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Roy Minton (28 August 1933 – 17 August 2024) was an English playwright and screenwriter best known for Scum and his other work with Alan Clarke.He is notable for having written over 30 one-off scripts for London Weekend Television, Rediffusion, BBC, ATV, Granada, Thames Television and Yorkshire Television, including Sling Your Hook, Horace, Funny Farm, Scum, Goodnight Albert, and The Hunting ...
Sixty Minutes is a defunct news and current affairs programme which ran each weekday at 5:40 pm from 24 October 1983 to 27 July 1984 on BBC1. It replaced Nationwide , and integrated the BBC's main regional news magazines into a single programme, as per its predecessor.
Tina Daheley (born 1980 or 1981) is an English journalist, newsreader and presenter who works for the BBC, both on television and radio. She currently reads the news on The Radio 2 Breakfast Show with Scott Mills,often contributing to discussions during the show. She is also a relief presenter on the BBC News at Ten and BBC News at Six.
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 10 February 2025. BBC's flagship evening news programme The article's lead section may need to be rewritten. Please help improve the lead and read the lead layout guide. (July 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message) BBC News at Six Title card used since 3 April 2023 Also known as BBC Six O ...
Bert Coules worked in radio drama for ten years, gaining experience as a recording engineer, sound-effects technician, script reader and producer-director before becoming a full-time writer in 1989. [1] [2] Coules began writing without any previous training, saying that he only heard a bad radio drama and felt he could do better.
Edward J. Mason had his first major success in 1947 as a script writer when the BBC Home Service radio network began airing his British detective serial Dick Barton which he created with co-writer Geoffrey Webb. This was the first serial to air on the BBC and it continued to be aired until 1951.
The modern Frisian language is the closest-sounding language to the English used approximately 2,000 years ago, when the people from what is now the north of the Netherlands travelled to what would become England, and pushed the Celtic language—ancestor of modern Welsh—() to the western side of the island.
Charlotte Green (born 4 May 1956) [1] is a British radio broadcaster and a former continuity announcer and news reader for BBC Radio 4.. After 1988 she specialised in news reading, including reading the news on the Radio 4 breakfast Today programme, and reading news items on The News Quiz. [2]