Category: 1980s

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Newspapers Getting Basic Facts Wrong, part 35252 in an indefinite series

    Newspapers Getting Basic Facts Wrong, part 35252 in an indefinite series

    From The Metro, 3rd November 2022:

    Exciting news for Monty Python fans, as the comedy series Monty Python’s Flying Circus is coming back to TV.

    There’s sure to be innuendos galore as the episodes return to UK terrestrial television for the first time in 35 years.

    That’s TV — which broadcasts on Freeview, Sky and Freesat — has acquired the exclusive network television rights to all four seasons of the famous comedy.

    The episodes will air every weeknight at 9pm from March 14, and will be uncut.

    The series premiered on BBC in 1969 and originally ran until 1974.

    BBC last repeated the series back in 1988, so news of its return will surely be music to many people’s ears!

    Burton Daily Mail (Staffordshire), Thursday 30th November 1989:

    "Tonight's Highlights" - Round up of TV that day with headline "Python re-coil".

    Old fans of Monty Python and new friends of Michael Palin will welcome BBC2’s repeat showing from tonight of the first series of Monty Python’s Flying Circus (9pm).

    […] Now a cult programme worldwide, British fans can at last begin catching up again with early episodes tonight featuring Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and, as a special treat, the funniest joke in the world.

    Long Eaton Advertiser, “Weekly TV Post” section, Friday 14 July 1995:

    Evening and night time BBC2 listings for Friday 14th July, 1995. The full listings are as follows: 5:30 All in the Mind - 6.00 FILM: The Sins of Rachel Cade - 8.00 Ready Steady Cook - 8.30 Gardeners' World - 9.00 Rab C Nesbitt - 9.30 The All-New Alexei Sayle Show 2 - 10.00 Monty Python's Flying Circus - 10.30 Newsnight 11.15 The Vibe - 11.45 Weatherview - 11.50 A Tribute to Rory Gallagher - 12.40 FILM: The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie - 2.25 Close.

    9.00 Rab C Nesbitt
    9.30 The All-New Alexei Sayle Show 2
    10.00 Monty Python’s Flying Circus
    10.30 Newsnight

    TLDR; Python was repeated on UK terrestrial television until, at the very least, the year that the Sony Playstation was launched in the West. That’s not counting the occasional brief runs of selected episodes on BBC2, let alone the repeats on cable / satellite channels in the 2000s, such as those on the Paramount Comedy Channel (now Comedy Central UK).

    It’s been said before, and I’ll say it again. If you can’t get a basic fact like that right, despite the facilities that are presumably available to you as someone working for a major newspaper, what does that say about everything else you print?

  • The compiled Radio Times listings for The Young Ones

    The compiled Radio Times listings for The Young Ones

    Following on from my big info-dump of the gags and whatnot featured in RT listings of Not The Nine O’Clock News, here’s another example of comedians larking about in the same publication. The Young Ones ran for twelve episodes from 1982 to 1984, and unlike NTNOCN, it didn’t take long for Elton, Mayall and Mayer to catch on to the possiblities…


    Series 1 (1982)

    Episode 1: Demolition

    First broadcast: Tue 9th Nov 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    A new series of six comedy shows of which this is the first. Be there or be square! Starring Ade Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan
    Featuring Alexei Sayle as the Balowski Family.
    With Nine Below Zero and Paul Bradley, Christine Ellerbeck, Chris Ellis, Ben Elton, Gerard Kelly, Hilary Mason, Pauline Melville, Herbert Norville, Cyril Shaps, Anthony Sharp, Maggie Steed, Andy de la Tour.
    Written by Ben Elton, Rik Mayall, Lise Mayer
    Additional material Alexei Sayle

    Episode 2: Oil

    First broadcast: Tue 16th Nov 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    Witty, rich, priceless, side-splitting, light, comic, mock heroic, farcical, clownish, knockabout (Roget’s Thesaurus).
    Starring Ade Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan.
    Featuring Radical Posture.
    With Tony Aleff, Robbie Coltrane, Barry Cookson, Mark Ezra, Ronnie Golden, Terry Medlicott, Patrick Newell, David Rhule.

    Episode 3: Boring

    First broadcast: Tue 23rd Nov 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    As Schtenker said, ‘music will buy the paint’. He never said what colour…
    Starring Ade Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan.
    With Madness, Mark Akden, Jim Barclay, Ruth Burnett, Jacqueline Clarke,
    Paola Dionisotti, Nick Dunning, Stephen Frost, Paul Gale, Peter Greene, Roger Ashton Griffiths, Pauline Melville,Patrick Newell, John Owens, Robin Parkinson, Ken Parry, David Rappaport.
    Written by Ben Elton, Rik Mayall, Lise Mayer
    Additional material Alexei Sayle

    Episode 4: Bomb

    First broadcast: Tue 30th Nov 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    Mark and Samantha decide to have a tea party, and the vicar tries out his new chain-saw with side-splitting results!
    Starring Ade Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan
    featuring Alexei Sayle as the Balowski Family.
    With Dexys Midnight Runners and Mark Arden, Jean Campbell-Dallas, Paola Dionisotti, Clair Hill, Ceri Jackson, Peter Laxton, Tony Sympson, Roger Sloman.

