos thing for their staff as well. (I don’t know if YS or Sinclair User came up with it first, but it must be noted that late period Sinclair User crudely fashioned themselves on the younger upstart YS from around 1987 onwards). With all that in mind, enter one Damien Scattergood, a young programmer from Ireland.

    Damien was responsible for “YS Capers”, which was produced the best part of two years later. Whether it was a deliberate attempt on Damien’s part to better the woeful Sinclair User attempt isn’t clear. It’s another game following in the steps of Operation Wolk and its ilk, and is much the same as “Robinson Street”, only with actual effort put into it. And like that Space Harrier clone, Damien digitised YS’s own cartoon versions of their writers for sprites. He sent it into the magazine, and they decided it was good enough to put on the cover-mounted “Smash Tape”.

    The fact that in both games you’re killing the staff of your favourite computer magazine is, of course, a deeply odd one. (The same endlessly respawning / Kelvin McKenzie-maddening thing also happens here, as an unavoidable aspect of the gameplay.) To their credit, YS brought up the confusing unwholesomeness of the concept in the instructions:

    It seems (ahem) that we’ve all gone mad you see, and are out to kill you, our dear readers, by shooting out at you from the safety of your TV screens!! (Perish the thought.) Only you can stop us!

    (Above from the July 1990 issue of Your Sinclair)

    To conclude, I do miss the days when video / computer games could do stuff like this – or rather, had the impulse to do so. The days of getting modern versions of the same thing distributed via newsagents up and down the land may be over, but perhaps there’s some kind of modern equivalent on itch.io that isn’t focused around the usual big franchises (which appear to all be dying in any case). Maybe someone – maybe me? – could make an 8-bit adaption of Afternoon Plus With Mavis Nicholson, with the aid of modern tools. Until then, you may want to check the link below.

    Download A Nightmare On Robinson Street
    at Spectrum Computing!
    (Playable in pretty much any ZX Spectrum emulator)

  • The Great Big Utterly Massive 1979 ITV Strike Datablast – Part 3

    The Great Big Utterly Massive 1979 ITV Strike Datablast – Part 3

    Oof! Finally, here we are, with the last installment of dry facts and possibly ill-advised attempts at making light of industrial unrest.

    How were people coping?

    We’ve already seen a few blase opinions from those tourists in the Channel Islands – but what about everyone else? Well, obviously they were watching the Beeb – but they weren’t entirely happy about it.

    What with the strike starting in August, the BBC were sticking stubbornly to their usual summer schedule of repeats and sport. It must be understood that back in 1979, the very act of repeating any TV show for any reason whatsoever would cause The Great British Public to flail around their living rooms screeching like car alarms.

    The idea that not everyone might have seen the original broadcast, and as a result might have wanted another chance to catch something they’d missed (or even if they had seen it and just wanted to watch it again in those pre-Sky-pre-streaming stone age times), never seemed to occur to anyone.

    Indeed, in their twilight years, these would be the same sorts who watched 4:3 aspect ratio television with everything insanely stretched to 16:9 because “we paid for a widescreen telly, and we’re going to use all of it!!!”.

    Nevertheless, a lot of viewers complained that the BBC ought to be putting on something more interesting than the fucking cricket. Of course, the reality of the situation meant BBCs 1 & 2 couldn’t simply be converted to Non-Commercial ITV – as explained by the “Comment” section of the Wolverhampton Express and Star on Wednesday 29th August 1979:

    Leave the Beeb alone! THE BBC has been severely criticised for not “‘plugging the gap”’ during lTV's blackout. Short of opening a new channel or coming in with their own version of Crossroads, it is difficult to see what the Beeb could do without undermining its own schedules, prepared weeks in advance. Had it disrupted existing programmes and altered BBC 2 standards to conform with typical ITV output, it would have been accused of cashing-in and hitting a competitor when he is down. The BBC could not have anticipated the ITV strike and, in any case, it is best left to pursue its own targets without becoming a temporary reflection of ITV.

    So, pretty obvious there. And when the calendar turned to autumn and the BBC ended the repeats, they began showing their own new programmes – which had quite an effect on their overall ratings. With no competition from ITV over September and most of October, BBC1’s ratings went through the roof, out up into the sky, left the atmosphere and probably touched the surface of the moon.

    One of the more notable examples of this was the extraordinary, never-repeated achievement where the first two Doctor Who serials of the Autumn 1979 season – Destiny Of The Daleks and City Of Death – got phenomenal ratings the show has never matched since.

    By the end of the former, ratings had risen to 14.4 million viewers, as calcuated by JICTAR. The last episode of the latter got just over 16 million, a level only achieved this century by a handful of football matches, various government announcements made during the pandemic, and the death of Queen Elizabeth II.

    (For a full in-depth look into Doctor Who’s relation to ITV’s woes at the end of 70s, look at the nicely-titled Doctor Who And The 1979 ITV Strike, which sadly will not get a novelization from Terrence Dicks.)

    A grim addendum

    Before we continue, here’s a bit of business I have to properly address. In the previous part of this series, I mentioned that Yorkshire Televison broadcast a special message in place of the usual blue caption asking for information on the Yorkshire Ripper, then still at large. Well, here it is, shown below for completeness’s sake. It’s taken from Adam Martyn’s video on the ITV strike, which is also well worth watching:

    …Brrrrr. Let’s get back to the matter at hand, as quickly as possible…

    Restarting… a timeline of events from “Everybody out!” to “Welcome home!”

    The first of these articles had a rundown of events leading up to the strike. So it stands to reason to do the same for how ITV crawled out of that massive hole…

    10th September, 1979

    • The intended date of the start of ITV’s 1979 autumn schedule. It comes and goes with people either watching BBC1, BBC2, or listening to the classical music over that apology caption. Or maybe they went to the cinema or a Joy Division gig, who knows?

    21st September

    • ITV management put another offer on the table to the collected unions (to refresh your memory, that’s the ACTT, EEPTU, and NATTKE). ITV declare it to be a “final” offer; reader, it wasn’t.
    • The offer didn’t impress the unions, mainly consisting of ITV’s original offer of 15% now backdated to July, with the additions of a promised further 5% increase the following July, and two other cost-of-living related increases for 1980 and 1981.
    • In return, the unions would have to accept the use of electronic news gathering equipment (also known as ENG). In other words, that would be the increased use of video over film cameras on location.
    • The three unions all decided to hold off from either reccomending or refusing the offer, and put it to their members in a national ballot.
    • Paul Fox, one of the heads of Yorkshire TV and part of the negotionating team, warns everyone that management were willing to start an emergency service, operated by themselves, to transmit the new autumn schedule. (Something like this had happened once before in 1968.)

    24th September

    • The ACTT decides that it won’t recommend the offer. This means EEPTU and NATTKE will follow suit.

    26th / 27th September

    • Following the ACTT’s refusal, everyone else follows suit and the results of the union’s national ballot overwhelmingly turns down ITV’s offer. Once again, no meaningful progress of any kind has been made…

    Late September / Early October

    • The ACTT put forward another claim. This redoubled their original demand, bringing the asked pay rise to 30%, backdated to July. The cost of living rises would be a 1% rise in pay in January 1980, and another 1% rise in July 1980.
    • ITV turns down this offer flat, delcaring it to be “unrealistic”, and stating that such an demand might lead to pay going up to 50%.

    11th October

    • After weeks of deadlock, a major breakthrough occurs when NATTKE settle for a 26.3% pay rise to occur over the following year. EEPTU, who were negoating along with NATTKE, also agree to settle with that deal.

    12th October

    • With the other two unions forcing ACTT’s hand, the ITV companies work out a new pay deal with ACTT. They agree on an increase of pay between 40 to 45% over the following two years, the precise rise to be decided by the increase in cost of living.
    • The ACTT agree to the gradual introduction of ENG, but without any staff being made redundant.
    • Alan Sapper, leader of the ACTT, agrees not to recommend a rejection and puts it to a national ballot.

