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BBC-3 (TV series)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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, Eleanor Bron, 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

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In the edition of 13 November 1965, during a discussion on theatre censorship in which Robert Robinson and Mary McCarthy also participated, Kenneth Tynan supposedly became the first person to say "fuck" on British television. (Although research indicates that the word was used twice before, once by Brendan Behan.) 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

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