Cee Tee Jackson recently published an interesting post about Children’s television. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it and left a comment about some of my memories of Children’s TV. You’ll have to read his post to find out the details.

The post inspired me to write about my memories of not just watching television but also of television sets. I’d love to hear about your memories of television, too.

Light blue image with the words 'Nostalgic Memories: The Miracle Of The Television Set Before Video' in white text.
What did you watch on your television set?

How it all started!

My first memory of a television set was a black and white one with a 24-inch screen that my parents rented from the local electrical shop.

It was square-shaped with four legs that stuck out after being screwed on. On the set was a button for changing the channels and two dials, one for sound and one for brightness.

It reminded me of a spaceship. I’d often ask my parents if I could ‘watch the spaceship’ rather than asking if I could watch television.

In those days, you had to ensure you were in front of the television when your favourite show was about to start. There were no video recorders, catchup TV or streaming services. If you missed the show, you had to wait for it to be repeated (if lucky) or ask somebody who had watched it to explain what happened.

Back then, television sets had to ‘warm up’ after being switched on, and it could feel like an eternity for the picture and sound to come on, sometimes resulting in you missing the start of the show. Heaven forbid if the picture rolled and the aerial had to be adjusted.

I remember my grandparents having an even older television set than the one we had. Whereas my mother would call into the shop to pay the weekly rental, my grandparents had to put coins into a slot on the back of the television to get it to work. Someone would come from the shop every week to empty the coin box. I always thought it was the biggest ‘money box’ I’d seen.

Our First Coloured Television Set

Many years later, I remember the excitement in our house when my father announced that we were getting a ‘coloured television.’ Most shows would be transmitted in colour, and a box was installed on the wall next to the TV to switch channels. It wasn’t quite a ‘remote control’ but was the first step towards not having to press anything on the set to change channels.

The change to a ‘coloured’ television set also meant I could watch shows like ‘Pot Black’ in colour. Pot Black was a weekly snooker show, first shown every Monday evening on BBC2. Now, my father and I could see all the different coloured snooker balls without guessing which one was about to be potted! It made all the difference.

Does anyone else remember that theme tune to the show?

Two of my favourite detective shows, which I remember watching with my father and which seemed much better in colour, were Charlie’s Angels and Cagney and Lacey.

Charlie’s Angels – Watched For Different Reasons!

I loved watching Charlie’s Angels, as did my father, although for different reasons. Whereas I was amazed by how three young women solved violent crimes without a hair going out of place, my father was more interested in Farrah Fawcett-Majors.

Before watching the following video, can you name the other two actresses who played alongside Farrah Fawcett-Majors?

By this time, my parents had separated, so I didn’t mind that my father fancied Farrah. Little did he know that I was more interested in her husband, Lee Majors, who played Steve Austin in the TV show The Six Million Dollar Man, which was well before its time for artificial intelligence.

Cagney And Lacey – Why My Father Didn’t Understand!

My father was more concerned about my liking of Mary Beth Lacey, but for the wrong reasons. It wasn’t that I was into women who were old enough to be my mother (or so he thought); it was that I missed my mother a lot when my parents separated, and I saw Mary Beth Lacey more as a mother figure, somebody whom I wished was my mother.

As my love of television and television sets grew, it was no surprise that my second-ever full-time job was working as a salesperson in a television shop, selling and renting out televisions.

But change was on the way. I was there when the launch of the videotape recorder changed how we would gradually watch television shows in the future.

Apologies if any of the videos did not play for you.

  • What are your earliest memories of watching television?
  • Did you ever have a black-and-white television set? What was it like watching shows on it?
  • How did the transition to a coloured television set change your viewing experience?
  • Do you have any favourite TV shows or memories associated with watching television?
  • Leave a link to the opening credits of one of your favourite television shows from the past.

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61 responses to “Nostalgic Memories: The Miracle Of The Television Set Before Video”

  1. Eugi avatar

    I remember my parents having a black and white set and there was a stick on film so it had color even though the colors were askew. Later on, we had a color TV that was in a console. I used to watch cartoons on Saturdays while eating breakfast.

    I have good memories of watching The Ed Sullivan show, Bonanza, The High Chaparral, I Love Lucy, Lassie, Gunsmoke, among others that I enjoyed.

    Now, we have 2 flat screen TVs, one in the bedroom and the other in the living room. We use Roku to stream our entertainment so we don’t have to pay the exorbitant prices for cable.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Thanks for sharing some of your television memories, Eugi.

      We never used to have a TV in the bedroom. Now, it seems most people have them. I can’t believe how large the screens have got. I saw one advertised recently with a 99-inch screen.

      1. Eugi avatar

        Wow! 99-inch screen is huge. One would have to have a very large room to watch it.