    12th – 18th (?) October

    • At some point during this period, EEPTU and NATTKE members vote in favour of the agreed deal.

    19th October

    • ACTT members across the country vote four to one in agreeing to the deal. For some reason, the only ITV company whose staff attempt to reject it are at Border Television. This may have been something to do with “Windscale”.
    • The strike was effectively over – now began the rush to get back on screen.

    Sound on, Vision on

    At 12:47PM on 24th October, ITV returned – for about 15 seconds, about five hours ahead of the actual start time. If this sounds like a weird accident, you’d be right.

    A Thames TV supervisor called Laurie Baker happened to be sitting in the announcer’s chair as everyone at Thames was checking the continuity studio’s equipment. Someone somewhere pressed the wrong button, and Mr Baker’s face was briefly transmitted across the entire nation until the wrong button was un-pressed.

    The actual return of ITV happened at approx 5:40PM, later that night.

    …Unless you lived in the Westward region, in which case two days previously you had been treated to a special transmission of the local news programe Westward Diary. The presenters welcomed (…welcomed, welcomed) everyone back well before Laurie Baker’s 15 seconds of fame. Apparently the lighting hadn’t been sorted out at that point, and everything was quite murky.

    The return of ITV, recorded from UNKNOWN REGION

    To give all the ITV regions a little bit of a way to get back into the swing of things, it was decided that the grand re-opening night would be networked directly from London. Thames TV took the honours, and pretended to be just plain old “ITV” that evening, going to the length of adjusting the Thames clock and having one of their senior announcers – Peter Marshall – addressing the entire nation as one big national channel.

    However, some space was left for individual regions to do their thing. Over at HTV, one of their main announcers – possibly either Terry Dyddgen-Jones or Gwyn Parry – opened up services for Wales & The West with a useful explanation of how all the usual programmes were going to get back on-air over the following week, and precisely what was happening that night. An audio recording of this definitely exists, as I’ve heard it… but, erm, I can’t find it anywhere now.

    Over at Yorkshire, they launched with a full YTV start-up, using a new start-up theme and caption that had been intended to debut the previous month:

    It also seems that STV took the same route as HTV that night – but went much further beyond a mere introduction. From the Scotland On Air wiki (which has proved to be an invaluable resource in putting all of this together):

    STV did its own presentation that evening rather than taking the national service. Chief Announcer Tony Currie did the usual start-up at 17:40 before the ITN News at 5.45 and, during the evening, the station had local commercials and voiceover slides. Currie did an in-vision closedown after the film Chinatown.

    And like STV, it seems most other ITV regions also did their own local closedowns.

    One very well-recalled element of this first night back was the “Welcome home to ITV” graphic package, and the close-harmony sung theme. This jingle and promo package had been reportedly put together about a couple of weeks previously, using unaffiliated technicians and talent, in anticpation of having something ready to go after the strike ended.

    It seems to have only been used for at most a week, possibly only a few days – but everyone watching at the time has had the following burnt into their brains for evermore:

    After the rundown of that night’s programmes, which included The Muppet Show, the TV premiere of the movie Chinatown and the first of many, many episodes of 3-2-1 (of which there was a massive backlog), ITV went straight into the News At 5:45. Newscaster Leonard Parkin summed up the mood of everyone watching and working for the channel…

    Good evening, again… it’s good to be back again, so let me simply say, let’s get on with it.

    Epilogue

    There’s a fair bit more that can be written about the 1979 ITV strike. I’m just going to end this on one final little thing.

    Around January 1980 – a date which at one point was theorised to be the potential end of the strike – Heineken put out an advert that must have caused some viewers to have a heart attack when it began.

    The following is from the History Of Advertising Trust – watch below…

  • Twin Peaks on the BBC

    Twin Peaks on the BBC

    David Lynch, as you will now be aware, has passed. By way of a slightly odd attempt at a tribute, here’s all the Radio Times listings involving Lynch’s best-known creation (arguably) across both BBC television and radio that I could find from around the original broadcasts, harvested from BBC Genome.

    As well as the actual original showings of the show itself, I’ve also included some additional current affairs / arts type things which ran features on it. And as usual, I’ve attempted to correct what appear to be scanning and formatting errors.

    All first showings of Season 1 were on a Tuesday on BBC2, at the regular time of 9pm. The same episode would be repeated the following Saturday at varying times – usually between 10 to midnight.

    The second season’s initial broadcasts also began at 9pm on BBC2 with the established Saturday repeats, but as time went on things started to slide a bit, mirroring the dip in interest once Lynch temporarily left to film Wild At Heart. Premiere and repeat slots get switched around, change days and eventually repeats are skipped altogether… until Lynch returned, and we got that final cliffhanger.

    We begin with one of those aforementioned arts programmes:

    Behind the Screen
    Mon 22nd Oct 1990, 14:50 on BBC Two England

    Twin Peaks, a new series directed by David Lynch, begins tomorrow at 9.00pm on BBC2. Behind the Screen previews this gripping story of a murder hunt in small town America. Producer Catherine Elliott-Kemp

    Twin Peaks: 1
    [The above is how it was listed to begin with – the rest drop the episode numbers from the titles]
    Tue 23rd Oct 1990, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The feature-length opening episode of David Lynch and Mark Frost’s acclaimed television series. An offbeat murder-mystery drama about a small town where anyone would want to be.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    “She’s dead. Wrapped in plastic.” The body of Laura Palmer, a beautiful teenage girl, is found by the shoreline in the small lumber town of Twin Peaks, shattering the tranquillity and revealing a host of dark and twisted secrets involving drugs, illicit love, Norwegian property developers, Douglas firs and cherry pie.

    COVER STORY: page 5
    BARRY NORMAN: page 37
    CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Kaleidoscope
    Wed 24th Oct 1990, 16:30 on BBC Radio 4 FM

    Robert Dawson-Scott is at this week’s new films, including the tough picture of American life Goodfellas, and watches David Lynch’s Twin Peaks on BBC1.
    Producer Tessa Watt
    Stereo

    Third Opinion
    Sat 27th Oct 1990, 17:45 on BBC Radio 3

    with Christopher Cook.
    Reviews: Scorsese’s film GoodFellas. John Updike completes the Rabbit quartet. David Lynch’s soap send-up Twin Peaks. Opinions: Waldemar Januszczak, Joan Smith. Features: The Dickens industry: biography and adaptation. Translation for the stage.

    Producers John Boundy, Tim Dee

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 27th Oct 1990, 22:25 on BBC Two England

    A second chance to see the feature-length opening episode of David Lynch and Mark Frost’s acclaimed television series.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    The body of teenager Laura Palmer is found by the shoreline in the small lumber town of Twin Peaks.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 30th Oct 1990, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The mystery continues in the second part of David Lynch’s offbeat drama about a small town where anyone would want to be. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    Further probing into Laura Palmer ‘s murder brings indications of a sordid secret life – but who really knows the truth? Meanwhile, Agent Cooper senses young love in the air, learns about where the fish swim in Twin Peaks and is chastised for doubting the integrity of the local timber.

    Written by Mark Frost and David Lynch
    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 3rd Nov 1990, 22:25 on BBC Two England

    Another opportunity to keep up with events in David Lynch’s offbeat American town.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    2: Further probing into Laura Palmer ‘s murder brings indications of a sordid secret life – but who really knows the truth?

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 6th Nov 1990, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The mystery continues.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    3: Duplicate account ledgers, shady dealings in the woods, a house of ill-repute, a one-armed man and a grief-stricken father jitterbugging into madness. For Agent Cooper, perhaps it’s time to resort to the Tibetan Stone-Throwing Deductive Technique – and dreams.