    Episode 5: Interesting

    First broadcast: Tue 7th Dec 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    Heinrich Schtenker, the little-known but much hated amateur philosopher, famous for his epithet ‘I exist therefore I am’, was run over by a tram in Vienna in 1893. Good job too.
    Starring Ade Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan.
    Featuring Rip, Rig and Panic with Keith Allen, Tony Allen, Mark Arden, Nicholas Ball, Paul Bradley, Ruth Burnett, Mark Dewison, Chris Ellis, Dawn French, Stephen Frost, Sadie Hamilton, Peter Laxton, Dave Lloyd, William MacBain, Kilian McKenna, Michael Redfern, Jennifer Saunders, Cindy Shelley, David Squire.

    Episode 6: Flood

    First broadcast: Tue 14th Dec 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    Disaster looms: in the last few days of a desperate government, riots spread as the economy collapses and the threat of nuclear conflict grows. Despite this, the BBC screens the final episode of The Young Ones.
    Starring Ade Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan
    featuring Alexei Sayle as the Balowski Family
    With Mark Arden, Jim Barclay, Arnold Brown, Ben Elton, Stephen Frost, Gareth Hale, Justine Lord, Norman Pace, David Rappaport, Cindy Shelley, Peter Wear


    Some observations: these aren’t as well put-together as some examples that you could find with other comedy shows. However, the final one is interesting (…no, not Interesting, the sixth episode’s Flood), and certainly has one hell of a punch.

    Following the initial broadcast of the first series, the whole lot was repeated in 1983. However, the Radio Times editors saw fit to strip away the original intro text for each show and just listed the plain information on its own, with not even “Be there or be square!” making it back in.

    …Also, who the hell is Heinrich Schtenker? Okay, nevermind. Onto the second series:


    Series 2 (1984)

    Episode 1: Bambi

    First broadcast: Tue 8th May 1984, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    Written by Ben Elton, Rik Mayall, Lise Mayer

    A psychological British war film set in the Sahara desert. Hugh Freganotte’s sombre Western is diversely episodic but the locations admirably sustain the journey. Like an old favourite shoe: not brilliant but sturdy. Pauline Melville makes a splendid quiche.

    Starring Adrian Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan, Alexei Sayle
    with Madness
    and Mark Arden, Jim Barclay, Perry Benson, Ruth Burnett, Hugh Cecil, Jean Channon, Brian Croucher, Ben Elton, Stephen Frost, Peter Greene, Ceri Jackson, Kilian McKenna, Pauline Melville, Carla Mendonca, Michael Redfern, David Rolfe, Maggie Steed
    and Brian Oulton, Peggy Thorpe-Bates

    (Note: for some reason BBC Genome listed this broadcast as “Sick”, which comes later on in the series)

    Episode 2: Cash

    First broadcast: Tue 15th May 1984, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    Cash written by BEN ELTON, RIK MAYALL, LISE MAYER
    ‘Whizz Bang’ – the new youth programme. Roger Dingo talks live in the studio to Screaming Leppard. On film, Barry Coathanger Smith talks to Minty from Broken Chair about his new cooker. The weekend starts somewhere over there in the corner.
    Starring Adrian Edmondson Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan, Alexei Sayle with Ken Bishop’s Nice Twelve
    and MARK ARDEN, PAUL BRADLEY, LEE CORNES, STEVE DIXON, STEPHEN FROST, STEVE KELLY, JAN PRINCE, KAY STONHAM, ANDY DE LA TOUR and ALAN FREEMAN
    Additional material ALEXEI SAYLE
    Music PETER BREWIS
    Make-up VIVIEN RILEY
    Sound LAURIE TAYLOR
    Lighting FRED WRIGHT
    Designer GRAEME STORY
    Production PAUL JACKSON

    Episode 3: Nasty

    First broadcast: Tue 29th May 1984, 21:05 on BBC Two England

    Nasty written by BEN ELTON, RIK MAYALL, LISE MAYER
    This week a video head helically scans the high coercivity medium taking full advantage of the inherent wide hysteresic characteristics and fully saturating the magnetic structure of the oxide emulsion with predictably hilarious results.
    Starring Adrian Edmondson Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan, Alexei Sayle with The Damned
    MARK ARDEN, HELEN ATKINSON WOOD
    CHRISTOPHER BARRIE, PAUL BRADLEY
    ARNOLD BROWN, VIKKI CHAMBERS
    RON COOK, DAWN FRENCH
    STEPHEN FROST, GARETH HALE
    DAMARIS HAYMAN, NORMAN PACE
    DANIEL PEACOCK, BARRY STANTON
    ANDY DE LA TOUR, PETER WEAR and TERRY JONES
    Additional material ALEXEl SAYLE Music PETER BREWIS
    Videotape editor ED WOODEN Sound LAURIE TAYLOR Lighting FRED WRIGHT
    Designer GRAEME STORY
    Production PAUL JACKSON

