☆ Last IBA Engineering Announcements on ITV | 17 May 1983
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- Опубліковано 2 вер 2015
- From the www.transdiffusion.org/ archives...
The ten minute gap between TV-am finishing at 9.15am and ITV proper starting at 9.25am is about to be closed up by British Telecom. Because of this, the IBA's engineering announcements programme has to move from ITV over on to Channel 4/S4C. This is their last ITV broadcast.
Man, I love the early Central start up music. Pure 80s gold!
TV gold! What a beautiful piece of history. Thanks so much for the video.
I love how the IBA break professionalism and have a dig at TV-am.
Shame they didn't revoke TV-am's licence seeing what an utter shambles it was. Although they'd never have the balls to do so.
@@robertcomer2767 Ironically, it was the IBA's replacement, the "light touch" regulator ITC that gave TV-am the boot, the same kind of light touch regulator the likes of Bruce Gyngell lobbied for. Apparently the ITC was still somewhat concerned about quality, even while letting in a cheap skeleton crew operation like Carlton get their foot in the ITV door.
I've just acquired the original off air recordings of engineering announcements from the Ofcom archives ranging from May 1983 to 1990! I'm loving them and watching them!
Liam Mustapha Nice! Any chance of uploading them?
I just may be, @tomhekker ! I'll be making a new channel soon as soon as I get the Panasonic AG-7750, I'll be converting them with some adjusting to the TBC!
If you just like me came across this comment and you all like 'hey Liam, where's your channel', well, there it is:
ua-cam.com/channels/6oDtfnkkKgYKk0BId3f38w.html
@@igorszamaszow171 Haha, thanks for linking that. You may have noticed I haven't uploaded in a very long time! I haven't run out of tapes or lost interest, I've just been very busy with real life stuffs and I'm starting university in September! There will be more classic IBA goodness for your enjoyment soon!
@@liammustapha6643 you're doing God's work
This was the final week that Central did not network an ITV Schools slide at 9.28. From the following week, Monday 23rd May, the slides returned. This now makes more sense as switching changes were obviously taking place with Engineering Announcements moving to Channel Four.
Transmitted Tuesday 17 May 1983. I was 4 days old!
Notice there is a picture roll after TV-am ends, so presumably there must have been yet another switch to the engineering announcements coming from somewhere else (Crawley Court?).
2001JamesTV j
Also it was the last time the classical Gilbert and Sullivan music was used there for their theme one week before Francis Monkman's Current Affairs took over as the regular theme tune.And made one brief appearance on their final programme at the very end on July 31st 1990.
3:17 John Lovell proving the IBA have a sense of humour where they need to show it.
The announcements were of course already on Channel 4 (since at least 9/11/82, if not 2/11/82) and S4C (since 2/11/82). However, there were parts of many regions that had no 4th channel reception at the time.
Not easily without someone finding the relevant broadcasts. I was watching the edition on 26/10/82 as it was a school holiday, and there was an announcement about S4C and Channel 4 then. As for the areas without reception, that is well known - the transmitter network was not completed until 1987.
0:12 We all want to be left alone with our hemoroids...
Starting with a trailer for the last episode of the short-lived Central-produced sitcom "Good Night and God Bless", which ran for just one series of six episodes in April-May 1983, starring and co-written by the late Donald Churchill.
For some reason, the series has a set of pages on the British Comedy Guide, here's the synopsis for tonight's episode, titled "You Won't Feel A Thing"...
"A minor operation turns in to a major drama for Ronnie when he has to go in to hospital overnight. In the event of his not coming through the operation, he leaves farewell messages and final instructions for everyone."
Thanks for sharing this, this clip has it all: Engineering Announcements, a holding slide, one minute *exactly* of black, a start-up, a Schools clock and a frontcap! Any more Engineering Announcements in the TBS archive?
+jaseinblack Very few, we're afraid.
fortunately, The IBA Archive has uploaded a heap of these - if you like these announcements, I recommend giving them a watch
I had no idea that this existed? It was usually wacaday or someting like that around this time in the morning when I was a kid!!
I wish it could be just the same now. Where has the time gone I ask myself
AMAZING!
Love these; very nostalgic :)
And your announcer at Central is Gary Terzza.
Three random things:
1. I wonder how the IBA ident was made, it looks 3D enough to be a model (given in 1982 only very basic 3d computer modelling was available).
2. I saw a version of the IBA ident which used the synth jingle also used in the first Video Collection ident - but can't seem to find it again... have you come across this?
3. Notice how the Central logo fits almost perfectly into the clock circle!
+Rob Mortimer 1) The IBA symbol is very definitely a physical, 3D model, videotaped, the contrast pushed to maximum and then chromakeyed into IBA blue and white. 2) Nope! Interesting! 3) Coincidence: Central happily mixes between random globe placements as part of their startups: that one should match is the exception rather than the rule!
Why is there a minute of black please ? Why didn't they just keep the holding slide on?
