Cecil Buckland

[…]here's more audio compression and stuff that kind of gets away from that. [24:26] Talking about Harry, the boom, and him following you around, you do radio work as well, don't you? R: Yes, I was six and a half years on Radio Clyde and two and a half years with Saga and BBC, I used to do BBC in […]

Roy Lockett

[…] 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[…]

Anne Hanford

[…] the BBC and that’s where the relationship with the National Archives comes into play and that goes, well certainly, for television programme output, radio programme output, certain parts of the music operation.  They’re quite beyond the BBC’s interests and usage and I don’t think that’s ever b[…]

Jim Whittell

[…]bsp;      JIM WHITTELL:  No, because it’s digital, and digital reproduction – I don’t know whether you’ve got a digital radio?  It never fades, it’s always spot on the signal, same for the screen.  Now volume, it may well be part of the programming to say that[…]

Ann Meo

[…][00:00:00]Recording of Ann Meo, approximately twenty-fifth of May, 1996 in France, talking about her days in television. When I was in sound, in radio, I did a tremendous lot of editing and mucking about with tape and everything went round, either to left or to right on things that turned like […]

Cynthia Moody

[…]h, you know,behaving, both of them, appallingly. I mean there was no way of pretending they weren’t.Anyway, Cav was going to be interviewed on German radio, thank heavens, and he had agreed to give the interview in French and there was this sort of lounge where all the delegates used to gather, and […]

Kenneth Griffith

[…]. I never met Rank; he didn't seem to appear ... but Captain Norman Walker. And the other day, just a few weeks ago, I noticed in the TV Times or the Radio Times that there was a film called Hard Steel on and I knew I was in it. I had no idea what I did in it. But I knew I was in it, and I knew, I f[…]

David Prosser

[…]nd, well like most of the ships who went actually, he was sunk, but he was captured, and he finished up a few days later broadcasting for the Italian radio - which didn't go down very well. So, that was the only time they actually stopped us going, but otherwise I used to ignore the Fleet Press Liai[…]
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