    Episode 4: Sick

    First broadcast: Tue 12th Jun 1984, 21:05 on BBC Two England
    (Note: the positions of “Sick” and “Time” got switched around after their first transmission, and it’s the iPlayer order that I’m presenting them in here – Genome has the wrong dates applied to both)

    Sick written by BEN ELTON, RIK MAYALL, LISE MAYER
    This week the man who writes the listings in RADIO TIMES, which is actually a very difficult job at which he works very hard and he is not getting home very much because he is out earning money to keep his family, comes home late one night to find his wife in bed with another man and has a nervous breakdown … wakka wakka oooooooh aaaaaaah.
    Starring Adrian Edmondson Rik Mayall , Nigel Planer
    Christopher Ryan , Alexei Sayle with Madness and MARK ARDEN , JIM BARCLAY ,
    PERRY BENSON, RUTH BURNETT, HUGH CECIL, JEAN CHANNON, BRIAN CROUCHER, BEN ELTON, STEPHEN FROST, PETER GREENE, CERI JACKSON, KILIAN MCKENNA,
    PAULINE MELVILLE, CARLA MENDONCA, MICHAEL REDFERN, DAVID ROLFE and MAGGIE STEED
    Additional material ALEXEI SAYLE Music PETER BREWIS
    Costume BARBARA KIDD Sound LAURIE TAYLOR Lighting FRED WRIGHT
    Designer GRAEME STORY
    Production PAUL JACKSON

    Episode 5: Time

    First broadcast: Tue 5th Jun 1984, 21:10 on BBC Two England

    Time, written by Ben Elton, Rik Mayall, Lise Mayer
    A plane-load of funsters crashes in the African jungle; the souffle still won’t rise; a former model charges through the plot like a tornado; anything can happen and probably will.
    Starring Adrian Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Christopher Ryan, Alexei Sayle
    with Amazulu and Gary Beadle, Jonathan Caplan, Robbie Coltrane, Lee Cornes, Dawn French, Gareth Hale, Helen Lederer, Paul Martin, Norman Pace, Jennifer Saunders and Julianne White

    Episode 6: Summer Holiday

    First broadcast: Tue 19th Jun 1984, 21:00 on BBC Two England

    Final programme in the series written by BEN ELTON, RIK MAYALL, LISE MAYER
    Blah, blah, blah. bottom burp!
    Starring Adrian Edmondson Rik Mayall , Nigel Planer
    Christopher Ryan , Alexei Sayle with John Otway and BRIAN CROUCHER, BEN ELTON
    STEPHEN FROST, JOOLS HOLLAND
    MARK LAMBERT, PETER LAXTON
    HELEN LEDERER, NORMAN LOVETT
    JOANNE PEARCE, ROGER SLOMAN
    MAGGIE STEED and ALAN FREEMAN
    LENNY HENRY
    Additional material ALEXEI SAYLE Music PETER BREWIS
    Videotape editor ED WOODEN Sound LAURIE TAYLOR Lighting FRED WRIGHT
    Designer GRAEME STORY
    Production PAUL JACKSON


    …Bloody hell, they ran out of inspiration for the “Summer Holiday” listing, didn’t they? Although seeing as the final episode had to be remounted a few weeks after the intended filming date due to a BBC strike, they were probably just knackered. (Mind you, the one about the Radio Times listings man could have done with another draft.)

    While like in the first RT listings article I’m focusing on original broadcasts, special mention must be given to this write-up done for one of the 1989 repeats. It’s nice to see someone at the magazine cared enough to do something bespoke for the transmission on Tuesday 29th August 1989, on BBC2 at the hallowed time of 9PM:


    21:00
    The Young Ones

    Bambi written by Ben Elton, Rik Mayall, Lise Mayer.
    Biff whack ouch – the Young Ones are back with another boring series of repeats.
    Plenty of signs of life in the fridge, but still no sign of Cliff.
    Starring Adrian Edmondson , Rik Mayall , Nigel Planer , Christopher Ryan , Alexei Sayle with Motorhead,
    Robbie Coltrane, Ben Elton, Stephen Fry, Tamsin Heatley, Hugh Laurie, Tony Robinson, Emma Thompson, Griff Rhys Jones and Mel Smith.
    Additional material ALEXEI SAYLE
    Music PETER BREWIS
    Designer GRAEME STORY
    Production PAUL JACKSON (R)


    One final little oddity: “Time” was repeated on Saturday 29th April 1989, right after a repeat of The Likely Lads. The listing for the latter says this: “Nearly 20 years separate this BBC2 comedy, which launched the channel in 1964, and its 1980s successor The Young Ones.” I don’t think anyone before or since has seriously attempted to somehow claim The Young Ones being the “successor” to The Likely Lads. The description for “Time” then reads as follows: “Twenty years later an even more appalling menage was launched on BBC2. Contrast and compare…” The words “appalling menage” are a pretty good turn of phrase, I have to say.

