OTD in early British television: 10 January 1938

10th January 2025

John Wyver writes: tucked into the evening schedule on Monday 10 January 1938 was a ten-minute broadcast titled Alexander Calder's Mobiles, and there's a case to be made for this as the first television programme conceived as visual art; not, more

OTD in early British television: 8 January 1937

8th January 2025

John Wyver writes: on the afternoon of Friday 8 January 1937 Dallas Bower produced Burnt Sepia, a half-hour variety line-up billed as, in the racially derogatory language of the day, ‘an all-coloured cabaret’. This was television’s first variety programme featuring more

OTD in early British television: 5 January 1938

5th January 2025

John Wyver writes: One of the things I love about researching early television is how bare programme listings can lead down the strangest and most unlikely rabbit holes. Take the line-ups for the two Picture Page editions on Tuesday 5 more

OTD in early British television: 1 January 1939

1st January 2025

John Wyver writes: In keeping with the aspirational tenor of Alexandra Palace's lifestyle programming for its professional middle-class viewers, each winter there was at least one studio broadcast for those looking forward to, or dreaming about, a ski-ing holiday across more

OTD in early British television: 30 December 1936

30th December 2024

John Wyver writes: The conventional forms of conventional politics on television are absent from the pre-war Alexandra Palace service. There was no television news, and Panorama, the first regular current affairs magazine show would not debut until 1953. But there more

OTDs in early British television: Xmas reprise 1

25th December 2024

John Wyver writes: for a month now, I have been writing more or less daily blog posts about pre-war British television, linking each one to a programme or event that took place on the same in one of the years more

OTD in early British television: 24 December 1938

24th December 2024

John Wyver writes: for whatever reason, pre-war television on Christmas Eve was largely unremarkable, although the Baird Company's 30-line broadcast on 24 December 1931 appears to have been the first to be described in the billings as 'A Christmas programme'. Frustratingly, more