    Written by Mark Frost and David Lynch
    Director David Lynch
    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 10th Nov 1990, 22:40 on BBC Two England

    Another chance to keep up with events in David Lynch’s off-beat American town.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    3: Duplicate account ledgers, shady dealings in the woods, a house of ill-repute, a one-armed man and a grief-stricken father… so many secrets baffling Agent Cooper.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 13th Nov 1990, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The mystery continues in David Lynch’s soap noir.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean

    4: As the funeral of Laura Palmer turns into a fiasco, Cooper is given a scent of the dead girl’s double life by Audrey Home and learns of the evil lurking in the woods.
    Meanwhile, Josie gets nervous, Norma gets bad news from the State prison and Shelly gets a gun.

    Agent Dale Cooper… Kyle MacLachlan
    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 17th Nov 1990, 22:40 on BBC Two England

    Another opportunity to see last week’s episode of David Lynch and Mark Frost’s acclaimed television series. Starring
    Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    4: As the funeral of Laura Palmer turns into a fiasco, Cooper is given a hint of the dead girl’s double life by Audrey Home and learns of the evil lurking in the woods.
    Meanwhile, Josie gets nervous, Norma gets bad news from the State prison, and Shelly gets a gun.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 20th Nov 1990, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The mystery continues in David Lynch’s offbeat drama about a small town where anyone would want to be.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    5: The psychiatric branch of medicine fails to throw light on Laura Palmer ‘s secrets, but the trail of the one-armed man leads to a feathered friend and a vital clue. Meanwhile, James Hurley is stunned by a familiar face, Cooper finds out that he isn’t the only visionary in town and Audrey Home decides to follow the sweet smell of excess.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 24th Nov 1990, 23:30 on BBC Two England

    Another opportunity to keep up with events in David Lynch’s offbeat American town. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    5: The psychiatric branch of medicine fails to throw light on Laura Palmer’s secrets, but the trail of the one-armed man leads to a feathered friend and a vital clue.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 27th Nov 1990, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The mystery continues in David Lynch’s small-town soap noir. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    6: ‘Three men, two girls… the dark was pressing in… screams…” An unlikely informant brings Cooper and Truman to a cabin in the woods and another clue. As Norma waits for her husband to turn up, Bobby Briggs breaks down, Josie sits in the dark and Audrey goes to work for her special agent.

    Agent Dale Cooper… Kyle MacLachlan
    Written by Mark Frost

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 1st Dec 1990, 23:45 on BBC Two England

    Another opportunity to keep up with events in David Lynch’s offbeat American town. Starring Kyle Maclachlan, Michael Ontkean
    6: An unlikely informant brings Cooper and Truman to a cabin in the woods and another clue. As Norma waits for her husband to turn up, Bobby Briggs breaks down, Josie sits in the dark and Audrey goes to work for her special agent.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 4th Dec 1990, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The mystery continues in David Lynch ‘s soap noir. Starring
    Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    7: For one resident of Twin Peaks, Laura Palmer is brought shockingly back to life, but a talkative witness to her murder is destined to leave blood on the doughnuts. Meanwhile, Cooper goes undercover at One-Eyed Jacks, Audrey gets tongue-tied and Nadine Hurley sees her dreams of riches shattered.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 8th Dec 1990, 21:30 on BBC Two England

    Another chance to see last week’s episode of David Lynch ‘s soap noir. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    7: For one resident Laura Palmer is brought shockingly back to life, but a witness to her murder leaves blood on the doughnuts.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    [And now, a month later, comes the second season…]

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 8th Jan 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The second season’s feature-length opening episode returns to the small town seething with secrets. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    Is that a corpse on the floor in the Great Northern Hotel and has the investigation into Laura Palmer ‘s murder met a premature end? As the local hospital fills up with the victims of an eventful night, other residents of Twin Peaks adopt strange changes in style, a giant dispenses wisdom, and someone sees the face of ‘Bob’.
    Written by Mark Frost Director David Lynch

    ● PICTURE STORY: page 73
    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 12th Jan 1991, 22:45 on BBC Two England

    Another opportunity to see last week’s feature-length opening episode of events in David Lynch’s off-beat town. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    Has the investigation into Laura Palmer ‘s murder met a premature end? After an eventful night, residents of Twin Peaks adopt strange changes in style.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 15th Jan 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s soap noir continues starring
    Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    One-Eyed Jacks becomes a dangerous place for Audrey.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 19th Jan 1991, 22:55 on BBC Two England

    Another opportunity to keep up with events in director David Lynch’s offbeat American town.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean

    The face of ‘Bob’ appears in more nightmares and, while Cooper ponders on increasingly cryptic clues, three friends begin singing out of tune. Two brothers scheme to capitalise on recent events, and One-Eyed Jacks becomes a dangerous place for Audrey.

    (Ceefax subtitles)

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 22nd Jan 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch ‘s soap noir continues. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    Donna meets someone with strange insights, and Cooper has trouble with a vengeful brother. Meanwhile, Lucy gets mad, and Leland pays the price of getting even. page 39)

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 5th Feb 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s offbeat drama about a small American town. Starring Kyle MacLachlan Michael Ontkean
    A mission to rescue Audrey and a plan to steal Laura Palmer’s diary turn into terrifying experiences.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 9th Feb 1991, 22:55 on BBC Two England

    Another opportunity to see last week’s episode starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    A mission to rescue Audrey and a plan to steal Laura Palmer’s diary turn into terrifying experiences.
    Meanwhile, Ben Home is tempted and Bobby and Shelly get ready for Leo’s homecoming.

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 16th Feb 1991, 23:00 on BBC Two England

    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    Homecomings abound as Audrey returns from her ordeal and Leo is guest of honour at a bizarre party. Meanwhile, Cooper’s supervisor arrives with a new, and dangerous, direction for his agent.
    Wntten by Mark Frost
    Director David Lynch

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 19th Feb 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    In tonight’s instalment of David Lynch’s cult murder-mystery, the question is answered. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean

    ● CEEFAX SUBTITLES

    Twin Peaks
    Sun 24th Feb 1991, 00:50 on BBC Two England

    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    As mystic rhymes are recited, as the giant warns that ‘it will happen again’, as Cooper pieces together the fragments of a secret diary, as a cloud of dread hangs over Twin Peaks …the face of Laura Palmer’s killer is revealed.
    Written by Mark Frost
    Director David Lynch

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 19th Mar 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s offbeat drama about a small American town.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    As Twin Peaks celebrates the wedding of the year, Josie is about to discover exactly what widowhood means.

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 26th Mar 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s offbeat soap-opera continues.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan Michael Ontkean
    After the wedding of the year, the honeymoon proves to be decidedly fatal and Dick Tremayne begins to fear that time spent in little Nicky’s company may not be life-enhancing either. Cooper, meanwhile, gets into property and James gets deeper into a dangerous fascination.
    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 2nd Apr 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The mystery continues in David Lynch’s offbeat drama. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    As Ben Home fights past battles, Cooper heads for a showdown with Jean Renault, but a far more dangerous adversary moves ever nearer.

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 16th Apr 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s offbeat drama. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    Actress Diane Keaton directs this episode of the soap noir.
    DRAMA: page 4

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 7th May 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s offbeat drama. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    Break-ups, marriage proposals and new attractions are the order of the day in Twin Peaks.

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 14th May 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s offbeat drama about a small American town.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    A grieving Truman seeks solace in a bottle.

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 21st May 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s offbeat drama about a small American town.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan Michael Ontkean
    While Truman survives a killer’s kiss, mysterious symbols lead Cooper to a cave where the owls may not be what they seem.

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 28th May 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s offbeat drama. Starring Kyle MacLachlan Michael Ontkean
    Cooper meets Cupid.

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 4th Jun 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch’s offbeat drama. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    The puzzle of the Black Lodge seems about to be solved.