  • The increasingly silly Radio Times listings for Not The Nine O’Clock News

    The increasingly silly Radio Times listings for Not The Nine O’Clock News

    The front cover of "Not 1982", the final Not The Nine O'Clock News spin-off produced during the show's lifetime (there were a few others later on...)

    Originally published on my personal blog in October 2024.

    This is an annotated copy-paste archiving of the original TV listings for Not The Nine O’Clock News, as harvested from the BBC Genome which in turn came from the Radio Times. The bulk of the listings were an example of something that happened a fair bit with British TV comedy back in the day, but which has now been stamped out due to “reasons”.

    These were listings quite unlike the usual formula of a straightforward description of a programme, followed by a cast list. Below you’ll find examples for the show in question that were clearly put together by the people who actually made it (rather than the Radio Times staff), and these were used to put across the whole comedic feel of NTNOCN. Probably one of the earliest examples might be Python – a slightly later one would be The Young Ones, and I may try and collate the ones from the latter at some point.

    All listings are for the original broadcasts. Be aware that the transcriptions on Genome may contain some mistakes and formatting errors, which have been corrected if spotted. Comments in bold are added by me. Please also note that there will be “material that is of its time”, and that I do not necessarily support all of the implied opinions in the quoted text…

    Old style physical VT clock, stating that this is Not The Nine O'Clock News, and it is "Programme I"... the number one gets written as a roman numeral for some reason! This show actually ended up as an untransmitted pilot.

    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    (“Pilot” episode)
    First (intended) broadcast: Mon 2nd Apr 1979, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    A new series of six topical comedy programmes with Rowan Atkinson, Chris Emmett, Christopher Godwin, John Gorman, Jonathan Hyde


    This edition never went out. The announcement of the 1979 UK general election caused it to be pulled from the schedules, due to the BBC’s rules about comedy shows not being allowed to influence potential voters during a general election cycle. However, some sections from this ill-fated first try ended up being recycled for the following actual first series which began that autumn, with an almost completely different cast after a bit of a re-think…


    The classic end-of-opening-titles shot - "Not the Nine O'Clock News" in that typewriter-esque font, overlaid on top of eerie film of 50s atomic test footage.

    Not The Nine O’Clock News
    Series 1, Episode 1
    First broadcast: Tue 16th Oct 1979, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The first of six topical comedy programmes, in which a team led by Rowan Atkinson, Chris Langham, Pamela Stephenson and Mel Smith offer unhinged interpretations of the world of news and current affairs.
    Designer PAUL JOEL
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD and SEAN HARDIE
    (Rowan Atkinson is in The Atkinson People, on Radio 3 Friday, 10.0 pm)


    Not The Nine O’Clock News
    Series 1, Episode 2
    First broadcast: Tue 23rd Oct 1979, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The second of six topical comedy programmes, in which a team led by Rowan Atkinson, Chris Langham, Pamela Stephenson and Mel Smith offer unhinged interpretations of the world of news and current affairs.
    Designer DAVID HITCHCOCK
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD and SEAN HARDIE
    (Rowan Atkinson in The Atkinson People, Radio 3 on Friday, 10.0 pm)


    Not The Nine O’Clock News
    Series 1, Episode 3
    First broadcast: Tue 30th Oct 1979, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The third of six topical comedy programmes, in which a team led by Rowan Atkinson, Chris Langham, Pamela Stephenson and Mel Smith offer unhinged interpretations of the world of news and current affairs.
    Designer PAUL JOEL
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD and SEAN HARDIE
    (Rowan Atkinson in The Atkinson People, Radio 3 on Friday, 10.0 pm)


    …And I’ll interrupt things there, as the first series’ listings were very very straightforward. The rest of them followed the same basic pattern, with the plug for The Atkinson People dropped from the fourth one as the latter had finished airing. The remaining episodes went out on 6th November, 13th November, and 20th November 1979.

    We pick up from what was effectively the Christmas special, which was a compilation of stuff from the first series...

    An audiene member from a sketch who's been roped into the events - a man has a massie fluffy pink cushion on his head, which enables him to be one of the joint winners of the Reggie Bosanquet Look-Alike Competition. The man is fairly young and looks nothing like the just-retired ITN newsreader.

    Not the Least of Not the Nine O’Clock News
    First broadcast: Fri 28th Dec 1979, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    Highlights from the series, in which Rowan Atkinson, Mel Smith, Chris Langham and Pamela Stephenson offer their own anarchic view of the State of the Nation. (The repetition of that last sentence is giving me flashbacks to each introductory bit of continuity in this…)


    This was then followed by a repeat of that compilation in March, to precede the second series.

