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Nationwide (TV series)

 
Nationwide (TV Series)

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Nationwide (TV series)



 
 
Nationwide was a BBC current affairs
Current affairs (news format)

Current affairs is a genre of broadcast journalism where the emphasis is on detailed analysis and discussion of news stories that have recently occurred or are ongoing at the time of broadcast....
 television series broadcast on BBC1 each weekday following the early evening news. It followed a magazine format, combining political analysis and discussion with consumer affairs, light entertainment and sports reporting (on Fridays). It ran from 9 September 1969 to 5 August 1983, when it was replaced by Sixty Minutes
Sixty Minutes (TV series)

Sixty Minutes was a news and current affairs programme which ran each weekday evening at 5.40pm between 24 October 1983 to 27 July 1984 on BBC One....
. The long-running Watchdog
Watchdog (TV series)

Watchdog is a BBC television series that investigates viewers' reports of problematic experiences with traders, retailers, and other companies around the United Kingdom....
 programme began as a Nationwide feature.

The light entertainment was quite similar in tone to That's Life!
That's Life!

That's Life! was a magazine-style television series on BBC between 1973 and 1994, television presenter by Esther Rantzen throughout the entire run, with various changes of co-presenters....
.






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Nationwide was a BBC current affairs
Current affairs (news format)

Current affairs is a genre of broadcast journalism where the emphasis is on detailed analysis and discussion of news stories that have recently occurred or are ongoing at the time of broadcast....
 television series broadcast on BBC1 each weekday following the early evening news. It followed a magazine format, combining political analysis and discussion with consumer affairs, light entertainment and sports reporting (on Fridays). It ran from 9 September 1969 to 5 August 1983, when it was replaced by Sixty Minutes
Sixty Minutes (TV series)

Sixty Minutes was a news and current affairs programme which ran each weekday evening at 5.40pm between 24 October 1983 to 27 July 1984 on BBC One....
. The long-running Watchdog
Watchdog (TV series)

Watchdog is a BBC television series that investigates viewers' reports of problematic experiences with traders, retailers, and other companies around the United Kingdom....
 programme began as a Nationwide feature.

The light entertainment was quite similar in tone to That's Life!
That's Life!

That's Life! was a magazine-style television series on BBC between 1973 and 1994, television presenter by Esther Rantzen throughout the entire run, with various changes of co-presenters....
. Eccentric stories featured skateboarding duck
Skateboarding duck

Herbie the skateboarding duck was the subject of an item first broadcast on the BBC news magazine programme Nationwide on 24 May 1978.Herbie, an Aylesbury duck, was bought by Jacky and Paddy Randall of Croydon for their children Michaela and Colin....
s and men who claimed that they could walk on egg shells. (In fact, the show's tendency to sidestep serious matters in favour of light pieces was famously spoofed in an episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus
Monty Python's Flying Circus

Monty Python?s Flying Circus is a BBC sketch comedy programme from the Monty Python comedy team, and the group's initial claim to fame. The show was noted for its surreality, Wiktionary:risqu? or innuendo-laden humour, sight gags, and sketches without punchlines....
, where the show, instead of reporting on the opening of the Third World War, chose to feature a story about a "theory" that sitting down in a comfortable chair rests one's legs). Richard Stilgoe
Richard Stilgoe

Richard Henry Simpson Stilgoe Order of the British Empire is a British songwriter, lyricist and musician. He is noted for clever wordplay as much as for his music....
 performed topical songs.

The programme's famous brass and strings theme music The Good Word was composed by Johnny Scott
John Scott (composer)

John Scott is a United Kingdom composer and Conductor .John Scott is a film composer who has worked with some of the world's foremost producers and directors including Richard Donner, Mark Damon, Hugh Hudson, Norman Jewison, Irvin Kershner, Daniel Petrie, Roger Spottiswoode and Charlton Heston, among others....
.

