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. Did You Miss Any Of These? Monthly Round-Up - September 2024 avatar

    […] Nostalgic Memories: The Miracle Of The Television Set Before Video […]

  2. Graeme Cumming avatar

    I think you know already that I have a lot of nostalgia for the TV of my childhood and youth – though I haven’t written about it for a while. We had at least two black and white sets before my mum decided she could afford to rent a colour set. What a difference that made to my life. Previously, I’d had to guess what colour things were. Then there was the fact that TV didn’t start broadcasting until about 4pm – except for the school holidays – and there were only three channels. Strangely, I felt I got a better deal then than I do now. But maybe that’s the rose-tinted specs… Great post, Hugh. Wish I’d got to it sooner

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Those days of only three channels, Graeme. We never struggled to find something to watch. These days I find myself flicking through channels for ages before finding something.

      I firmly believe that some of the best television was made back in the 70s and 80s.

      1. Graeme Cumming avatar

        Preaching to the converted there. Hugh!

  3. Terri Webster Schrandt avatar

    What a fun blast from the past, Hugh! Anyone older than 55 recognizes all this I’m sure. We had a small B&W TV on which we watched the moon landing. By 1970, our old TV needed needle nosed pliers to turn the channel, but we only had 5-6 channels we could watch, so no big deal.

    We spent parts of summers with my grandparents whose TV was bigger and in color! Grandma allowed us to eat breakfast on these fancy TV tray tables I also have fond memories of watching I Love Lucy (reruns even then), and other 60-70s shows. I loved Charlie’s Angels and at least 1 out of 5 girls in 1974 had Farrah’s feathered hair cut.

    Our favorite though was on Sunday night dinners at the grandparents, when we gathered to watch “The Magical World of Disney.” Still remember parts of the theme song. “the world is a carousel of colors, …fantasy, mystery, comedy…” That’s it, LOL!

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      ‘The Magical World of Disney’ rings a bell, but I can’t recall watching it, Terri.

      When you compare the number of TV channels available now to back in the 70s! We only had three TV channels in the UK back then. Channel 4 never arrived until the mid-80s. I can never remember there being nothing to watch apart from when there was no TV being broadcast. We didn’t get breakfast TV in the UK until the 1980s.

      I can also recall TV Dinners, made especially for you to enjoy while watching TV, probably on one of those TV tray tables you mentioned.

      And talking of hairstyles, the one that took off here in the UK was the ‘Purdy’ cut, taken from Joanna Lumley who played ‘Purdy’ in The New Avengers.

      Thank you for sharing your TV memories with us.

      1. Terri Webster Schrandt avatar

        Sadly, we were much more active before TV. As a nation (US, at least), our collective weight increased along with the amount of tv channels available.

  4. V.M.Sang avatar

    We had a 12 inch TV in 1953. I can’t quite remember if it was bought for the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, or if we had it before that. My Pop had a radio and television business (begun as a bicycle shop by his father!) and we borrowed a 14 inch TV for that special occasion. All the extended family along with friends and neighbours crammed into two rooms to watch. I found it most exciting.

    I remember Pot Black; in black and white, and having to rely on the commentators to know which ball was which. I also just remember seeing the famous Stanley Matthew’s cup final. I got bored and went to play on my bike, but remember seeing the famous footballer charging down the wing. All in grainy black and white, but it was miraculous in those days. As few people had a television, special events always meant a houseful of visitors.

    It was equally miraculous when ITV made an appearance. Two channels to choose from!

    The main children’s TV I remember are Muffin the Mule and Andy Pandy. And, of course, Watch with Mother, which had moved from the radio as Listen with Mother that I listened to before TV.

    And television was only on for fixed hours. No daytime TV. I seem to remember that children’s hour started at 5 o’clock. Then there was the news at 6. Programmes finished at around 11 pm with the National Anthem.

    Later, I watched Bonanza, largely to see Michael Landon as Little Joe, whom my friends and I had a crush on. And Wagon Train was another favourite. There were a lot of westerns.

    As an animal lover, I enjoyed Fury, the Wild Horse; Champion, the Wonder Horse; Lassie; and Skippy, the Bush Kangaroo.

    I think I’d better stop here. Thanks for stirring up these wonderful memories.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      What wonderful memories. Thank you for sharing them.

      It’s hard to believe just how poor picture quality was on television sets, but the miracle of seeing moving pictures didn’t make it that important. I often wonder how my grandparents would react to the picture quality of today’s televisions and their shape. Televisions are so flat now, so different from the boxed-shaped ones of the 1950s, 60s, 70s and 80s.

      I remember watching Bonanza just to see Michael Landon. There was also Mark Slade, who played Billy Blue Cannon in The High Chaparral. Did you watch that show? The show was worth watching just to see him.

      Thanks again for sharing your memories of television.

  5. Paul Ariss avatar
    Paul Ariss

    A black and white portable TV set was the first major item I bought with wages from my first job. I brought it from a department store in Liverpool and had to carry if through the streets of the city onto the train to bring it home. I was sweating so much, it was awkward to carry and the weather was warm but I was so excited to have it and that gave me the adrenalin to go through it all. The first flickering images that came on it was the first episode of Porridge – it doesn’t get better that that.

    Thanks for invoking those memories Hugh – I see you’ve hit a nice emotional chord given all the replies you’ve received!

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I recall what it was like carrying heavy items during summer days, Paul. All the sweating and feeling flustered, but worth it all when you got home. I think my first portable TV was a colour one, but I remember all the fun trying to get the aerial in the right place before an outside aerial was finally fitted.

      I still have the box from a portable TV, which was my first ever portable TV that you can connect to the internet. It’s now used for storing Christmas decorations, but that box is from the early 90s. The TV has long gone.

      It has been wonderful to read about all these memories of television. I’m glad many readers have shared them, and thank you for sharing yours with us.

  6. Forestwood avatar

    Everyone pays via incone tax, but then noone thinks of it that way . It is just another Government service like hospitals, public service, defence forces etc. A few decades ago, they started SBS the Special Broadcasting Service for foreign language programs and movies – subtitled to English. Again Government funded and free.
    They are now allowed to air commercials at the end of programs to help cover the cost of the channel. At least the ads are not as bothersome as the commercial channels. I rarely watch them. It is all rubbish, now that streaming services have arrived.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I agree that streaming services have dramatically changed how most of us watch TV. Apart from the news, fewer people now watch live TV.

  7. Mac's Opinion avatar

    Oh wow. The memory vault has opened!
    Yes, I remember B&W TV’s and when we finally got a coloured one most of the showes I watched as a kid were still in B&W for the most part. The little Rascals and some other show I can’t remember the names to.

    The $6 million dollar man was a good one and the Bionic Woman. Dukes of Hazard and Star Trek. Dad had control over most of the TV shows during the evenings which consisted of Dr Who and Star Trek. I guess I must have gotten my taste in Si-Fi from him, LOL!
    Mom would take it over for the Game Shows and the soap Operas during the day and that’s when we would be outside playing.

    I can remember when we first got Cable TV. That was a game changer!

    I never knew people rented TV sets, especially putting coins in them. Wow!

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I was never a fan of Star Trek, but Doctor Who—a big yes! My sister often hid behind the sofa when I watched Doctor Who, although she was younger than me. From that famous opening music, you can tell when an episode of Doctor Who was starting.

      Renting a TV set was very popular in the UK, and some people still do it. The coin-operated sets saved you a journey to the shop to pay the rental, but there was no TV if you didn’t have the correct coins to insert!

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