    Not the Least of Not the Nine O’Clock News
    First (repeat) broadcast: Tue 18th Mar 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    A last chance to see highlights from the first series, featuring Rowan Atkinson, Chris Langham, Mel Smith, Pamela Stephenson and Griff Rhys Jones
    Producers JOHN LLOYD, SEAN HARDIE (A new series begins shortly)


    And now, finally, we get to the actual meat of this article. From the second series onwards, actual humour creeps into the previously dry Radio Times listings.

    Title slide for the show, from episode 1 of series 2. The programme name is this time overlaid a load of smoke from a steam train (which you can't see because there's so much smoke).

    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 2, Episode 1
    First broadcast: Mon 31st Mar 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The return of the comedy programme that won more awards than other programmes that haven’t won any awards at all have won. Featuring Rowan Atkinson, Mel Smith, Pamela Stephenson, Griff Rhys Jones
    Designer DAVID HITCHCOCK
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD, SEAN HARDIE


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 2, Episode 2
    First broadcast: Mon 7th Apr 1980, 21:10 on BBC Two England
    by William Shakespeare
    Highlights from the Prague Festival Theatre’s expensive and overrated production of Shakespeare’s most famous sit-com.
    King of Burgundy: Rowan Atkinson
    Welsh army: Mel Smith
    Portia: Pamela Stephenson
    Old Nimmo: Griff Rhys Jones
    Designer MARHORIE PRATT (This should be “Marjorie” – not sure if this was a scanning error or a typo in the original listing)
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD , SEAN HARDIE


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 2, Episode 3
    First broadcast: Mon 14th Apr 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    A situation comedy written by BOB DEASEY and MAURICE FOTE
    Don’t Get Your Vicars in a Twist!
    Trouble in store for the sofa when Ros has to explain away a misunderstanding with the milkman… with hilarious consequences!
    Lovable young couple: Rowan Atkinson
    Man from the gas board: Mel Smith
    Girl on sofa: Pamela Stephenson
    Pakistani: Griff Rhys Jones
    Designer MARJORIE PRATT
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD, SEAN HARDIE


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 2, Episode 4
    First broadcast: Mon 21st Apr 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    from the Opera House, Welwyn.
    WOOMERA PHILHARMONIC conductor CANAAN BANANA
    Haydn No 95 ‘Excruciatingly Dull’ Symphony
    Laundromat Avocado Ma, Non Mobutu Nimmo Quartet for strings and relish tray
    Soloists: Rowan Atkinson, Mel Smith, Pamela Stephenson, Griff Rhys Jones
    Designer MARJORIE PRATT
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD, SEAN HARDIE


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 2, Episode 5
    First broadcast: Mon 28th Apr 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    Drama Today
    ‘Gulp’ by GAVIN TOAD
    Set in a small Welsh weaving shed, ‘Gulp’ looks at the events leading up to the abdication of Edward VIII through the eyes of a professional footballer and a politician’s widow. Expensively directed by a member of the Socialist Workers Party.
    Mrs Simpson: Rowan Atkinson
    Lord Reith: Pamela Stephenson
    Virginia Woolf: Mel Smith
    Vet: Griff Rhys Jones
    Designer DAVID HITCHCOCK
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD, SEAN HARDIE

    (Nowadays I’d quite happily watch the above for real. People in 1980 didn’t know they were born)


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 2, Episode 6
    First broadcast: Mon 5th May 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    (Mae’n naw o’r gloch!) live from Bangor
    17: Os awn ni nawr fe fyddwn ni yng Nghaerdydd oriau cyn y gem…
    Gyda Griff Rhys Jones, Rowan Atkinson Jones, Mel Smith Jones, Pamela Stephenson Jones
    Designer DAVID HITCHCOCK JONES
    Producers JOHN LLOYD JONES, SEAN HARDIE JONES

    (This is what the above says according to Google: “17: If we go now we will be in Cardiff hours before the game…” Also “Mae’n naw o’r gloch!” apparently means “It’s Nine o’clock!”.)


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 2, Episode 7
    First broadcast: Mon 12th May 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The Death Lasers of Kzaarn
    Huge evil squids threaten to destroy the universe, but the Doctor is trapped in the same concrete corridor as last week…
    Zagglimorgx: Rowan Atkinson
    Talking suitcase: Mel Smith
    Mini-skirted alien: Pamela Stephenson
    Fourth extra wearing hat with rubber tentacle on: Griff Rhys Jones


    There then followed a small series of compilation episodes, lasting for three weeks.

    Daft BBC2 programme slide for one of the NTNOCN compilations, tinted a shade just slightly off from "Sam Tyler Blue". Mel Smith and Pamela Stephenson share a joke, Griff Rhys-Jones looks worried, and Rowan Atkinson possibly has indigestion.