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 11th Jun 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    The penultimate episode of David Lynch’s offbeat drama about a small American town.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    Cooper and Truman decipher part of the secret of the Black Lodge. But are they too late?

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    Twin Peaks
    Tue 18th Jun 1991, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    David Lynch directs the final episode of this offbeat drama.
    Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean

    Dale Cooper must finally confront the evil that lurks in the woods of Twin Peaks.
    (Repeated next Saturday)
    Drama: page 6

    (Teletext subtitles: page 888)

    Twin Peaks
    Sat 22nd Jun 1991, 23:30 on BBC Two England

    Another opportunity to see the final episode of this offbeat soap opera, directed by David Lynch, starring Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean
    A queen is escorted to an appointment at the end of the world but, in order to play the white knight and rescue her, Agent Dale Cooper must face a final confrontation with the evil that lurks in the woods surrounding Twin Peaks.

    ● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888

    [A couple of other things I might as well mention: the edition of Barry Norman’s Film 92, broadcast on Tuesday 17th November of that year at 17:30 (that’s half five in the evening), has a review of the then-reviled Fire Walk With Me. And at the start of the following year, Blue Velvet finally got its British TV premiere on BBC2 (or BBC Two, as it had offically become by then) on Saturday 9th January 1993, at 23:55.]

    A final curiosity

    While I’ve refrained from giving much commentary on anything this time round, I thought I’d mention this strange little quirk of how the BBC Genome displays its data.

    When the original listings were scanned 12 years ago, there was some sort of post-processing done to each individual programme. The algorithm that they used attempted to pick out any and all names mentioned in the main body text, in an attempt to credit anyone who might not have been listed in the actual credits printed in the original issue.

    This was an interesting idea, and sometimes can be genuinely useful, although it does tend to produce a lot of chaff that I often have to ignore when putting these infodumps together. However, in one of the first “another chance to see” Twin Peaks repeats for Season 1, something unintentionally odd happened.

    In this particular listing, Sheryl Lee’s name wasn’t given, but the character of Laura was mentioned as part of the plot summary. This made sense at the time, as Lee had already been credited in full with the initial Tuesday broadcast along with everyone else, so all they needed to do was to print a slightly cut down version of that first listing.

    But years later, that Genome post-processing lead to the following eerie credit being automatically created. Sitting alongside the names of Lynch himself and Kyle MacLachlan was this:

    • Unknown: Laura Palmer
  • A Look At 1980s British Video Game Adverts (On The Telly)

    A Look At 1980s British Video Game Adverts (On The Telly)

    In the 1980s computers were often referred to as “home computers”. Until then, the very idea of a such a thing would conjure up images of enormous and frightening rooms in “research centres”, filled with blinking lights, spinning tape reels and Joe 90 having his mind erased and then re-programmed with the thoughts of someone who was really good at yachting.

    And on top of that, computers were also called “electric brains”, which had a tendency to blow up if Patrick McGoohan asked them the question “Why?”. (For some reason they never printed out a slip of paper replying “Why not?”, like in a comedy text adventure.) Ultimately, prior to about 1980, the idea of something along those lines in someone’s house was the stuff of madness.

    But this was now the decade of The Microchip Revolution, and of R Tape Loading Errors and Kevin Toms’ cheerful bearded face. Now you could buy your very own computerised electrickery thinking boxes, and if you typed “Why?” into one it would sternly respond with something like “Nonsense in BASIC”. Checkmate, Number Six!

    Anyway, all that shite I just wrote is an intro to an article about ads for computer games on actual British TV, which I did because you have to have an intro.

    First off is K-Tel’s faintly odd attempt at muscling in on the lucrative Spectrum market, and the slightly less lucrative Vic 20 one as well. K-Tel, of course, had a number of fingers in all sorts of pies, usually to do with crap compilation LPs or “labour saving” gadgets that insulted your intelligence simply by existing. K-Tel weren’t adverse to new trends, and one particularly gravy-filled pie they decided to jab a hairy swollen digit into was one with the words “VIDEO GAMES” baked into it, using extra bits of pastry to… make out the letters… or, er, by carving that into the crust or something. (That metaphor sounded better in my head when I started writing it.)

    So, instead of K-Tel advertising 20 Golden Hits Of The Enoch Powell Stranglewank Band Playing The 40 Platinum Smashes Of Lennon & McCartney & Gilbert O’Sullivan, here they’ve got cassettes with actual games on them in actual shops. And game(s) plural is the important bit to note, as each tape has TWO games on one cassette, whereas other tapes would only have one! Hoorah! Which would be good if any of them were actually halfway decent, but this is more The Power House than Ultimate Play The Game.

    Indeed, even the shittest effort from the latter company would likely be more entertaining than the two being flogged here, with the second one appearing to be a not-as-good version of Chris Sievey’s minor classic “The Biz”. I’m not sure if this came first or The Biz did, but either way there’s nary a mention of Whistle Test or Probe Records to be seen. The whole two for one thing wouldn’t really catch on, even if you tried including an actual officially licensed game of The Evil Dead on the B-side.

    The advert itself is a cracker, though – I wish the absurd camp nonsense of it could go on for a few more minutes at least. Extras from a provincial theatre group staging of some sort of 50s jukebox musical are pissing off a Dracula with their wild hip gyrations, which are so gyratory they’re woken both him and Lady Dracula, even though these are their waking hours. (He probably wasn’t too happy with their Sinclair BASIC attempt at drawing him, either.)

    However, Lady Dracula is basically fine with the younger generation, ultimately clicking her fingers to the crazy wild cat rock’n’roll sound of The Big Bopper claiming “I got no money, honey!”, before dying in a massive plane crash. If only Don McLean could have had an Oric in 1959, it might have taken his mind off that whole “would you believe that bloody levy was dry?” business.

    Meanwhile, there’s a classic example of that kind of detached, faintly ironic voiceover used in ostensibly humorous ads back then on British television. If you needed to make some sort of wry comment juxtaposing the product being sold with whatever stuff was being shown on screen, then this is the kind of thing you did.

    So, this time round, the voice of someone who you’d imagine would be otherwise be taking a “side-eye glance” at Ronald Reagan saying “Well” a lot is trying to sell you some Spectrum games – or if wet, games for the Vic 20. And they’re all available at a billion shops you haven’t thought about in years, or are at least now teetering close to bankruptcy. “Twice the fun with two games on one”, as long as you’ve got the 8K RAM expansion.

    Onwards into the beyond. What do we see now? An ominous bleak landscape, John Hurt narrating, it’s the 80s… no, this isn’t how we’re all going to die from shagging; it’s only the bloody Intellivision!

    Hurt, modulating his voice from the more familiar “THERE IS NO KNOWN CURE” doom-tone into a “look how grand and mint and skill this amazing thing is” kind of manner, is extolling the virtues of Mattel’s ill-fated dalliance with early 80s video games.

    If you know your gaming history, you’re aware how this console was wiped out in / partially caused the North American Video Games Crash – which didn’t really concern anybody outside the US or Canada to a large extent. In the UK we all shrugged our collective shoulders, if we noticed it at all, and got a Spectrum or C64 or something instead. And if you were really unlucky, you got a Dragon 32.

    Still, at this point all that’s yet to happen, and Our Lord God John Hurt runs through the amazingness of the console best known these days for that strangled electronic voice saying something about being a “buhhhmerrrr”. (Well, you know what Texans are like.)

    The word Intellivision was meant to denote “intelligent television” – TV you interacted with, rather than everyone’s favourite badly-dressed transphobic educational organisation with a jingle composed of naught but total malevolence. In 1982 it was still remarkable to plug a box into your TV’s ariel socket and make a white rectangle hit a square, so something with actual colours and graphics and text and sounds other than “BIP!” (although they still weren’t a million miles away from that) blew everyone’s minds.

