How popular (and influential) was teletext during the early 1980s? Teletext decoders tended to only be fitted to high end model TVs. On some TVs a teletext decoder was an optional extra.
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Life in Britain in the early 1980s
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Originally posted by Arran View Post
There may have been concerns with the name, but CITV was organised in a very different way from Watch It! hence a valid reason for a change of name. Watch It! was run by the regional ITV companies whereas CITV was effectively a time limited national ITV company (like TV-AM) although it was owned by Central.
I'm surprised that there wasn't a separate franchise for children's programmes in the 1991 ITV franchise round like there was for breakfast TV and the teletext service.
Is there any truth that CBBC was created as a result of the success of CITV?
I know that due to the problems that TV-am had with the unions and all that, Scottish Television and a couple of other companies wanted the regional companies to have the breakfast television slot.
I suppose that CBBC was created in that way, but in many ways I am surprised that they didn't do it before ITV did.
I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
I'm having so much fun
My lucky number's one
Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!
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It was late 1981 when I changed schools and the one I transferred to had a computer class with two systems. You could access the internet through a modem you laid the telephone hand set on top of. For graphics you had to write a program in code, you could switch between settings and achieve a very basic animation to it. I worked on a screen image of a very basic looking bird silhouette in a night sky with the wings static but the while thing gliding upwards and the stars in the sky twinkling off and on. When they switched to floppy disk drives from cassette tape ones you had to buy your own 3 1/2" floppy disk to keep your work on and though not cheap I did, but someone broke into my locker and stole it and that was the end of computer class for me. I might've had a grand career but for a lousy thief!
I remember one channel on an extra band or VHF on cable television being the main page for some sort of teletext service, but without the extra gear that was the only page I ever saw. There was Oracle and Cee-Fax in U.K. and Teledon I think in Canada.
Interesting to learn about how ITV (and BBC) developed in the '80s. I think of it as a time of lay offs and contracting out, followed in the '90s by mergers for ITV regions until there were no more basically. TVam and Breakfast television plus CITV and CBBC are sort of late wrinkles giving an illusion of more variety than there really was behind the scenes.Last edited by beccabear67; 12-06-2021, 05:36.My virtual jigsaws: https://www.jigsawplanet.com/beccabear67/Original-photo-puzzles
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Originally posted by George 1978 View PostI suppose that CBBC was created in that way, but in many ways I am surprised that they didn't do it before ITV did.
The BBC already had a standardised selection of after school children's programmes. Remember that continuity and presenters cost money, so it's easy to understand why the BBC did not deploy it until after ITV had already tried it out and it proved to be popular with the viewers at the time.
Not all ITV companies liked the standardised content of CITV because they would broadcast programmes specific to their region. The most notable example was Gus Honeybun from Westward and TSW.
https://forums.doyouremember.co.uk/f...itv-after-citv
Both CITV and CBBC eventually evolved into their own channels separate from ITV1 and BBC1. I have wondered how different the history of terrestrial children's TV would have been since 1985 if CITV (or its predecessor Watch It!) had never been established and ITV companies had full autonomy over weekday afternoons right up until the takeovers by Carlton and Granada in the 1990s.
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Originally posted by W1 Rover View PostThe various makes of personal cassette players becoming smaller and actually compact.
CD players first went on sale in Britain in late 1982 and were perceived as toys for rich audiophiles until the end of the decade.
Hi-Fi was big in the 1980s. Hi-Fi magazines were sold in every newsagent shop and had quite substantial readerships.
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Magazines in general were big business in the 1980s. Visit WH Smith and find a magazine for just about every hobby and interest imaginable.
I think that magazines were, on average, cheaper during the early 1980s than they were in the 1990s and 2000s after adjusting for inflation. You could buy computer magazines for LESS than £1 in 1984.
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Originally posted by Arran View Post
Not all ITV companies liked the standardised content of CITV because they would broadcast programmes specific to their region. The most notable example was Gus Honeybun from Westward and TSW.
Smaller ITV companies did get some shows networked on CITV - remember Border's efforts such as The Joke Machine and Crush a Grape, the Stu Francis Crackerjack ripoff? I have always thought that anyone who watched in the Border region probably thought that their local station had opted out of the network to show the programme as they hardly ever got networked programmes on air from Border, and the Border "bow and arrow" logo ident was associated with Cumbria and south Scotland only.
I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
I'm having so much fun
My lucky number's one
Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!
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Originally posted by Arran View PostMagazines in general were big business in the 1980s. Visit WH Smith and find a magazine for just about every hobby and interest imaginable.
I think that magazines were, on average, cheaper during the early 1980s than they were in the 1990s and 2000s after adjusting for inflation. You could buy computer magazines for LESS than £1 in 1984.
I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
I'm having so much fun
My lucky number's one
Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!
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I think CD players were reasonably mainstream by 1987 but were still a product for audiophiles with Hi-Fi separates rather than teenagers.
There was a rise in the popularity of cassettes in the late 1980s - possibly as a result of the music industry that had abandoned vinyl records but CD players and even CDs themselves were generally too expensive for the average teenager. Also, most cars now had cassette players fitted as standard.
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Originally posted by George 1978 View PostIn 1981 for example, Woman magazine was around 20p, TV Times (both IPC Magazines) was around the same price - my family had the Charles and Diana wedding issue for many years. A tabloid newspaper like the Daily Star was 12p, a middle market paper like the Daily Express was 15p, and a broadsheet like The Times was 20p. I would hazard a guess that they are around six or seven times that amount now.
New Scientist cost 70p in 1982. WH Smith is now selling it for an eye watering £5.95.
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Originally posted by George 1978 View PostSmaller ITV companies did get some shows networked on CITV - remember Border's efforts such as The Joke Machine and Crush a Grape, the Stu Francis Crackerjack ripoff? I have always thought that anyone who watched in the Border region probably thought that their local station had opted out of the network to show the programme as they hardly ever got networked programmes on air from Border, and the Border "bow and arrow" logo ident was associated with Cumbria and south Scotland only.
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Originally posted by Arran View Post
Newspapers and magazines, along with postage, appear to have increased in price above the rate of inflation more than anything else (except housing) since the early 1980s.
New Scientist cost 70p in 1982. WH Smith is now selling it for an eye watering £5.95.I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
I'm having so much fun
My lucky number's one
Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!
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