    The Bert of Not the Nine O’Clock News (Not a typo)
    First broadcast: Tue 9th Sep 1980, 21:30 on BBC Two England
    Some of the greatest hats (also not a typo) from the last series.
    The Jewish-looking one: Rowan Atkinson
    The fat one with split ends: Mel Smith
    Sex interest: Pamela Stephenson
    The other one: Griff Rhys-Jones


    Twenty-Five Years of Not the Nine O’clock News
    First broadcast: Tue 16th Sep 1980, 21:30 on BBC Two England
    2: The Formative Years
    More highlights from the first four per cent.
    Trusty Old Ham: Rowan Atkinson
    Man who saw Old Ham on bus: Mel Smith
    Ancient Crone with face lift: Pamela Stephenson
    Face in crowd: Griff Rhys Jones


    Not the Lot of Not the Nine O’Clock News
    First broadcast: Tue 23rd Sep 1980, 21:30 on BBC Two England
    The last of the best of the last lot. A new lot is set for Oct with the old lot: Rowan Atkinson, Mel Smith, Pamela Stephenson and Griff Rhys Jones
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD, SEAN HARDIE


    Onto the third series…

    Title caption from the first episode of the third series - a fighter jet departing the runway, with an altered version of the show's title: "Not the Nine O'Clock In the Morning News".

    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 3, Episode 1
    First broadcast: Mon 27th Oct 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The first of eight programmes: The Banana of T’ai
    Twenty years ago, the remote island of Santa Meej boasted one of the largest banana stocks in Brazil. Today only one is left.
    Nympho with chocolate bar: Rowan Atkinson
    Man in Land-Rover with binoculars: Mel Smith
    HRH The Prince Philip: Pamela Stephenson
    Thane of Fyffe: Griff Rhys Jones
    Designer DAVID HITCHCOCK
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD and SEAN HARDIE


    (Title written in Korean)
    Series 3, Episode 2
    First broadcast: Mon 3rd Nov 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    BBC2 North Korean Cinema Season
    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Perhaps Ng Mnong’s least seminal work, which tells the story of two Korean orphans whose adventures with a water lily and a duck (symbolising the bicycle and the vacuum flask) become tragically entangled in the ideological panic of the Great Step Sideways.
    “Recommended…” (Sheridan Morley)
    Ho Vis: Rowan Atkinson
    Eg Nog: Mel Smith
    Frank Chapple: Griff Rhys Jones
    Hydroelectric dam: Pamela Stephenson


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 3, Episode 3
    First broadcast: Mon 10th Nov 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The third of eight programmes
    Gosh, that’s amazing!! Weekly look at relevant and unusable technological gimmickry, packaged together to look like a building society commercial.
    Laser device for opening Long Life milk cartons: Rowan Atkinson
    Man who keeps pointing at things with his ballpoint pen: Mel Smith
    Plastic greenhouse: Pamela Stephenson
    Carpet salesman: Griff Rhys Jones
    Designer COLIN LOWRY
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD and SEAN HARDIE


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 3, Episode 4
    First broadcast: Mon 17th Nov 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The fourth of eight programmes
    The Mysterious Television Programme of Arthur C. Clarke
    Venezuelan geologist: Rowan Atkinson
    Intergalactic foetus: Griff Rhys Jones
    Dishonest amateur photographer: Mel Smith
    Former head of programmes, Yorkshire Television: Pamela Stephenson
    Designer COLIN LOWREY
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers SEAN HARDIE and JOHN LLOYD
    (At the end of this listing is a plug for the then-forthcoming vinyl release and accompanying book:)
    Record (REB 400) and cassette (ZCR 400), from record shops. Book (same title), £1.95, from bookshops, from 27 November


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 3, Episode 5
    First broadcast: Mon 24th Nov 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The fifth of eight programmes
    Special collectors’ edition made to commemorate HRH Prince Charles’ 32nd consecutive winter holiday in Australia. Hand-tinted by Rowan Atkinson, Griff Rhys Jones, Pamela Stephenson and Mel Smith.
    (Contains jokes of more than one country of origin)


    Not the Nine O’Clock News Surplus Sale
    Series 3, Episode 6
    First broadcast: Mon 1st Dec 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The sixth of eight programmes
    Ex-SAS Coat Hanger Car Aerial, ££2.95. Genuine ex-Traffic Warden No Parking Cones, £4.67. Phoney TV-cum-contact lenses, £56.80. Wide selection reconditioned Rowan Atkinsons, Mel Smiths, Griff Rhys Joneses, Pamela Stephensons to be sold as seen.


    (This listing was hidden on BBC Genome under an “offensive language” warning, because whatever automated system that was in place couldn’t understand the context in which “cum” was being used…)


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 3, Episode 7
    First broadcast: Mon 8th Dec 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The seventh of eight programmes
    Special anniversary edition!
    Many happy returns of the day to Lord Diplock, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary (73), Mr Maurice Green, former editor Daily Telegraph (74), and the Declaration of War on Japan (39) from Rowan Atkinson, Mel Smith, Pamela Stephenson, Griff Rhys Jones.
    Designer DAVID HITCHCOCK
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers SEAN HARDIE, JOHN LLOYD


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 3, Episode 8
    First broadcast: Mon 15th Dec 1980, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    The last of eight programmes
    Twenty-first and final edition with Griff Rhys Jones, Mel Smith, Pamela Stephenson, Rowan Atkinson
    Designer DAVID HITCHCOCK
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD and SEAN HARDIE

    (No jokes here – possibly a degree of exhaustion had set in by the end of this series, although it seems more likely that John Lennon’s murder a week prior may have caused a brief retreat from thinking up silly listings. Reportedly the entire team spent the first day of production on the final episode too depressed to write anything.