    Once the Temu Milky Bar Kid picks up that weird disc-and-keypad controller (note to imaginary editor: would “the Happy Shopper Milky Bar Kid” make more sense in this context? “The Fine Fare Milky Bar Kid”…?), the almighty power of the machine is revealed through, er, a magic cloud? Oh, no, it’s a future hover-city, my mistake. This advert may have been recorded on Betamax, which was technically superior to VHS and all, but it’s still a bit hard to make out at first.

    And then we get to see an actual game. I’m not going to make fun of the games themselves – within the context of the time, they really were genuinely enjoyable back then, and the best of them are still fun for a quick outing today. You’re not going to get Red Dead Redemption or anything, but they do have their worth.

    I must point out, though, that the description of the ad’s featured game Star Strike -“the ultimate space battle… destroy these aliens” – described 95% of all games at that point. The remaining 5% were either about gorillas kidnapping the girlfriends of Italians (shut it, Manning), or unsettling British whimsy about a man in a hat having to avoid toilets.

    Apparently, you must get an Intellivision because “no one else can take you there” – I assume “there” means playing excellent games and that, and not that time when you asked your dad to take you to London to maybe perhaps possibly buy a NEC PC Engine from an import electronics store in 1989, and him flat out saying “NO”.

    And it was true that no one other than Intellivision could take you “there”… well, apart from the Intellivision’s rival Colecovision, which had the best graphics of that console generation. (And was manufactured by a leather company…?) Even the increasingly creaky Atari 2600 could be relied upon for some decent thrills in 1982-ish, thanks to programmers going above and beyond to squeeze as much as they could out of that disco-era console.

    As with that K-Tel business above, one of the major delights of these sorts of adverts is seeing all the old stores where you could have bought this vision of the future. Here it’s pretty much bloody everywhere, including the famed Bentalls department store.

    Personal reminisce time! I visited the Kingston Upon Thames flagship store many times as a child, though I don’t recall seeing an Intellivision there myself. I think I was too distracted by the giant Playmobil figure they had standing by the toy department entrance. But now in the Hell Year 2025, the only thing like a console you can get in Bentall’s toy place are one of those Amiibo-like figurines that come shaped like Pikachu or Wonder Woman. I’ve nothing against “Wondy” or Pikachu (if I could have a baby, I would want it to be exactly like that adorable electric mouse), but y’know, it’s not the same. Come to think of it, they might have been actual Amiibos. But more unforgivingly, Bentalls has been “re-branded” as “Fenwick’s”. Gah. Personal reminisce time over!

    Still, Mattel would go back into video games once Nintendo had taught Corporate America that it’s not a good idea to run a gaming company like this twat did. After that, the following decades would see a steady flow of games licensed from Mattel for Nintendo, Sega, Sony, and Microsoft. They tended to focus mainly on Barbie, and also Barbie, with some Barbie thrown into the mix, and sometimes Shit Version Of Action Man… but mainly Barbie. Fair enough.

    And finally, a compilation of one of the most legendary crossovers produced by human hand. Forget anything to do with DC or Marvel or anything like that – behold Morecambe And Wise And Atari!

    After you’ve sat through the classically Youtubey thing of the uploader putting an intro at the start that’s a bit too long (first advert starts at 17 seconds in, accurate starting time fans), we get the head-spinning juxtaposition of The Stage newspaper and the concept of music hall with Missile Command and Pac-Man, rammed right next to each other.

    Eric Morecambe cackling while manhandling a joystick (steady now) while in his classic flat cap and mac get-up is worth the price of admission alone… which is, er, free. Or at least the price is sitting through at least two adverts, one of which may be some weird and creepy bit of disinfo from that there “manosphere” they have these days, annoying everyone by screaming at the sight of blue hair dye and going insane in prison.

    Other delights are Eric and Ernie having much the same arguments about playing a game as you did with your friends / cousins / siblings at any time between 1982 and 2000, and Eric doing a classic bit of business by not allowing Ernie to play Yar’s Revenge.

    But rather than me waffling on about it any longer, you’re better off just watching it yourself. The above video is approximately four minutes of pure joy, and has the power to end wars. Have you played Atari today? (Bites tongue to avoid mentioning emulation – oh no what a giveaway…)

  • What Comes After The Little White Dot?: When ITV Stations Die

    What Comes After The Little White Dot?: When ITV Stations Die

    1: Thames Television, 31st December 1992

    32 years and one day ago (at time of writing), I watched Thames TV leave the airwaves, which they did with a real sense of dignity. Much has been written about the Death-On-The-Rock-inflicted injustice of it all, and the resulting crassness and haplessness of British broadcasting from that point on – but let’s not go over all that again. Instead, let’s take a look at some pre-90s moments where various ITV stations bit the big one.

    Before we get to them, though, we’ll take a quick look at Thames TV bowing out with their final programme. Embedded above is their End Of Life Entertainment Scenario curtain-closer, an hour-plus long compilation of their many highlights. This upload is a brand new 50fps rip of it which was put up on YouTube by Sticky tape ‘n’ rust.

    Of special note is the fact that this was recorded in the Central region. Most recordings of Thames’ death come from That London, so it’s interesting to see how this went out somewhere where it was effectively business as usual. I was surprised to see the final ITN news bulletin of 1992 with Dermot Murnaghan actually went on a few minutes beyond midnight, and in the Midlands it wasn’t cut off by some bellowing HEAR YE HEAR YE twat in the pay of Carlton Television.

    Oh look, what’s coming up in 1993? Norman Lamont’s going to do another budget! Yes, that’ll go well, I’m sure. Talk about a red box…


    2: Southern Television, 31st December 1981

    Southern Television was “The Station That Serves The South”, although that tagline maybe should have been “The Station That States The One Thing You Can Guess From The Name”. Like Thames, they went out with a massive compilation show on their final night of broadcasting. Unlike Thames, they were complete dicks about it.

    The management of Southern TV took the loss of their franchise with an unusual amount of ill-grace. They were well aware of the criticisms that they had been neglecting parts of the region they were meant to be covering, with local news and other local programmes often ignoring great big chunks of the area. On top of that, the station was viewed as staid, dull, and complacent.

    But! Rather than properly address these problems, they chose to spend 1980 making a bunch of sitcoms and dramas and things with well-known light entertainment names. They did this rather than improve their regional output, like that one farming show that only lives on as a bit on It’ll Be Alright On The Night… that I can’t find a clip of right now.

    I’LL ADD IT IN THIS SPACE HERE, IF I EVER FIND IT LATER. IT’S THE ONE WITH THE ODD 70s BLOKE TALKING ABOUT “A FIRM LAY” OR SOMETHING

    Anyway, if that was meant to prove to everyone how great they were at telly and that they were really interesting and could sit at the big boy’s table and had their own personal Telebug, it backfired for the clear reason that the whole regional thing was the main problem. Although this behaviour did result in the extraordinary spectacle of their weatherman hosting a variety show.

    That company-ending compilation programme has since become infamous for the footage of Richard Stilgoe singing a dreadful song about how shit TVS (the incoming ITV station starting the following morning, of course) is definitely going to be, somehow made worse by the fact it was most likely written to order by someone who didn’t have any real horse in the race.

    Notably, everyone roars with laughter at it despite that a lot of them would be retaining their jobs under the incoming company anyway.

    It seems there also wasn’t the standard “take out the plug from your creaking old fire hazard of a telly” warning at the end, either; according to all available sources, there was just eerie silence after their jingle got played one final time through a delay effect. Clearly Southern’s directors were so pissy about the whole franchise loss thing that they would have quite happily seen a few of their former viewers burn to death during the night.

    In any event, TVS did quite well getting on the air on their first day, considering that Southern famously refused to let them use the studios they were meant to share for the final year or so, before TVS could get round to completing their purpose-built studios. That’s the the meaning behind the “Portakabin TV” jibe (they were forced to use them during 1981 – apparently having to set them up in Southern’s car park).