After the introduction and round-up, the BBC regions opted out
Opt out

Opt out, is a term used in broadcasting when a nation or region splits from the main national output. In the United Kingdom, BBC Scotland often opts-out of the main BBC One schedule in favour of locally relevant programming....
 for a twenty minute section for local news round ups (Midlands Today
Midlands Today

Midlands Today is the BBC's regional television news programme for the West Midlands , which covers the West Midlands , Warwickshire and Staffordshire....
, Points West, Wales Today Look East etc.). Once they had handed back to Lime Grove Studios
Lime Grove Studios

Lime Grove Studios was a film studio complex built by the Gaumont Film Company in 1915 situated in a street named Lime Grove, inShepherd's Bush, west London, north of Hammersmith and described by Gaumont as "the finest studio in Great Britain and the first building ever put up in this country solely for the production of films"....
 in London
London

London is the capital of both England and the United Kingdom, and the most populous municipality in the European Union. An important settlement for two millennia, History of London goes back to its founding by the Roman Empire....
, the regions remained on standby to participate in feedback and two-way
Two-way

Two-way communication between means that information is flowing in both directions between two parties.----In journalism, a two-way is an informal style of reporting that involves a conversation between two people....
 interviews to be transmitted across the whole BBC network.

The show was used in an influential cultural
Cultural studies

Cultural studies is an academic discipline which combines political economy, communication, sociology, social theory, literary theory, Media influence, film theory, cultural anthropology, philosophy, museum studies and art history/art criticism to study culture phenomena in various societies....
/media studies
Media studies

Media studies is a collection of academic programs regarding the content, history, meaning and effects of various media . Media studies scholars vary in the theoretical and methodological focus they bring to mass media topics, including the media's political, social, economic and cultural roles and impact....
 project at the University of Birmingham
University of Birmingham

The University of Birmingham is a United Kingdom 'Red brick universities' university located in the city of Birmingham, England. Founded in Edgbaston in 1900 as a successor to Mason Science College, and with origins dating back to the 1825 Birmingham Medical School, it was the first of the so-called Red brick universities to receive a Royal...
, known as The Nationwide Project
The Nationwide Project

The Nationwide Project was an influential media audience research project conducted by the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies at the University of Birmingham, England, in the late 1970s and early 1980s....
. The name also provided inspiration to the former Co-operative Permanent Building Society
Nationwide Building Society

Nationwide Building Society is the largest building society in the world. It has its headquarters in Swindon, England, and maintains a significant administration centre in Northampton....
 who, in 1971 renamed themselves the Nationwide Building Society
Nationwide Building Society

Nationwide Building Society is the largest building society in the world. It has its headquarters in Swindon, England, and maintains a significant administration centre in Northampton....
.

Thatcher On the Spot

Perhaps the most famous interview occurred in May 1983 during a general election
United Kingdom general election, 1983

The 1983 UK general election was held on 9 June 1983. It gave the Conservative Party under Margaret Thatcher the most decisive election victory since United Kingdom general election, 1945....
 special of its "On the Spot" feature. Mrs Diana Gould, a geography teacher from Cirencester
Cirencester

Cirencester is a market town in Gloucestershire, England, 93 miles west northwest of London. Cirencester lies on the River Churn, a tributary of the River Thames, and is the largest town in Cotswold ....
, persistently challenged Margaret Thatcher
Margaret Thatcher

Margaret Hilda Thatcher, Baroness Thatcher Order of the Garter, Order of Merit, Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council, Fellow of the Royal Society was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1979 to 1990 and Leader of the Conservative Party of the Conservative Party from 1975 to 1990....
 about her ordering of the sinking of the General Belgrano
ARA General Belgrano

The ARA General Belgrano was an Argentine Navy cruiser sunk in a controversial incident during the Falklands War with the loss of 323 lives....
 when it was sailing away from the Falklands
Falkland Islands

