BBC-3 (TV series): Difference between revisions

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{{short description|BBC television programme}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2012}}
{{Infobox television
{{Infobox television
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| caption              =  
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| genre                = {{Plainlist|  
| genre                = {{Plainlist|  
* [[w:Chat show|Chat show]]
* [[Chat show]]
* [[w:Satire|Satire]]
* [[Satire]]
}}
}}
| presenter            = [[w:Robert Robinson (broadcaster)|Robert Robinson]]
| presenter            = [[Robert Robinson (broadcaster)|Robert Robinson]]
| starring            =  
| starring            =  
| theme_music_composer =  
| theme_music_composer =  
| country              = [[w:United Kingdom|United Kingdom]]
| country              = [[United Kingdom]]
|  num_series  = 1
|  num_series  = 1
| num_episodes        = 24
| num_episodes        = 24
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[[Category:BBC satirical television shows]]
[[Category:BBC satirical television shows]]
[[Category:1960s British satirical television series]]
[[Category:1960s British satirical television series]]
{{BBC-tv-prog-stub}}

Latest revision as of 14:49, 23 February 2023

BBC-3
Genre
Presented byRobert Robinson
Country of originUnited Kingdom
No. of series1
No. of episodes24
Production
ProducerNed Sherrin
Original release
NetworkBBC1
Release1965 (1965) –
1966 (1966)

BBC-3 is a BBC television programme, devised and produced by Ned Sherrin and hosted by Robert Robinson,[1] which aired for twenty-four hour-long editions during the winter of 1965–1966.

It was the third in a line of weekend satire-and-chat shows, successor to That Was The Week That Was and Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life, though David Frost did not participate in this series.

Regular performers included John Bird, Lynda Baron, David Battley, Roy Dotrice, Bill Oddie, and Leonard Rossiter.[1][2][3] Guests included Millicent Martin and Alan Bennett.[2] The musical director was Dave Lee.[1] With its white sets, BBC-3 retained the look of its predecessor, Not So Much a Programme. Its name was a reference to the BBC's second channel, BBC2, which had started the previous year.

Swearing

In the edition of 13 November 1965, during a discussion on theatre censorship in which Robert Robinson and Mary McCarthy also participated, Kenneth Tynan became the first person ever to say "fuck" on British television; he claimed, perhaps disingenuously, that the word no longer shocked anyone.[4] The storm which resulted forced the BBC to make a public apology for Tynan's comments. No recording of the incident is known to exist.

References

  1. ^ a b c Radio Times entry for BBC-3. 1965-10-16. BBC Television. BBC One.
  2. ^ a b Radio Times entry for BBC-3. 1965-11-27. BBC Television. BBC1.
  3. ^ Radio Times entry for BBC-3. 1965-12-11. BBC Television. BBC1.
  4. ^ "My TV 4-letter word by Tynan". Daily Mirror. 1965-11-15. p. 1.

External links