    Southern locked them out until the wee hours of 1st January 1982. It was only then that the management left the building, presumably trudging in single file like captured war criminals; ties askew, stinking of whisky, with a signed photo of Stilgoe in one fist and shaking the other at those damned portakabins.

    As a bonus, here’s a continuity announcer’s attempt at making light of the misery surrounding Southern’s final days from a start-up just a few days before. The announcer doesn’t quite make the joke land, unfortunately, so it just ends up seeming more odd than anything. It’s not helped by some other ITV region playing out Stingray a bit too late, and some behind-the-scenes talk leaking through to the audio:

    Blimey, that entry went on a bit, didn’t it? Onward to Westward.


    3: Westward Television, 31st December 1981

    From the same time as the above entry, but entirely the opposite in tone – despite some major wrangling the previous year.

    After losing the franchise, Westward TV’s management basically underwent some sort of massive existential crisis, with boardroom battles threatening to render the entire company asunder before they’d had a chance to actually complete their final year.

    And so, the IBA – imagine Ofcom, but made up of people who gave a shit – took the unusual step to take away the franchise early, and forced the sale of all of Westward’s facilities to the incoming station Television South West in the middle of 1981.

    This meant that TSW technically started running things about six months early with full legal approval, while maintaining the old on-air “branding”, as I wish people wouldn’t call it. All the staff stayed on too. This means that the eventual changeover was the most cheerful example of a station closing down that you could possibly find.

    Things were a bit less successful with the notorious official opening show the following day, which is full-on Partridge, and features the above announcer (Roger Shaw) doing some astonishing dance moves toward the end.


    4: Rediffusion London, 29th July 1968

    An ITV company who bowed out so early on, it was when they were put to sleep in the summer. This is the earliest example of an ITV station going off air forever, except for another notable example coming up later, and another even more notable example related to the latter which I’m not covering because there’s zero footage of it. With this one, we only have the audio. So here it is, courtesy of Transdiffusion on Soundcloud.

    Unlike the previous entries, I’ve not got much to say about this one, except that I love how oddly low-key and sweet this is, although “Laurie” the weatherman is a bit shouty. I also like how they let the “new boy” have the last word, as part of the closing “your telly might catch fire” announcement.

    Incidentally, Laurie did give a complete forecast, which has been edited out here. He didn’t just go “YOU’VE GOT MY STATEMENT ON THE WEATHER” or whatever it was, like he was being pestered by a reporter from the Daily Met Office over a “backhanders for sunny days” scandal.

    Incidentally, I was going to pad this entry out a bit by including a scan of Rediffusion’s final schedule from the Daily Express. I won’t be doing that, as one of their last programmes – shown at 11pm that night, and highlighted in the listings available to me – was a documentary made by Rediffusion that just has a slur for a title. To be precise: a single word slur, with a question mark after it, and nothing else. An ableist one. For fuck’s sake, 1968. Maybe that was why Laurie was so upset.

    (Please direct any postcards with the word “SNOWFLAKE” scrawled across them in green ink to the following address: Your Mum’s Big Arse, Your Mum, The Toilets In Victoria Station, London.)


    5: Confusing Welsh double-closedown pissabout, March – July 1968

    Alright, so – first of all there was a company called TWW, who were the main Welsh ITV company, and then the only one. They lost their license in 1967, and following a brief legal battle and some very bad financial advice from the TV regulator of the day, decided to end it all early and let the incoming station, Harlech (later better known as HTV) to take over ahead of schedule.

    Of course, nothing was allowed to go smoothly in the long gone world of regional ITV, and due to various complications that final three month period ended up as a prolonged bout of confusion for the viewers at home.

    TWW bowed out in March, with an early example of the doomed ITV region big blow out party / last supper sub-genre. They broadcast a live variety show titled “All Good Things…”, followed by a brief pre-filmed epilogue straight after that called “…Come To An End”. The latter was presented by John Betjeman, where he said this:

    The new firm, Harlech, which will be centred in Cardiff, must build up its own personality. Tellywelly [Betjeman‘s nickname for TWW], you had a warm, friendly and inspiring one. Like many others, I’m very grateful to you. I’m sorry to see you go. It’s like the death of an old friend.

    The Wikipedia entry for TWW continues: “As Betjeman walked out of the theatre and the credits rolled, the camera tilted up to the “EXIT” sign on the wall, and TWW ended its transmission for the last time.” Aw.

    The above is home movie footage filmed directly off a TV at the same time as the only broadcast of TWW’s end, and is the only footage of it remaining. The “ooh, a flashback!” wobbling effect is due to the difference in the movie camera’s shutter and the rate which the old TV’s display was being updated.

    However, this melancholy and dignified conclusion was then complicated by a bizarre interim service, which featured an unsettlingly abstract ident with a weird electronic jingle. This was a 1960s liminal shopping mall of an ITV region, calling itself “Independent Television Service For Wales And The West”, like a Dalek was responsible.

    This is a re-creation of what’s mentioned above…
    …and this is the original unedited audio, over a “telesnap” – photographed off the television as the above was being transmitted, like the home movie footage seen earlier.

    This service also used all of TWW’s old announcers and showed the final TWW productions that hadn’t been broadcast yet. For your average 60s TV viewer who were even less media-literate than the average type today, this would have been headswimmingly odd.

    And eventually one night they just stopped dead, with not a single mention of a portakabin or “Maurice Jones, Town Crier, Streets Of London” anywhere. Back into the backrooms they went.

    And so Harlech started properly, and got things back on the straight and narrow again with the aid of an unsettlingly abstract ident with a weird electronic jingle.

    (Alright, so the jingle was actually pretty tuneful, and continued to be used well into the 80s after being edited down a tad. But the ident has come in for a lot of bashing over the years, particularly from the late Victor Lewis-Smith. Personally I sort of like it, although I get the complaints, and it would have looked horrible on newer colour sets of the time. Apparently it looked better on older lower resolution B&W tellies. You could say that it’s the late 60s prototypical version of 1980s video games using violent strobing to indicate pain.)

    But after that, they really did get back on the straight and narrow, really properly proper this time, with a major incident of network-wide industrial action.

    Photo from transdiffusion.org – another “telesnap” from their site.

    D’oh!

    The third and final article covering the 1979 ITV strike is coming soon. Peter Bradshaw is not ill, but is taking refuge up a bell tower.

  • Have A New Year!

    Have A New Year!

    Count down the final minutes to 1991 with Channel 4, in the presence of top light entertainer and singer – Mr Vic Reeves:

    From the TV listings of the Daily Express, this is the latter part of Channel 4’s New Year’s Eve line up from 1990. Pretty decent night for comedy across the channels, as it happens. Over on BBC2 at ten to eleven there was another installment of Peter Cook’s proto-Why Bother, “A Life In Pieces”. And if you didn’t fancy Squeeze then you could wait five minutes before switching back to BBC2 to catch Mel Brooks’ “Young Frankenstein”… all those “best bloopers” things from The Chase or whatever don’t compare, do they?
  • Not Keeping Up With Auntie: The Very Brief Existence Of The “ITV Micro”

    Not Keeping Up With Auntie: The Very Brief Existence Of The “ITV Micro”

    Here’s a quick little thing – a while back I spotted something curious when going through old computer magazines on archive.org. I had to do some more research to work out the background to what I found – and what I had read about didn’t apparently last long!

    Popular Computing Weekly, 8-14 December 1983 (Issue 49, Vol 2):

    Personal Computing News, Dec 22 1983 – Jan 4 1984 (Issue 42):

    Computing Weekly (Dec 22 1983, same date as the previous publication):

  • Christmas In Granadaland

    Christmas In Granadaland

    Christmas has always been a big deal on British television, with Christmas Day effectively being our rough equivalent of Sweeps Week in America – although nowadays I’m not sure how true that is anymore. Anyway, I had to do a Christmas themed post.

