Pilkington Committee on Broadcasting
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Pilkington Committee on Broadcasting
The Pilkington Committee was set up on July 13 1960 under the chairmanship of British industrialist Sir Harry Pilkington to consider the future of broadcasting, cable and "the possibility of television for public showing". The report, published in 1962, criticised the populism of ITV, and recommended that Britain's third national television channel (after the BBC Television Service and ITV) should be awarded to the BBC. BBC2 was launched two years later. MembersThe members were:
At the time, there was public concern about acquired programming, such as Westerns and American crime series. The committee felt that ITV was to be blamed for this concern. Findings and recommendationsThe report, published on June 1, 1962, intended to ensure that television reflected the correct British social values, also considered:
The report resulted in BBC local radio franchises, colour television licences, and BBC2. The report also criticised commercial television for being too trivial. Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
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