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In a week of programmes for the ±«Óãtv centenary, historian Robert Seatter selects three objects from the ±«Óãtv’s archive store and tells the stories behind their creation.

In a week of programmes for the ±«Óãtv centenary, historian Robert Seatter selects three objects from the ±«Óãtv’s archive store and tells the stories behind their creation - what they tell us about the changing history of the organisation, about expansion of the media and the nation at large. Robert’s choices are unexpected, revelatory and sometimes, with the cruel benefit of hindsight, funny.

In today’s programme, Robert unpacks three very different and significant maps associated with ±«Óãtv output.

i) A very early Shipping Forecast chart from 1925, when the famous broadcast was launched in partnership with the Met Office in order to save lives at sea.

ii) A football grid designed to make the sport comprehensible in the early days of radio, and the source of that everyday phrase ‘back to square one…’

iii) A handy map of the broadcast itinerary of the 1953 Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, the UK’s first big television moment of the last century.
Robert explores themes of lifeline broadcasting and myth-making, early attempts at ‘visualising’ radio, and the post-war arrival of mass media television in the UK.

He is joined by Shipping Forecast enthusiast, the poet Imtiaz Dharker.

Producer: Mohini Patel

Available now

14 minutes

Supporting Content: 100 Years of Our ±«Óãtv

For more information about 100 Years of Our ±«Óãtv and to see some of the images mentioned in this programme, please follow this link:

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Broadcasts

  • Thu 17 Nov 2022 13:45
  • Sun 15 Jan 2023 14:45