Television Act 1954

The Television Act 1954 was the law which permitted the creation of the first commercial television network in the United Kingdom, ITV. By the early 1950s, the only television service in Britain was operated as a monopoly by the British Broadcasting Corporation, and financed by the annual television licence fee payable by each household which contained one or more television sets. The new Conservative government elected in 1951 wanted to create a commercial television channel, but this was a controversial subject -- the only other examples of commercial television were to be found in the United States, and it was widely considered that the commercial television found there was "vulgar". The solution to the problem was to create the Independent Television Authority which would closely regulate the new commercial channel in the interests of good taste, and award franchises to commercial companies for fixed terms. The first commercial franchises were awarded in 1954, and commercial television started broadcasting in stages between 1955 and 1962.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
steve buscemi
owen sound, ontario
inflation in mexico
christian legal society
00s
futanari
political privacy
university challenge
ghostface killah
bamber gascoigne
electoral system
mc solaar
mitchelstown
de nederlandsche bank
missy elliott
channel television
mystikal
geoffrey ii, duke of brittany
roxanne shant
kit williams
vanilla ice
talib kweli
dead prez
guanajuato, guanajuato
dilated peoples
niboshi
himeji castle
dixie chicks
daikon
child support
immigration policy
i've fallen and i can't get up
television commercial
domestic security enhancement act of 2003
morris swadesh
campbell
nation of islam and anti semitism
list of television commercials
anni frid lyngstad
pembroke, ontario
decemviri
the average white band
marie d'agoult
daniel stern