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Sunday Morning telly

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  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    It was worth catching the end titles of Highway for the rare glimpse of one of the logos of one of the smaller ITV companies at the end.

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  • wispa lover
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    The "On The Record" titles were a Sunday highlight for me. Plus the theme tunes to The Waltons and Highway meant for me "school tomorrow".

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  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by Richard1978 View Post
    There was a phase of the BBC putting shows normally on a Sunday on a Saturday for a time, All Creatures Great & Small, Bergerac & That's Life come to mind.
    I never liked it when they moved That's Life! to Saturdays in the early 1990s, even though it was on Saturdays when it started in 1973. It always felt like a Sunday evening show to me.

    I didn't like it when CBBC moved the Grange Hill repeats from Sundays to Saturday mornings in the mid 1990s either so that Fully Booked could run on Sunday mornings.

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  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    I remember On The Record being another "watch for the titles only" show, with that Big Ben Crocodile roaring.

    There was a phase of the BBC putting shows normally on a Sunday on a Saturday for a time, All Creatures Great & Small, Bergerac & That's Life come to mind.

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  • marc
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    IIRC, wasn't Batman (1960s) series shown on a Sunday morning around 11:00 am?

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  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    It's also interesting that despite Sundays being associated with religion, it can just as much be associated with politics, when you think about David Frost, and programmes like Weekend World; This Week Next Week or whatever it was called. There was something rather sober about Sundays seeing senior politicians being interviewed. I think of politicians as being a "weekday" thing, and even constituency duties don't take place on a Sunday.

    Follyfoot repeats were on Sunday morning ITV, and I think that Black Beauty ended up there as well.

    Give me Sunday evenings instead - Hale and Pace, Spitting Image, That's Life!, and even Prisoner: Cell Block H.

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  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Channel 4 seemed to get the odd good repeat like The Munsters or Lost In Space, though it could be Follyfoot, but that was a good excuse to laugh at the 1970s fashions.

    Umbrella was one of those programmes where the title sequence was more interesting than the actual show. The upbeat theme & hands of all nations dance. BBC2 had the weakest schedule for a long time apart from CBBC & Sunday Grandstand.

    Normally after 6pm everything picked up for a good evening's viewing normally ending in a "mum's favourite" drama.

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  • Twocky61
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by George 1978 View Post
    Going back ten years or so before that, apart from the church services, it was still DIY programmes, and learn to speak Italian, and Asian community programming on BBC 1, OU on BBC 2, farming, painting along with Nancy, and learning to read on ITV.
    That's all I remember too; the church services; especially Songs of Praise unless it was in the evening like it is now

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  • Twocky61
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    [QUOTE=George 1978;219984]

    Going back ten years or so before that, apart from the church services, it was still DIY programmes, and learn to speak Italian, and Asian community programming on BBC 1, OU on BBC 2, farming, painting along with Nancy, and learning to read on ITV. QUOTE]

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  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    And of course Channel 4 repeated Worzel Gummidge on Sunday mornings circa 1987 (complete with Southern ident, five years after they bit the dust); and they also shown The Waltons, Lost in Space and Little House on the Prairie.

    Sundays only got better with a good film, and of course, Bullseye.

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  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    The TV set was hardly on in my house on a Sunday morning back in the 1970s and 1980s - we had the radio on with Dennis McCarthy on BBC Radio Nottingham doing his Family Jackpot and Wanted Column of the Air, as well as Tara with a record and some jokes (Apologies for anyone not local to the Nottingham area like I am). My family didn't really go to church either, save for one Sunday morning in 1994.

    Occasionally however, it was mostly either Play School on BBC 1 or David Frost on TV-am and then the TV was off for the radio. I am glad that in 1993 the OU was elbowed out of the way for CBBC on Sunday mornings, which meant repeats of Grange Hill as well as other things, and Channel 4 didn't do too badly either, with the cartoon Dennis (Mitchell, not the Menace), and Saved by the Bell, until the Hollyoaks omnibus took up too much time.

    Going back ten years or so before that, apart from the church services, it was still DIY programmes, and learn to speak Italian, and Asian community programming on BBC 1, OU on BBC 2, farming, painting along with Nancy, and learning to read on ITV.

    And don't get me started on the EastEnders omnibus either - I would rather have the test card on for an hour. I used to hate Sundays in the 1980s when you couldn't even find an open shop to buy a loaf of bread.

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  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Apart from the odd stand out show I never found Sunday daytime TV that interesting compared to Saturdays.

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  • 80sChav
    started a topic Sunday Morning telly

    Sunday Morning telly

    I found/came across the Satu7rday Mornuing telly thread, but try as much as I did - can not find a Sunday one!!

    Who else recalls when sunday Morning - even extending the Morning by 2 hours to 2pm - that Sunday telly was brilliant before the Internet wrecked it all .... or as The Buggles said Video Killed The Radio Star and Robbie williams sang Reality Killed The Video Star (a play on words I know lol)

    Going back to Sunday Morning TV - it sure is cult now just like Saturday's is and not just for Kids Shows but like Gazetta Football Italia, World Sport (I think it changed between Sats and Sunds), Duppledown Frm etc and aqll the kids shows including like the O-Zone ... when kids TV mattered/was important - let alone on a Sunday - which made it a game-changer in my opion. Then if you wanted eastEnders - the Omnibus used to start areound Lunchtime-ish - which was worth watching alone before all this "on demand telly" etc etc

    Even before all this I can recall things from the real early 90s like The Golden Girls, Little House On the Prary etc too - that all mixed in mwith others made for a great and easily 6 hours viewing!

    80sChav
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