One Day in the Life of Television
GenreDocumentary
Production
Executive producerGrant McKee
ProducerPeter Kosminsky
EditorTerry Warwick
Running time180 mins[1]
Production companyYorkshire Television
Original release
NetworkITV
Release1 November 1989 (1989-11-01)

One Day in the Life of Television is a documentary that was broadcast on ITV on 1 November 1989. Filmed by over fifty crews exactly one year earlier, it was a huge behind-the-scenes look at a wide range of activities involved in the production, reception and marketing of British television.[2] The project was funded by th Markle Foundation and organised by Richard Paterson and Janet Willis at the British Film Institute and produced and directed for television by Peter Kosminsky.

The documentary opens with TV-am's industrial conflict, with picketers outside of the studio at Camden Lock. The documentary also looks at Breakfast Time, Lucky Ladders and EastEnders. Reactions to the latter's representation of a prison storyline were garnered from inmates in HMP Dartmoor.[2]

The documentary also showed the marketing of cable television, and the availability of pornography through satellite television during the early evening.

A book by Sean Day-Lewis was published to accompany the documentary. It contained the thoughts selected from more than 20,000 participants throughout Britain, including more than 3000 industry professionals, who recorded their feelings and experiences of television viewing on 1 November 1988, the day that the documentary was filmed.[3][4]

References

  1. "One Day in the Life of Television". BFI Film & TV Database. Archived from the original on 16 October 2012. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
  2. 1 2 Jane Harbor & Jeff Wright (1992). 40 Years of British Television. London: Boxtree. p. 111. ISBN 1-85283-409-9.
  3. Sean Day-Lewis (1989). One Day in the Life of Television. London: Grafton. ISBN 0-246-13497-6. (Paperback)
  4. Sean Day-Lewis (1989). One Day in the Life of Television. London: Grafton. ISBN 0-246-13424-0. (Hardcover)
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