    Below is a remarkable Christmas closedown from Granada, taking place on 23rd December in… erm, the 1980s. Weirdly, I can’t properly pin down the year. It’s either 1984 or 1985, and the copyright date at the start would seem to confirm the former, but the TV guides available to me have some inconsistencies.

    Instead of Granada’s normal end-of-day theme being played out – like Thames, they never “did” the national anthem – there’s an exceptional version of In The Bleak Midwinter dubbed over a lovely montage of local North West areas looking all Christmassy:

    And in the comments of that upload is one Steve Green, the man who actually put those visuals together! In an attempt to save what he’s written for posterity, I’m going to copy and paste it here.

    I made that closing film using stock footage that the news cameramen used to take whilst they had a few spare moments. The library dug it out for me, I got it transferred to 2 inch tape and spent about 3 hours in an edit suite putting it together with the help of a more experienced promo maker (Graham?). It went out about 6 times. Head of Presentation, Dave Black chose the music.

    The full quality version of that same music can be found in an official upload on Youtube. It was performed by Annie Haslam and the band Nevada:


    And now, all that remains for me to say is that on behalf of Just Me and everyone else here at No Really It’s Just Me On My Own, this is Michelle Lyons wishing you a massive buttery smooth goody yum-yum gumdrops night, and I hope you have a lovely, super sparkling Christmas, with absolutely all the knobs on.

  • The Great Big Utterly Massive 1979 ITV Strike Datablast – Part 2

    The Great Big Utterly Massive 1979 ITV Strike Datablast – Part 2

    We continue with our look at ITV basically falling headfirst into a skip with some press reports of the time (mainly from the Daily Mirror and the Daily Express, as those are the two papers I have easiest access to)…

    What The Papers Said

    As you can imagine, ITV going into a coma was major news:

    Newspaper scan. Headline: "TV ON THE BLANK". In the corner of the scan is a blurry photo the Daily Mirror have taken of an early version of that blue caption.

    Daily Mirror, Wednesday 8th August 1979Front Page

    ALL ITV programmes could be blacked out by the weekend. […] Singer Andy Williams was turned away yesterday when he went to ATV’s Elstree studios to appear on the Muppet Show. Thames say they may have to scrap the latest series of comedian Tom O’Connor’s London Night Out.
    And Yorkshire have had to postpone recording the next Sandbaggers secret service series and Derek Nimmo’s Life Begins at Forty. Harlech stopped transmitting last night when The TV technicians started nationwide guerilla action after they were offered a 20 per cent rise in reply to their demand for 25 per cent.
    Tempers frayed when workers were suspended for refusing to work overtime and others walked out in protest.
    A spokesman for ACTT, the largest union involved in the dispute, said they had offered to go to arbitration, but ITV had turned them down.

    Note the early version of the apology caption in the corner of the article, snapped by the Mirror off a telly – “We are sorry to tell you that there will be no further programmes on this channel today. We will give you more information tomorrow.” And because I’m that sort of person, I tried to recreate it in a teletext editor.

    Listing of Thames schedule (under the name of just "London", due to LWT.)

    From page 16 of the same edition of the Mirror, we see what was meant to be broadcast on Thames that day, instead of the blue caption – note the oddly hopeful statement indicating “Industrial action may affect ITV programmes”. Bit of an understatement, that…

    Newspaper scan. The headline reads "Blankety-blank!". Article text mentions much the same details as this blog post. To the right side is a picture of Noele Gordon - whose mother, the first person to appear on Crossroads, has just died.

    The Daily Express, front page, 8th August 1979 – includes details on the failed HTV news broadcast. Meanwhile, the first person to appear on Crossroads has died. Babylon (70s ITV) is burning!

    TV listings scan, showing schedules for ATV (listed as "Midland"), Southern, Anglia, Westward, Granada and Yorkshire. As stated in the main text, Sophia Loren was on at 10:35 am on Anglia, but most likely wasn't.

    From the TV listings of the same edition of The Express. This is what may have been shown on these ITV regions as it slipped over the edge, allowing for all sorts of random things to be replaced with blue screens…

    Of special note is the fact that Sophia Loren might have been on at 10:35 in the morning in Anglia. Not a show of any kind, just Sophia Loren, on her own? I mean, obviously not – it must have been a brief documentary about her or something – but the idea of her just popping up and reading out kid’s birthdays (right in the middle of the usual summer morning kid’s programmes) is too amusing to ignore.

    Imagine if she linked into Runaround at the end, and then apologised when it didn’t appear. Imagine Sophia Loren talking about “striking members of the ACTT”.

    Newspaper scan. Article text: "ITV blackout goes nationwide. ITV screens throughout Britain will be blacked out all weekend. Sports fans will be especially disappointed with racing, golf and speedway scheduled for this afternoon. Later casualties today will be Sale of the Century and Police Woman. The indefinite blackout came after the technicians' union ACTT ordered its members to strike. This was in reply to a management ultimatum from ITV: work normally or not at all. ITV warned members of ACTT and two other unions involved in the pay dispute to return to work by next Wednesday. If they didn't, they would be locked out. An ACTT spokesman last night put the blame for the blackout on "the unfortunate attitude" of management in response to the "moderate claim." There was a glimmer of hope after the ITV companies and unions agreed to hold further joint talks with ACAS the conciliation body. But the meeting is not until Tuesday. The dispute began after the unions rejected a nine per cent offer. This was raised to 15 per cent, plus five per cent in fringe benefits. But the unions are holding out for 25 per cent."

    Skipping ahead to Saturday 11th August, the Daily Mirror confirms the nationwide blackout. At this point there’s still some vague hope (outside of the actual industry, perhaps) that it might be sorted out within the next week.

    A small snippet of the Daily Mirror's Saturday TV pages, labelled "THE WEEK AHEAD".

    Unfortunately the recent developments have revealed how far ahead the Mirror’s TV coverage is written. “Britain’s Strongest Man” is “wacky”?

    “But you’ve got to search hard for anything worthwhile.” The IBA Engineering Announcements are worth a look, Mirror TV Critic Bloke!

    Newspaper scan - "BLANK OUT ON TV" on right side, left side has scary picture of a nurse in full "anti-rabies" gear.

    And here we have a section of the front page of the Express that same Saturday. Pretty much the same thing as before with no further new information – but check out that side article! RABIES IS HERE! RABIES MEANS DEATH! And then the actual article casually reveals that it was all a false alarm. Classic Express. The twats.

    ITV listing from the Daily Express, from the same edition as the previous picture. "Programmes subject to disruption or cancellation due to industrial action".

    That edition’s TV listings are also caught on the hop. The now-familiar disclaimer looks absurdly optimistic.

    Sadly, it seems that we’ll never find out what the bloody hell “BONKERS with Cleo Laine” was all about. The mind boggles at what that might have entailed. “Jazz ‘n’ jewellery, jazz ‘n’ jewellery…

    TV listing excerpt from 13th August 1979 edition of The Mirror.

    The following Monday’s Daily Mirror (13th August 1979) now has a slightly more realistic disclaimer: “ITV programmes are published in case there is a settlement of the industrial action which has stopped broadcasts.”

    No Jamie And The Magic Torch today. Or “Sidekicks”, whatever that was – it seems to have been considered important enough to print in capitals.

    But what was going on over in Jersey?

    Are you ready for a through analysis of Channel Televison’s listings, covering the late summer and early autumn of 1979? Well, you’d better be, or else the Major will have some stern words to say to you upon your next visit to Benest’s of Milbrook (and FINE PRICE! ST. CLEMENT’S CLOSE ROAD).