    2. joylennick avatar

      I enjoy TV most days, BUT I have received around 14 gmails about TV sets?!

      Oops! All the best. Joy Lennick

      1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

        gmails as in emails? Where have they come from?

  2. Liesbet @ Roaming About avatar

    Aaah, the memories. Who didn’t love TV back then? Such a novel concept and without all the commercials and dramatization of modern days…

    I had a TV growing up and I think it was always in color. But, your stories remind me of my dad’s experiences, where one house in the street had a black & white TV and the kids would gather there to watch shows.

    When I grew up, my brother and I were allowed three hours a week of TV time and we used the TV guide to pick our programs (like McGyver, the A-team, and Chips). The news we were allowed to watch “for free.” :)

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Those three hours of choosing what to watch must have been hard, Liesbet. I’d have had trouble choosing.

      When I went to high school, I recall doing history about World War 2. My mother was horrified that the school instructed us to watch a TV show called ‘The World at War,’ which was shown on a weekday evening. I loved history and had to get my father to calm her down. There were 26 episodes to watch, so it took half a year to watch them all. I was only allowed to watch it with my father present.

      1. Liesbet @ Roaming About avatar

        That’s an interesting tidbit, Hugh. It shows that older generations – like you and me – had much stricter TV rules than the younger ones. Let alone regarding the new kids on the block: social media and streaming services!

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          I’m certainly glad that I was born and lived my childhood before the days of social media and streaming, Liesbet. Going out to play with my friends was something I did every day. We’d go out after breakfast and not return home until it was time for the evening meal. Kids don’t seem to do much of going out to play these days, but the world has changed.

  3. petespringerauthor avatar
    petespringerauthor

    We had black and white television sets when I grew up. My parents would never dream of paying for cable TV, so we frequently had only two stations that only came in if the rabbit ears were arranged just so. More often, someone had to keep a hand on top of the television. For som reason that improved the reception.

    I’ll also remember when the Jones family was the first one to get a color television in our neighborhood. I still recall watching my first show in color. We didn’t rush right out and get one. In fact, we were one of the last people I know who got a color TV. Everyone else was “keeping up with the Joneses.”

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I recall also using a metal coat hanger as an aerial to improve picture quality on a television screen, Pete. And, sometimes, you’d have to walk around with the coat hanger to get a good-quality picture.

      ‘Keeping up with the Joneses.’ That’s a phase I remember being used a lot back in the 1970s and 80s.

  4. Forestwood avatar

    Pot black!! One of the few things on TV on Saturday! And I had forgotten how long they took to warm up. My father devised a switch to mute the ads as he hated them.
    We Australians never had coin operated TV – it was always free!!

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      TV was never free in the UK. You must buy a television licence when you get a TV, regardless of whether you purchased it or rented it from a store. The black and white television licence was cheaper than a coloured one. The licence fee helps to fund the BBC, which doesn’t allow advertising as revenue.
      The switch to mute commercials sounds like a brilliant idea.

      1. Forestwood avatar

        It seems strange to me to need a TV license. I never got my head around those remarks when watching British shows as a child. Our ABC is funded by the Government via our general taxes.
        Dad was a TV technician so fashioned the switch from an old light switch and long corded electrical wire.
        How many channels did you have as a child. There were four including the ABC. Nowadays I have lost count.

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          I’m guessing that everyone has to pay then, apart from those who don’t pay tax? Does that mean you still pay if you don’t have a TV? In the UK, you don’t need a TV licence if you don’t have a TV set. However, you also don’t need to pay if you have a TV set and don’t watch the BBC or use its Streaming service. There are TV detector vans out on the street catching those who have not paid. They get a heavy fine and can also end up in prison for not having a TV licence.

  5. Erika avatar

    Watching television was so special in those days. My parents had a big black and white tv too, while they gifted me a small colour tv for my birthday… I turned 5! When even there was no chance one of my kids got one, it was cool to have one as a child and teenager.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I don’t think I knew anyone with a television in their bedroom. The first portable TV I recall, was one I got when I rented my first flat. It had a tiny screen, but it was a gift from my mother. It stayed with me for many years.

      1. Erika avatar

        It was a treasure at that time!

  6. Esther Chilton avatar

    My first TV was black and white and I remember watching Dallas when JR was shot. When I had a colour TV, I was amazed. I remember watching reruns of Batman, the TV series. I thought it was wonderful and Wonder Woman. Loved all the crime shows too, such as Dempsey and Makepeace. Fond memories. Thanks for taking me back, Hugh.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      What a big show ‘Dallas’ was, Esther. I remember all the rage in the UK and the ‘Who Shot JR?” promotions. It made headline news, especially when the tape that included who it was that shot him, being protected by arm-guards when it arrived in the UK. That seems quite bizarre now, as does the number of people who tuned in to watch the episode.