    Also… the claim that this is the “final edition” is rather curious. Were they thinking of knocking it on the head after three series?)


    In 1981 the programme took an extended break off TV screens, with the gap filled with various things: a live show, a radio special covering the Royal Wedding, more books and more records. In Autumn 1981, another selection of compilations followed.

    A stern, no-nonsense caption: "HEDGEHOGS - An Apology".

    Not Another Not the Nine O’Clock News
    First broadcast: Fri 9th Oct 1981, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    First of three of bits of the best of the last three series shoved together in a different order.
    Featuring
    Rowan Atkinson, Griff Rhys Jones, Mel Smith and Pamela Stephenson
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers SEAN HARDIE , JOHN LLOYD
    Not the Nine O’Clock News (record RES 421. cassette ZCF 421) from retailers



    An Eighth Chance to See Not the Nine O’Clock News
    First broadcast: Fri 16th Oct 1981, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    Another chance to bone up on the bits you don’t quite know by heart yet from the previous three series. With Rowan Thingy, Pamela Whatsit, Mel Errrm and Griff Rhys Jones
    Director BILL WILSON
    Producers JOHN LLOYD , SEAN HARDIE


    Last of the Summer Repeats
    First broadcast: Fri 23rd Oct 1981, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    26: Not the Nine O’Clock News
    The inimitable four old codgers take another turn down memory lane.
    Mulch: Rowan Atkinson
    Nimmo: Mel Smith
    Cheesy: Griff Rhys Jones
    Humpo: Pamela Stephenson


    And now the final fourth series in 1982! Things start in a slightly more subtle manner than usual, and then once again go completely off the rails.

    A parody of a Valentine's Day card, labelled with the name of the show.

    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 4, Episode 1
    First broadcast: Mon 1st Feb 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    Due to lack of space in this edition of Radio Times, there is, regrettably, no room to give details about the above programme in the allotted amount of area available, due to the shortage of allottable pagery, except to say that the usual allocation is larger than this.
    Featuring Mel Smith, Pamela Stephenson, Griff Rhys Jones, Rowan Atkinson


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 4, Episode 2…

    (…and here we hit a snag, in that I can’t find the listing for the second episode. There doesn’t seem to have been any strike action that stopped that week’s Radio Times going out, or anything along those lines – whatever the listing was, it’s has been omitted from Genome, and in its place is a basic write-up done for iPlayer. Anyway, for the sake of completion, episode 2 was broadcast Monday 8th February 1982, at the standard time of 9PM on BBC2, and it was the one with the Game For A Laugh parody. Now let’s just skip over to the third one…)


    Ni He Seo An Nuacht Ag A Naoi A Chlog (That’s “Not the Nine O’Clock News” in the Irish language)
    First broadcast: Mon 15th Feb 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    Series 4, Episode 3
    Irish General Election Special with subtitles
    Ruadhn Mac Aidicin (Rowan Atkinson), Mel Mac Gabhann (Mel Smith), Pamela Nic Stiofain (Pamela Stephenson), Griff Rhys Mac Seion (Griff Rhys Jones)
    A roisin Phil (Posy),
    Ta suil agam go bhfuil tu slan. Mo bhron nach raibh me in ann scriobh chugat ach bhi an iomarca oibre Ie deanamh agam anseo sa Radio Times – se sin i roinn na coitchirte. Mile buiochas le haghaidh na stocai. Tabhair focail do Sinead ar mo shon-se.
    Mise le meas, Sean.

    (A Google translation of the above: “Dear Phil (Posy), I know you are. I felt like I couldn’t write to you but I had too much work to do here in the Radio Times – that’s in the commons department. A thousand thanks for the stocks. Give Sinead words on my behalf. Yours sincerely, Sean.”)


    Not the Nine O’Clock News on Ice
    Series 4, Episode 4
    First broadcast: Mon 22nd Feb 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    Spectacular tedium for children from 1 ½ to 90, from the Schwarzwaldkirschentorteleizurcenter, Munchen Gladbach.
    Introduced by JOHNNI STYLE with ARMAND AND MURIEL and the HEINRICH KNODL HARMONICA RASCALS
    Robin Cousins: Pamela Stephenson
    Gang of oovy(?) brigands: Rowan Atkinson
    Huge chicken in skis: Griff Rhys Jones
    Humorous cowpoke: Mel Smith
    Designer DAVID HITCHCOCK
    Director GEOFF POSNER
    Producers JOHN LLOYD and SEAN HARDIE