Probably convention at Central. Other companies would probably have done their own things. It's also possible that other ITV franchises had longer start up music.
BBC used 30 seconds of black and silence between test card and programming until the early 1980s.
Also notice a slodge of dirt under the "V" in TV Times in the exact same place as there is in this clip. ua-cam.com/video/R0Tdp1i7M0A/v-deo.htmlm32s Obviously they didn't clean their slides much!
+SkylerFTWInezFTL VGCP EDCP ANNQ TPNG SFTB OWN: You've not got replies turned on in your settings so you probably won't see this, but the answer is 'Overture' by Owen Brannigan, Geraint Evans and the Glyndebourne Festival Chorus, according to Shazam.
It's the overture to "Yeoman of the Guard" by Arthur Sullivan.
And at 9:45 it's the end of the overture to "The Mikado".
Whats the music at the beggining?? Sounds like Sonda Lato intro
Excellent upload. I've long wondered how Engineering Announcements managed to be broadcast on ITV at all during the TV-am years, given that it was broadcast during the switching period. Presumably each ITV region was already switched through to Crawley Court in preparation for TV-am handing back to them, but wouldn't this have meant a frame roll (at least) during Engineering Announcements itself?
+Rhys Jones If you look closely, there's a frame roll between the Gary Terzza-voiced ITV promo and the blue 'follow at 9.17' caption.
+Transdiffusion Broadcasting System Yes, I see that, but wouldn't this have been an automated switchover, occurring at the same time in every region? What I've read about the time before that suggests that the manual switchovers happened at an arbitrary point between 9.15 and 9.30, so would presumably happen mid-Engineering Announcements...
+Rhys Jones They were smart enough to hold them until after the EngAnn programme was done (they were being done manually, literally: a person pulling a plug out and putting another in). In the case of this clip, Birmingham has already been converted to autoswitching, so you don't get quite as jarring a change as happened manually in the past few months. For manual-switched areas, it would take place during the final IBA caption before the startup sequence. Here, it's hidden - possibly even before the clip starts with the Terzza promo being the first thing after the changeover. The switching between individual ITV companies (the IBA probably piped EngAnn through TVS or Thames's network entry point) was always very smooth.
+Transdiffusion Broadcasting System Ah, that makes sense. Thanks for the explanation.
+Transdiffusion Broadcasting System I have to say I'd be quite interested in seeing more examples of the 9:15-25 switching period from the brief time it existed. Sadly it's something that was over and done with 3 years before I was born!
ITV school starts in 14:05
what is the wonderous music (second tune in)
Francis Monkman, "Current Affairs" - ua-cam.com/video/eA0lPg7ZTTU/v-deo.html
I wonder why they conducted scheduled maintenance of relays during the day, when regular programming would have been interrupted. Why not do it overnight, when ITV was off the air anyway?
Two reasons spring to mind: first, health and safety at work - you don't want employees climbing 1,250ft masts at night if you can help it. Second, cost - overtime pay, plus dangerous work allowance, plus night-time supervision, plus union agreement to such a foolhardy plan all equal the maintenance being 10 or 20 times the cost of doing it on a schedule during the day.
Fair points, but I presume that nowadays much routine maintenance is done at night or with back-up systems, since modern-day relays rarely (if ever) shut down for several hours during the day?
Transmitters still go off or operate on reduced power during the day while work is underway. It happens less, because technology has moved on and there's not the range of valves and the like waiting to blow, and less of a big deal is made about it now people have satellite, cable and IPTV to fall back on. But it still happens. If you go to the BBC Reception home page, there are, as of this afternoon, four of the smaller transmitters off-air or on reduced power for essential maintenance.
Anyobody know the piece of music starting at 1:10?
Astral Sounds - Rotohead.
ua-cam.com/video/SIiClhE6RSU/v-deo.html
Do you have the first programme of IBA Engineering Announcements ever broadcast in 1973?
GlamTelevision In 1973 tv video recorders were not in existen until 1978, So there were no way Transdiffusion Broadcasting System could record the first IBA Engineering Announcement, Unless the UA-cam Channel Holder record it of a film reel camera pointing to the tv.
What's the name of the song that plays around 1:09?
Astral Sounds - Rotohead, thanks to The Soundtrack by Blog Đào Lê Minh
1:07 Anyone know the name of this track?
Astral Sounds - Rotohead, thanks to The Soundtrack by Blog Đào Lê Minh for the answer to a similar comment
Does the first engineering announcement still exist in the archive.
+Leigh Brown Not as far as we know.
How about last ever Engineering Announcements?
@@moramento22 Yes, the last Engineering Announcements can be found on UA-cam.
Don't you mean 9.25 am? :)
+DN21Media Bum. Corrected!
+Transdiffusion Broadcasting System ha I worried we were getting into C Williams after some moo sick territory :)
1970 - no relays at all? nobody cared to check their information, Hartford, Reigate and Brierley Hill transmitters came on air in the 60s to name a few.
Ov-ing-dean 😬🙈🙄. O’ving-dean 👍