Ad_Forums-Top

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sunday Morning telly

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by Moondog View Post
    1990s Disney Club on ITV was the only thing i enjoyed on a Sunday morning, great shows like Gummi Bears and such.
    Yes, Scottish Television did that programme. Ironic considering STV and Disney were both shareholders of GMTV.

    What's Up Doc? was the Warner Brothers equivalent of that.

    Leave a comment:


  • Moondog
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    1990s Disney Club on ITV was the only thing i enjoyed on a Sunday morning, great shows like Gummi Bears and such.

    Leave a comment:


  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by George 1978 View Post
    Yes, the name Terry rings a bell. It was like an actual programme within TV-am if you know what I mean.
    Yes that's right, it took me a long time to work out TV-AM wasn't just a programme.

    Leave a comment:


  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by Richard1978 View Post
    He was called Terry or Tony, though I used to call him "Melon Gob" because his head looked like a melon with a slice out of it!
    Yes, the name Terry rings a bell. It was like an actual programme within TV-am if you know what I mean.

    Leave a comment:


  • numpty
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    There have only ever been two things worth watching on Sunday mornings. Repeats of the first couple of series of "The Adventure Game" before it got a bit silly, and Lee & Herring's "This Morning With Richard Not Judy".

    Leave a comment:


  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    I just remembered that on the 7th IBAOTN, which was seen ironically two days after TV-am went off air, it had an outtake from Dappledown Farm with Cant trying to apply some green tissue paper with Copydex-alike glue onto an eggbox-alike dinosaur model while on a ledge before the dinosaur falls off the ledge.

    And the following outtake had Frost in the TV-am studio trying to interview a correspondent in Warsaw, and Frost shouting: "IS THIS A DIFFICULT TIME FOR GEORGE BUSH?" After the correspondent said that he couldn't hear him, Frost terminated the interview and concluded by saying: "I suppose you can't shout from London and be heard in Warsaw". Nevertheless it did almost expose the limited available technology that TV-am had at its station for obvious reasons.

    Leave a comment:


  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by Richard1978 View Post
    He was called Terry or Tony, though I used to call him "Melon Gob" because his head looked like a melon with a slice out of it!
    He reminds me of that "little boy" puppet character that Ronn Lucas used to have on his show. I used to think that there was some connection with the Muppets or Jim Henson at least because of the similarity of the puppets.

    Leave a comment:


  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by George 1978 View Post
    Children's shows come to mind such as Are You Awake Yet? had this boy puppet character that looked like one of Jim Henson's characters.
    He was called Terry or Tony, though I used to call him "Melon Gob" because his head looked like a melon with a slice out of it!

    Leave a comment:


  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by Arran View Post
    What was TV-AM like on Sundays?
    Money was so tight (as well as the union difficulties that they had) that they even shown RSPB films at 6.00 am on Sundays in the late 1980s.

    Children's shows come to mind such as Are You Awake Yet? had this boy puppet character that looked like one of Jim Henson's characters.

    Dappledown Farm was this children's farm series that had Brian Cant as a farmer was also on Sunday mornings - it had animal puppets as well as a horse, and I am certain that one of the voices used to voice characters on YTV shows like Puddle Lane and The Riddlers - considering that David Claridge was the puppeteer for Roland Rat and Mooncat (as well as Bruce Gyngell's associations with TV-am and YTV) made this not much of a coincidence.

    TV-am's religion editor Rowanne Pasco used to do some religious message on Sunday mornings as well.

    The Wide Awake Club might have ran on Sundays as well - I can't remember.

    And of course there was David Frost on Sunday, interviewing politicians and the like. Jonathan Dimbleby and Anne Diamond stood in for Frost as well. Sometimes the programme was recorded on Saturday afternoons, allowing Frost and his guests a bit of a lie in on a Sunday morning.

    Leave a comment:


  • Arran
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    What was TV-AM like on Sundays?

    Leave a comment:


  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Bullseye was shown on Saturday evenings when it had its "Roger Rabbit" "Bully climbing down the studio steps, hugging Jim Bowen and trashing the star prize" opening titles just before it ended in the mid 1990s. That is probably the reason why the Bowen version ended - they thought that as Big Break was doing so well for snooker, that Bullseye should be a darts clone of it. Bowen and Tony Green doing longer opening gambits at the start of each episode was so cringe-making.

    I don't recall Central showing an omnibus of Albion Market, and I don't recall any regional variations of it. You would have thought that Granada would have consolidated with Coronation Street rather bring out Albion Market - I am not surprised that it didn't last very long. Still, it gave Helen Shapiro a bit of work when it must have been drying up for her in the mid 1980s, and gave her a chance to shake off that "Charlotte Church of the early 1960s" identity that she had for 25 years up until then.

    Leave a comment:


  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by George 1978 View Post
    Probably one of those regional things. I always think of Bullseye when it came to Sunday teatimes. There was also All Clued Up, and also Now You See It - STV's game show - it had a Family Fortunes-alike Mr Babbage grid board with yellow word search-type letters, and contestants had to say in response "row 3, line 5 - Germany" or something like that in response to a question. There were no diagonal answers, always across or down, and the board rotated in a "Blankety Blank" sort of way.
    Maybe Granada liked to show it later at first.

    IIRC Bullseye was shown on a Saturday evening at one time, or was this another regional rescheduling?

    Some ITV companies showed the ill-fated Albion Market as a omnibus on Sunday lunchtime rather than on Friday & Sunday evenings.

    Leave a comment:


  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by Richard1978 View Post
    I've got the feeling Fraggle Rock was originally shown on Sunday teatimes, with ITV hoping it would be family fare like The Muppet Show, but soon seemed to be shown earlier in the day.
    Probably one of those regional things. I always think of Bullseye when it came to Sunday teatimes. There was also All Clued Up, and also Now You See It - STV's game show - it had a Family Fortunes-alike Mr Babbage grid board with yellow word search-type letters, and contestants had to say in response "row 3, line 5 - Germany" or something like that in response to a question. There were no diagonal answers, always across or down, and the board rotated in a "Blankety Blank" sort of way.

    Leave a comment:


  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by George 1978 View Post
    Fraggle Rock was most seen on CITV on weekdays, but for some reason, I have visions of it being on Sunday mornings.

    I suppose scheduling-wise, any company that would have took in TVS would have to take in Channel Television as well because of their reliance with TVS for scheduling.
    I've got the feeling Fraggle Rock was originally shown on Sunday teatimes, with ITV hoping it would be family fare like The Muppet Show, but soon seemed to be shown earlier in the day.

    Leave a comment:


  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Sunday Morning telly

    Originally posted by Arran View Post
    LWT was ITV company most opposed to the Sunday evening God slot with Highway because they were affected by it more than any other ITV company.

    Was Fraggle Rock shown on Sunday Mornings?
    Fraggle Rock was most seen on CITV on weekdays, but for some reason, I have visions of it being on Sunday mornings.

    I suppose scheduling-wise, any company that would have took in TVS would have to take in Channel Television as well because of their reliance with TVS for scheduling.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X