  7. Jacqueline Lambert @WorldWideWalkies avatar

    Tee hee! We didn’t have a colour telly until the late Seventies, because my dad refused to pay for the most expensive colour licence! I agree that watching Pot Black in monochrome was sometimes a challenge… But I do like the atmosphere of black and white films. Plus, in the days before special effects, plot, story and outstanding acting were essential ingredients in films.

    We went to my nan and grandad’s house every Sunday. We’d have roast chicken for Sunday lunch, go out all afternoon, then have salad in the evening. I used to enjoy huddling around the tiny black and white set to watch Sunday night TV after dinner. Programmes like Ski Sunday and All Creatures Great and Small.

    The first colour telly we got was more of a green and white TV, because of course Dad bought a cheap one! So it didn’t really wow me… We weren’t allowed a video recorder because he thought it was a scam set up by burglars, who would find out your address when you rented a video, then break in to steal the recorder!

    When I was a little girl, White Horses was one of my favourite shows. And Saturday morning TV, with things like Swap Shop, The Banana Splits, and Bonanza!

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I used to enjoy the Saturday afternoon matinee movie on BBC2 on a Saturday afternoon, Jacqueline. It would often be a Western, but whatever movie, it was always a black-and-white movie. I recently rewatched ‘Dial M For Murder,’ a classic Hitchcock movie often shown on Saturday afternoons.

      Your trip to your grandparents reminded me of our monthly trip to see my aunt and uncles once a month on a Sunday when my father had the weekend off from work. It was always a cooked dinner at one aunt’s house followed by salad tea at another aunt’s. We never watched TV, but I recall watching ‘Ski Sunday’ and ‘All Creatures Great and Small when we got home. How we eat all that food in such a small space of time, I’ve no idea.

      I like your dad’s thoughts on why not to have a video recorder, but given that I went on to work in a Television and Video rental shop, I was lucky that one of the perks (after a year’s service) was a free TV and video recorder. It was sad to see both go when I eventually left the job.

      I also enjoyed the morning shows the BBC screened during the six-week school summer holidays. ‘White Horses’ is one I watched. I loved the theme tune to that show. I also enjoyed ‘Champion The Wonder Horse,’ Skippy – The Bush Kangaroo’ and ‘Why Don’t You?’

  8. RasmaSandra avatar

    My shows varied but for some strange reason among the usual like I Love Lucy and The Dick Van Dyke Show I also enjoyed Red Skeleton, I think it was all those odd characters he played. I gave top ratings to all the cartoons out there particularly on Saturday mornings and one of my best pals was Bugs Bunny who taught me to like eating raw carrots. My mother was always very fond of that rabbit afterward. Until things got more modern my parents had one of those combinations the black and white TV side by side with a record player in a large cabinet.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I’ve not heard of Red Skelton, and sadly we never got shows like ‘I Love Lucy’ in the UK back then. But Saturday mornings were definitely filled with cartoons, until the introduction of a show called ‘Swap-Shop’ that aired on the BBC on a Saturday morning. It was a three hour show full of so much, but included the odd cartoon, too.

      Another commentator mentioned the cabinet with the TV and record player. I bet they are worth a small fortune now, given that mid-century furniture seems to be all the rage.

      Thanks for sharing your memories with us.

  9. Cee Tee Jackson avatar

    Thanks for the link and mention, by the way. ;) :)

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      You’re welcome. Thank you for the inspiration for this post.

  10. Cee Tee Jackson avatar

    I too remember watching Pot Black in b/w! :-D
    The first colour TV I saw was at my pal’s house. His dad worked as a cameraman or sumat in TV and had been given a ‘huge’ set (by standards those days) in time for Wimbledon fortnight. To see that wonderfully green grass and all the purple of the ball boys / girl;s uniforms was just so exciting.

    (Ironically, being Wimbledon, the players still all had to were white! :-D )

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I’m glad somebody else recalls watching ‘Pot Black’ in black and white. While researching this post, I saw another video clip in which the presenter says, ‘For those watching in black and white, the green ball is the one just above the bottom righthand corner of your screen.’

      I don’t recall the first programme I saw in colour. Knowing my father, it will probably have been something with Farah Fawcett Majors or Legs & Co!

      Watching Wimbledon in colour for the first time must have been amazing. How great to have had a pal whose dad was a cameraman. I wonder what shows he shot?

      1. Cee Tee Jackson avatar

        I think he was a camera man. I was young and wouldn’t know of anything else in the industry. He may have been involved with production or the likes … But defo TV industry in some form it other.