The Falkland Islands are an archipelago in the South Atlantic Ocean, located from the coast of Argentina, west of the Shag Rocks , and north of the British Antarctic Territory ....
. Mrs Thatcher denied that the Belgrano had been sailing away, but Mrs. Gould quoted map references and continued to push her point across, encouraged - so the Conservative party claimed - by presenter Sue Lawley. When Mrs Thatcher asked her whether she accepted that the Belgrano had been a danger to British shipping when it was sunk, Mrs Gould told her that she did not. Thatcher then proclaimed that "I think it could only be in Britain that a British Prime Minister could be asked why she took action to protect our ships against an enemy ship that was a danger to our shipping", and was extremely angry about the BBC for allowing the question. Thatcher's husband Denis
Denis Thatcher

Major Sir Denis Thatcher, 1st Baronet, Order of the British Empire, Territorial Decoration was an England businessman, and the husband of the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Margaret Thatcher....
 lashed out at Roger Bolton
Roger Bolton (producer)

Roger John Bolton is a British television producer and radio presenter....
, the editor of the programme, in the entertainment suite, saying that his wife had been "stitched up by bloody BBC poofs
Homosexuality

Homosexuality refers to human sexual behavior or same-sex attraction between people of the same sex or to homosexual orientation. As a sexual orientation, homosexuality refers to "having sexual and romantic attraction primarily or exclusively to members of one?s own sex"; "it also refers to an individual?s sense of personal and social identi...
 and Trots
Trotskyism

Trotskyism is the theory of Marxism as advocated by Leon Trotsky. Trotsky considered himself an Orthodox Marxism and Bolshevik-Leninism, arguing for the establishment of a vanguard party....
". As a result, Thatcher became increasingly hostile to the BBC.

Archive status

As a contemporary programme Nationwide was only recorded on broadcast videotape
Videotape

Videotape is a means of recording images and sound onto magnetic tape as opposed to film stock.In most cases, a helical scan video head rotates against the moving tape to record the data in two dimensions, because video signals have a very high bandwidth, and static heads would require extremely high tape speeds....
 in the event of possible complaint
Complaint

In general use, a complaint is an expression of displeasure, such as poor service at a store, or from a local government, etc. In legal terminology, a complaint is a formal legal document that sets out the basic facts and legal reasons that the filing party believes are sufficient to support a claim against another person, persons, entity...
 or litigation; after a period of time tapes would be wiped and re-used although filmed reports were archived. Consequently only a few complete editions exist in their original form.

However, in his book The Television Heritage (1989), author Steve Bryant claimed that "a virtually complete collection of the BBC magazine programme Nationwide from 1971 to 1980" existed as domestic recordings. He wrote:

"Already virtually doomed is material held on early domestic tape formats manufactured by Sony, Shibaden and Philips. The pictures from these tapes are very poor - indeed, the Sony and Shibaden reel-to-reel tapes are monochrome only - but some unique collections exist on these formats. Most significant is a virtually complete collection of the BBC magazine programme Nationwide from 1971 to 1980, mostly on Sony and Shibaden, but on Philips for the programmes after 1977. This collection is held by the NFA (National Film Archive
National Film Archive

AThe National Film Archive was the name of Britain's national film archive between 1955 and 1992. It had been set up by the British Film Institute as the National Film Library in 1935, its first curator being Ernest Lindgren....
) and represents the only copies of the complete programmes in existence.

The BBC has all the film reports and a small selection of pre-recorded video inserts, but the programmes themselves were live and were not recorded off-air. Neither the machinery nor the funds are currently available to save the contents of these tapes, so a valuable daily record of British life in the 70s, including a large number of live interviews with leading politicians and celebrities of the time, looks like being lost."

But the British Film Institute
British Film Institute

The British Film Institute is a charitable organisation established by Royal Charter to:...
 website has stated more recently that "so far we have successfully dubbed 500 [Philips] N-1500 [tapes] as part of an HLF
National Lottery (United Kingdom)

The National Lottery is the largest lottery in the United Kingdom. It is operated by Camelot Group, to whom the licence was granted in 1994, 2001 and again in 2007....
-Funded Nationwide preservation project"

External links