    As you might have guessed, upon the first Monday after the strike began all the national newspapers haven’t yet adjusted to whatever the new schedules of ITV’s only station were. This is what the Daily Mirror lists on that date:

    Tv listings from newspaper. Contents are: 12.30 Emmerdale Farm. 1.0 News. 1.20 Channel News; What's On. 1.30 All About Toddlers. 2.0 Rumpole of the Bailey. 3.0 Lucas Tanner (TV film). 4.20 Clapperboard. 4.45 Why Can't I Go Home? 5.15 Cabbages and Kings. 5.45 News. 6.0 Channel News. 6.10 Beverly Hillbillies. 6.35 Crossroads. 7.0 Britain's Strongest Man. 7.30 Coronation Street. 8.0 Spooner's Patch. 8.30 World in Action. 9.0 Best Sellers. 10.0 News. 10.28 Channel News. 10.32 Best Sellers. 11.15 Family. 12.10 News.

    Lucas Tanner probably went out as usual, but would have probably been joined by a couple of other films and inported ITC shows. By Tuesday, the various TV newspaper listings are being adjusted to acommodate the strike action.

    Newspaper scan - "PAGE 16", "DAILY MIRROR, Tuesday, August 14, 1979" - above the BBC1 listing reads the following: "Our usual full programme guide is restricted during the ITV dispute."

    The Mirror only prints the London and Midland ITV listings in the vain hope of everyone having a meeting and sorting everything out, along with the still inaccurate Channel listings.

    Listings of what would have been on ATV, and perhaps some of what was actually on Channel TV.

    By August 17th it’s pretty clear that this state of affairs isn’t being resolved any time soon, although the papers are still printing what would have been on normally in London and the Midlands. However, they do seem to be printing Channel’s actual line up now. From the Mirror on this day:

    Channel ITV listing from 17th August 1979. Channel Report has now become the hour-long "Report Extra".

    The giveaway being that you can see their local news has been extended to a full hour – which apparently included a brief rundown of national / international news. This is said to have involved someone driving to the northernmost part of the islands, switching the car radio to Radio 4, hurriedly scribbling down everything that was said, and then racing back to the studios to re-write it into a script.

    In the same edition and on the same page, mention is made of the choice every viewer has at this point – watch the two BBC channels, or nothing at all. Everybody naturally goes for the former.

    Article about the ITV blackout leading to nothing but BBC TV - headline: "Brightening up a dark age" - the article begins: "WITH ITV still in the dark ages, we TV addicts must rely on good old Auntie BBC to brighten our evenings. Trouble is the poor old lady, always complaining she is hard up, insists on serving up repeats and more repeats. Tonight, for instance, both channels are putting out several such programmes during the peak hours. A bit much, isn't it? Well, this IS the silly season when half of Britain seems to be on holiday."

    Despite the very 70s / 80s complaint of TOO MANY REPEATS COME ON BBC, this article makes no mention of the fact that one of them is Spike Milligan’s Q (Q7, to be precise). Despite Spike himself being pictured right above this column, the writer goes on at length about Des O’Connor Tonight, which was on BBC1 at that point before the eventual move to Thames.

    Admittedly this would be because it’s only being repeated in the London area. The reason being this.

    On Saturday 18 August, the Daily Mirror has a weird spell of desperate, screaming denial by printing a full range of ITV programmes that are not being broadcast. That’s because they’d already set the pages out beforehand and had to print them, but I like the idea of everyone at a newspaper office going insane from no BJ And The Bear.

    However, the same edition does have this interesting little nugget of info in a corner of the page:

    Your TV Top Ten

    With all areas except Channel hit by the ITV dispute BBC-1 had the top ten to itself in the week ended August 12. Here are the JICTAR ratings:

    1 Seaside Special
    2 Des O’Connor Tonight
    3 To Catch a Thief
    4 Sword of Justice
    5 It Ain’t Half Hot Mum
    6 The Hunchback of Notre Dame
    7 Return to Paradise
    8 Star Trek
    9 The Golden Fiddle Awards
    10 Juke Box Jury

    This is a bit of a diversion, but here’s what the less recognisable bits of that Top 10 might be. “To Catch A Thief” was most likely the Alfred Hitchcock film from 1955. “Sword Of Justice” was a Glen A. Larson show imported from the States, about “the weekly adventures of wealthy playboy soldier-of-fortune Jack Cole“.

    Meanwhile, “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” is again very probably an old movie version, perhaps the 1939 one with Charles Laughton – there was another from 1923 starring Lon Chaney, but as that was a silent film it’s less likely.

    “Return To Paradise” was possibly yet another old movie, this time a Gary Cooper vehicle from 1953 (“An American drifter comes to a remote Polynesian island controlled by a Puritanical missionary and turns the social life of the island upside-down“).

    Finally, precisely what “The Golden Fiddle Awards” was is unclear, although a quick search for it does turn up a Daily Record-sponsored compilation LP released the same year, featuring “the 250 players of the Golden Fiddle Orchestra and the 150 singers of the Scottish National Orchestra Junior Chorus“. Okay then!


    Monday 20 August 1979 seems to have been the date where the newspapers were able to fully adjust their page layouts to fit the situation, finally dropping the intended ITV schedules and just printing Channel’s. This is from the Mirror on 22nd August:

    Channel ITV listing from 22nd August 1979. "The only ITV station operating".

    The pictured movie at 8.25, “Seven Ways From Sundown”, clearly stars one Venetia Stevenson. According to The Movie Database, this is a Western about the following: “A Texas Ranger must capture an outlaw and take him-in, while tangling with savage Apaches and greedy bounty-hunters on the way back to jail“. So, standard cowboy shite.

    And if you’re wondering what in the Christ “Kum Kum” is, it’s a Japanese anime that was also shown in some other ITV regions (not at this time, obviously) – HTV also ran it in the late 70s and very early 80s.

    But why isn’t Coronation Street on in Guernsey?

    Finally, a quick look at the average viewer’s odd conception of what Channel TV was broadcasting at this point. Including, it would seem, a tabloid newspaper journalist.

    MISSING “Crossroads”? Desperate for Ena? Longing to see Reggie and Anna again?

    I was — and then I remembered the Channel[.]

    So I packed a toothbrush and headed for Jersey which boasts the only ITV company still operating during the strike.

    As I arrived, the sun was simmering the sea and blistering the bodies out in front of the hotel. But there was no time for all that.

    My fingers trembled as pushed the “on” button.

    Saturday afternoon – my first dose of “World of Sport” for weeks. Who would be on, I wondered, as the set warmed to life.

    It was the test card – Channel doesn’t start broadcasting till 5 o’clock.

    I dunked my disappointment in a cup of tea and settled down to wait – and watched cricket – on the Beeb.

    It was the sort of Indian summer I hadn’t planned. But come seven o’clock it would be a whole new ball-game. “The Bionic Woman” would be on. It said so in the local paper.

    Sure enough, there she was. My little electronic lovely doing battle with the baddies of darkest Africa. As I watched her triumphing over evil, I relaxed like a junkie after his first fix.

    So this was what ITV was like. The memories flooded back.

    The rest of the article features a lot of random tourists saying how they only miss the racing, or how they’re more interested in the Michael Caine film being shown on BBC1, or how they didn’t realise ITV was still going over here. It’s quite a contrast to how local viewers are said to have praised this new version of the service.

    And then there’s a quote from Roy and Mary Smith, a couple who went on holiday specifically to the Channel Islands just to watch ITV. According to Mary:

    I booked our holiday thinking we could see all our telly favourites. I expected to watch “Coronation Street” and “Crossroads” when I got here. Instead all I’ve found is old American films. It’s such a disappointment.

    A rather more serious quote comes from Ken Killip, Channel’s managing director:

    Our local advertising has increased since the start of the dispute, but because we have a marketing arrangement with Westward, our national advertising has died. There’s no doubt that if the strike goes on for much longer we would be in serious trouble.


    NEXT TIME: Finally! We’re welcomed, welcomed, welcomed home...