    To Let
    Series 4, Episode 5
    First broadcast: Mon 1st Mar 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    Convenient space, central BBC2 conservation area, adjacent BBC1 with handy rear access to Radio 1; would suit Rowan Atkinson, Mel Smith, Griff Rhys Jones or perhaps Pamela Stephenson; might convert into comedy programme like Not the Nine O’Clock News (subject to usual permissions).
    Sole agents David Hitchcock (Designer), Geoff Posner (Director), Sean Hardie, John Lloyd (Producers)
    Book, Not the Nine O’Clock News, £1.95 from booksellers


    Not the Nine O’Clock News
    Series 4, Episode 6
    First broadcast: Mon 8th Mar 1982, 21:00 on BBC Two England
    Dear Not the Nine O’Clock News, I would like to complain in the strongest possible terms about your treatment of………………… in the last programme ever. It was disgusting/ outrageous/rancid/not nearly long enough. I am not a prude/fat old codger/your mother, but this really takes the biscuit/mickey/last train to Clarksville. I shall not be watching again, yours sincerely ….
    PS My favourite was Mel Smith/Griff Rhys Jones/Rowan Atkinson/Pamela Stephenson/Designer David Hitchcock/Director Geoff Posner/Producers Sean Hardie, John Lloyd (Delete/fill in as applicable)
    Book (same title), £1.95 from booksellers


    (In 1983 there was another short run of compilation episodes, to squeeze out some final repeats out of the series. Those listings aren’t really worth copy and pasting as they’re pretty straightforward. By this time everyone involved had gone their seperate ways, with some of the last output basically being John Lloyd and various writers putting out more books along the lines of those ones you kept seeing plugs for in the Radio Times listings. Which is a topic for another day, perhaps…)

    The end bit of a quick NTNOCN sketch. The BBFC Cert X slide - they weren't too fond of nunchucks, but they were really into "Lesbian Lavatory Lust", as has been certfied here by the entire BBFC staff.
  • Murun Buchstansangur lay in his bed, drinking cups of coffee

    Murun Buchstansangur lay in his bed, drinking cups of coffee

    “5.20 MURUN BUCHSTANSANGUR. Original animated series featuring a smelly, disgusting, but irresistible creature that lives in a crack beneath the kitchen cupboard.”

    If you know what “Murun Buchstansangur” is at all, you know that it’s a series of five minute cartoons made between 1982 and 1988 for Channel 4 in the UK, and it stars a weird and somewhat unappealing blue blob man. The show itself is also weird and somewhat unappealing, and that’s why it’s so fascinating.

    It takes the form of a children’s cartoon, but it isn’t for kids at all; yet neither is it something that could logically be shown on something like Adult Swim. It’s too early eighties British, too unsettling in a way that doesn’t lend itself easily to memes and posts on the socials (other than the usual “Bri’ish” stuff – the meme equivalent of nervous laughter). If the creators of Mr Pickles took one glance at this, they’d have an existential crisis.

    The first episode went out only 12 days after Channel 4’s launch, at 5:20pm on a Sunday. The following episodes were repeated for many, many years, long after production had ceased. Eventually I started to wonder – when did it exit the schedules? It must have been the 90s, right?

    Well, yes, I was right – Murun Buchstansangur’s last air date, as far as I can tell, was on Tuesday July 30th 1996, at 5 minutes to 6 in the evening. It followed the airing of a Terrytoons cartoon, perhaps further emphasizing that Channel 4 probably never bothered watching a single episode of it themselves.

    1996 was perhaps the last year you could argue that Channel 4 was still at some level “Channel 4”, in the original Red Triangle / alternative comedy / “Channel Swore” meaning of the name. But by this point the schedules were very different. Despite Murun being followed by a repeat of The Avengers (as in Mr Steed and Emma Peel, not Marvel), which also graced the fourth channel in 1982, another programme that had been on earlier was Ricki Lake’s talk show. The following morning would feature Rocko’s Modern Life, The Secret World Of Alex Mack, and of course The Big Breakast.

    Embarassingly, while I do remember seeing the title of the programme in TV listings back in the 80s, I didn’t watch it due to a typical childhood misunderstanding. My small brain thought that “Murun Buchstansangur” must be something in a foreign language, and therefore I wasn’t allowed to watch, as that would break the law or something. A related bit of confusion happened with The Hitman And Her, which was on well after my bedtime in 1989 – I assumed it must be a thrilling American import about an assassin who now has to work for the cops, and who gets partnered up with a tough street-smart female detective (the “Her” of the title).

    Anyway, not too long ago I uploaded a painstakingly compiled video of the first 13 episodes of Murun Buchstansangur to this channel, and it’s embedded above. For more info on the programme, I highly recommend this review / ranking of these same first 13 episodes, courtesy of The Anorak Zone.

    A VT clock for the fourth episode, bearing the extraordinary altered title of "Murun Barfstrangler". Clearly someone in Channel 4's playout had already got tired trying to spell the title correctly - one of the previous editions has a completely managled attempt on its VT clock...