1967 in British television

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List of years in British television (table)
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This is a list of British television related events from 1967.

Events

January

  • 3 January – Trumpton is the second programme on BBC1 to be shot in colour.
  • 7 January – Debut of The Forsyte Saga – a blockbuster BBC dramatisation in 26 50-minutes episodes, and the first British television program ever to be sold to the USSR.

February

  • No events.

March

  • No events.

April

May

  • No events.

June

July

  • 1 July – BBC2 becomes Europe's first colour TV broadcaster. The colour service is launched with live coverage from the Wimbledon Championships.
  • 3 July – News at Ten premieres on ITV. It aired nightly on weeknights until 1999 before being axed. It was then reintroduced in 2001, axed again in 2004 and brought back for a second time in 2008.

August

  • No events.

September

October

  • 13 October – Omnibus, an arts documentary series, begins.

November

  • No events.

December

Unknown

  • The 1967 franchise round sees a number of changes being made to the ITV regional map, which will take effect in 1968.–
    • Any split weekday/weekend licences are removed in all regions, except London.
    • The London split is moved from Friday/Saturday to Friday at 7pm.
    • The North of England region is split into the North West and Yorkshire.
    • Granada, the existing weekday contractor for the North of England region, is given a seven-day licence for the new North West region.
    • Lord Thomson of Fleet is required to divest himself of most of his holding in Scottish Television.
    • A new company, Telefusion Yorkshire, later renamed Yorkshire Television, is given the licence to broadcast in the newly created Yorkshire region.
    • ATV wins the new seven-day Midlands licence, replacing ABC at the weekend.
    • ABC and Rediffusion, London are asked to form a joint company to take the London weekday franchise previously held by Rediffusion alone; the result, Thames Television, is 51% controlled by ABC.
    • The London Television Consortium, put together by David Frost wins the London weekend contract, which now includes Friday evenings from 7pm. They go on air as London Weekend Television.
    • Most controversially, TWW loses its franchise for Wales and the West of England to Harlech Television, which later became known as HTV on the arrival of UHF.
  • Sooty, Harry Corbett's glove puppet bear, moves from the BBC to ITV.

Debuts

BBC1

BBC2

ITV

Television shows

Changes of network affiliation

Shows Moved from Moved to
Sooty BBC ITV

1920s

  • BBC Wimbledon (1927–1939, 1946–2024)

1930s

  • BBC Cricket (1939, 1946–1999, 2020–2024)

1940s

1950s

1960s

Ending this year

Births

Death

See also

References

  1. ^ Mark Duguid "Armchair Theatre (1956–74)", BFI screenonline