[…]ine camera, ‘standard’ or ‘regular eight’ in those days. And my job was to film the family holidays, that sort of thing. And then my hobby of amateur radio, “ham radio”, [callsign GM3PSP], was developing as well, including portable expeditions and things like that. So I shot quite a lot of 8mm film […]
[…]ly can't do that there. I: Did you go from the Sunday Post to the BBC? R: I did. I had previously, again as a student, applied for a job at Radio Clyde. I had gone in for a couple of hours to get work experience and at the end of it - this was on the basis of a tape I'd sent in - and they […]
[…] one of my sons is in the media he's a radio man, he establishes new radio stations and so on […]
[…]in Northern Ireland.Unknown Speaker 3:59 And I was wondering when you were growing up? Were you an avid Regulus? That was That wasn't the radio. And the Did you always know even from a very young age, even when you were a schoolboy that you wanted to be a journalist?Unknown Speaker  […]
[…]was at home in hospitals and so onRF: Did your children have any desire to go into films?LK: No, into films no, one of my sons is in the media he's a radio man, he establishes new radio stations and so on so he's in the media and we have quite a bit in common. No the others are not. I've got an arch[…]
[…]CA eventuallyUnknown Speaker 5:57 came over to EnglandUnknown Speaker 6:05 when AmericaUnknown Speaker 6:07 was a radioUnknown Speaker 6:12 you might lose acres day followsUnknown Speaker 6:16 buyersUnknown Speaker 6:23 that may[…]
[…]y and we had totake them by taxi along the Corniche along to Monte Carlo every night toshow, them, to show the unit, it must have been at Monte Carlo radiostation, they had a theatre. So that was quite a thing taking rushes allthe way from Monte Carlo and back again every night. He travelled duringt[…]
[…] and work elsewhere so I’ll need a ticket’, you know what I mean. So, so there were those areas of friction and there was some friction in commercial radio a bit but it wasn’t very, very significant so that’s what they were like. And NATKE was really, what was NATKE? NATKE was really just [Paus[…]
[…]n Action". Ironically, the first programme that I did, I went back to see because I sailed on a boat called the Mi Amigo, which was the second pirate radio pirate ship to move into place. And the experience was amazing because as the director-producer, you would go, you would deal with subject yours[…]
[…]were you aiming to do? Bill Ward 1:28 I didn't know. I never had any idea. Hadn't the faintest idea? I got into into radio because I joined BBC Plymouth, 5PY, which was a local radio station BBC, of course, had to be in those days, 1932 ,32 and my father k[…]