        (I remember that Pot Black quote too. 😂)

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          I always wanted to be a cameraman or work behind the scenes in television, but my father didn’t have it! No wonder I ran away from home to join the BBC but foolishly took a job with London Underground.

  11. Annette Rochelle Aben avatar

    When I was very young, our family watched variety shows together. Jackie Gleason, Red Skelton, and such. A bit older, we enjoyed Disney’s Sunday night shows. So much more followed, but suffice it to say, that while there were fewer options, they were packed with entertainment value!

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I don’t recall those shows, Annette. However, that’s not to say they were not shown. We only had three TV channels back then, and there was nothing broadcast in the mornings until about 11 a.m. when school programmes would air. Then, there was another break until the lunchtime news, and programmes would start again for Children at about 4 o’clock. TV always ended around midnight with the National Anthem.

      1. Annette Rochelle Aben avatar

        Completely understandable as I have you by a few years… We were blessed to live so close to Canada (my father held dual citizenship until he chose the U.S.A.) we had access to a Windsor, Ontario channel that was brilliant! Also, public television rounded us up to 5 options.

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          I don’t think it was until the mid-1980s before the UK got more than three TV channels. Now, we have so many, but still can’t find anything to watch 😂

  12. Michelle (Boomer Eco Crusader) avatar

    This brought back a lot of memories Hugh. Yes, we had a black and white television set for many years. I remember my parents saying “Ooh. I bet that would be lovely in colour!”

    When we came to Canada from England, we had one of those massive wooden “sideboards” that contained a black & white TV, record player and radio. My parents loved that thing. They used to say “It’s a lovely piece of furniture.” They loved it so much that when the black & white TV died, they bought a colour TV that would fit in the space where the black & white TV used to be.

    I used to watch Charlie’s Angels and Cagney & Lacey too. And on Friday nights, I watched The Love Boat and Fantasy Island.

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane!

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Thank you for sharing your memories of television, Michelle.

      We had a radiogram containing a turntable, radio and a compartment to store records. We even had some ’78’ rpm records, although I didn’t play them much. I recall playing out as a radio DJ on the radiogram, playing my Top 40 records every month. My pals thought I was crazy.

      I remember ‘The Love Boat’ and ‘Fantasy Island,’ although I was not a fan in tuning in every week. I’d catch the odd episode, though.

      1. Michelle (Boomer Eco Crusader) avatar

        We watched a few episodes of The Love Boat with our daugthers after we went on a cruise years ago. It made me realize how cheezy the show was. I also wondered how did they run that ship with so few staff? Although I suppose the same could be said for most TV shows.

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          Yes, it’s a little like Charlie’s Angels. They always looked amazing, like they’d just come out of a saloon and having their make-up done after chasing criminals and getting into fights with them.

          1. Michelle (Boomer Eco Crusader) avatar

            Not to mention running in high heels. 😂

  13. Cathy avatar

    I have similar memories of a black and white TV, Hugh. I remember watching children’s programs such as Watch With Mother, Andy Pandy ect. Getting a colour set was a great highlight and I enjoyed the series you mention in the comments. The very best for me was watching Elvis’ 68 comeback special.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I don’t recall the Elvis comeback, Cathy. I may have missed it. ‘Watch With Mother’ was a weekday diet. I loved that specific programmes appeared in the series on certain days of the week. I recall Fridays always being ‘The Wooden Tops.’ I loved the spotty dog in that one.

      1. Cathy avatar

        Oh yes, the Wooden Tops. I forgot about that one!

  14. Darlene avatar

    We didn’t get a TV until I was ten and it was black and white. The first thing we watched was Hockey Night in Canada! (of course) Other favourites were Lassie, Bonanza and the Ed Sullivan Show. Mom and Dad didn’t get a colour TV until I had left home and I was married before I got one. As for Charlie’s Angels, I always liked Kate Jackson the best.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I don’t recall much sport on TV back then, except football and boxing, which my father loved watching.

      I also enjoyed Bonanza, The High Chaparral, and The Waltons. Back then, they were screened on BBC2, usually at ten past eight until nine on a weekday evening. I’m guessing only 50 minutes because the BBC never shows commercials during shows.

      Thanks for sharing your memories, Darlene.

  15. davidprosser avatar

    I also remember the old black and white sets Hugh, and shows like Tales of the Riverbank and Four Feather Falls. Later on, on a Saturday evening there was an American show about a bungling secret agent I used to watch at my grandpatents while eating my Crumpets.

    Good memories. Hugs

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      What great memories, David. Did you have a TV set at home, or did you have to go to your grandparents to watch?
      I still eat crumpets, although usually for breakfast. This reminds me that there was no breakfast TV back then, either.

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