Parody

That TV Year 1963

In spite of all the major domestic news stories of 1963; The Great Train Robbery, The Profumo Affair, everything else was eclipsed by the world shattering events in Dallas Texas on 22nd November.

Mr and Mrs

Andrew Cobby takes a humorous look at 1970s daytime TV: Crown Court, A Handful of Songs and Nancy Kominski - who wouldn't want to skip school for that?

TV Decade - The 80s

British television in the 1980s welcomed the first new national television service for twenty years, breakfast TV was launched and cable and satellite were established. For many, it was the last golden decade, for others it was best forgotten

The 1990s

It's not all about television - okay, it is really. But let's take a commercial break for a quick look back at the decade that became known as Cool Britannia. As we plunged headlong towards the new millennium and the Y2K Bug, what were the stories that formed the nineteen-nineties?

Public Information Films of the 1970s

Known in the short form as PIFs, they were government-commissioned television commercials mainly, but not exclusively, aimed at children that had begun on television in the 1960s. But the 70s were most definitely their heyday, and you may even have found yourself recently quoting them without even realising it

Charley Says

The Seventies were truly the Golden Age of Public Information Films. In a poll organised by the BBC in 2006 to celebrate 60 years of the Central Office of Information, 40%, voted the Charley Says films the Nation's Favourite PIFs

Tufty Fluffytail

The iconic red squirrel created by Elsie Mills in 1953 played a crucial role in teaching millions of children about road safety from the 1950s to the 1990s. In the 1970s, a series of 6 short television films bought him into the nation's homes

The Hour That Never Was

A surreal blend of espionage, eerie atmosphere, and avant-garde flair, The Hour That Never Was stands as The Avengers’ definitive masterpiece—where wit meets the uncanny in peak Steed-and-Peel brilliance

A Vintage Year for Scoundrels

Long before it became a cult favourite, Adam Adamant Lives! faced one of the rockiest roads to broadcast in BBC history. The dashing Victorian adventurer with a swordstick and disdain for modern manners was never meant to exist

Patrick McGoohan in The Prisoner

A look at how episodes of 'Danger Man' influenced 'The Prisoner' "From its beginning to its end, there is a near-palpable, mythological aura surrounding this cult series."

The Callan File

We open the file on unwilling British government assassin David Callan.

Arthur of the Britons

Another article on the best examples of our favourite television shows picks out a classic episode of a fondly remembered series that is, in the words of our reviewer, 'charged unapologetically with testosterone and raw masculinity'

Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em

Find out why Brian Slade has chosen 'The Public Relations Course' as his favourite episode of this classic British sitcom featuring the hapless Frank Spencer, as brilliantly played by the incomparable Michael Crawford...

Hi-De-Hi!

Author Brian Slade chooses his favourite episode of the classic sitcom in our 'Best Of' series. Peggy’s impromptu and unofficial audition for being a yellowcoat is a scene stealing performance from Su Pollard

Fawlty Towers

Everyone, who is a fan of Fawlty Towers, has their favourite episode. There's certainly a case for any particular episode to be at the top of your list as nearly all of them were equally hilarious. In this article, writer Brian Slade selects his

A Tethered Goat

Arthur loans out Terry for an easy three-day job: working as a bodyguard for a Lebanese businessman. But while Arthur sees it as an opportunity for "a nice little earner", Terry suspects that all is not what it appears to be

Taxi

Remembering a classic episode of the US sitcom 'Taxi' - 'Reverend Jim: A Space Odyssey' in which 'we get to see the best of the characters at their most eccentric'

Red Dwarf - Queeg

In the second in a series of articles recalling the best episodes of a TV show, Dan Tessier picks his favourite Red Dwarf episode.

Where is Everybody?

Rod Serling had struggled to get his scifi anthology idea off the ground for some time. But this 1959 pilot episode helped establish what would become an iconic series that is still regarded as the benchmark of science fiction from a golden era

Star Trek TNG header

Writer Sunday Simmons chooses her favourite TNG episode, describing it as an 'outstanding 45 minutes of sci-fi brilliance'

Trapped in the Sky

On it's maiden flight, an incredible new hypersonic airliner has been sabotaged. A bomb in the landing gear will explode on landing, whilst the crew and passengers have a limited time before they are exposed to radiation poisoning...can anyone save them?

Space: 1999

A macabre monster in outer space, eerie graveyards of lost spaceships are they real or imagined? Years of mental torment reach a terrifying climax for Tony Cellini - is this the best episode of Space: 1999? Daniel Tessier thinks so...

The Munsters' House

From romantic movie set to television icon, the Munster Mansion survived decades of Hollywood reinvention. This light-hearted history follows the famous house from The Munsters to Desperate Housewives, tracing its many dramatic makeovers and memorable screen appearances