Metadata
WORK ID: NEFA 21815 (Master Record)
Title | Year | Date |
LOOK OF THE MONTH: VOX POPS MOON LANDING | 1968 | 1968-01-01 |
Details
Original Format: 16mm Colour: Black & White Sound: Sound Duration: 1 min 7 secs Credits: Tyne Tees Television Genre: TV Magazine |
Summary Phil McDonnell conducts topical vox pops among young boys in Newcastle about the space race and the prospect of going to the moon. This Tyne Tees TV news magazine item was broadcast in a Look of the Month programme on 28 October 1968, the year before the United States successfully landed men on the moon with the Apollo 11 space mission. |
Description
Phil McDonnell conducts topical vox pops among young boys in Newcastle about the space race and the prospect of going to the moon. This Tyne Tees TV news magazine item was broadcast in a Look of the Month programme on 28 October 1968, the year before the United States successfully landed men on the moon with the Apollo 11 space mission.
One young boy thinks that there would be lots of craters and dust on the moon and you would probably float around too. Phil McDonnell, asks what he thinks...
Phil McDonnell conducts topical vox pops among young boys in Newcastle about the space race and the prospect of going to the moon. This Tyne Tees TV news magazine item was broadcast in a Look of the Month programme on 28 October 1968, the year before the United States successfully landed men on the moon with the Apollo 11 space mission.
One young boy thinks that there would be lots of craters and dust on the moon and you would probably float around too. Phil McDonnell, asks what he thinks you would do when you got to the moon. The boy responds that he would look for a good place and survey it to find where he could stay for the night. McDonnell asks if he thinks it matters which country gets there first. The boy doesn’t think it’s important. As long as they get there, he doesn’t mind.
Another boy thinks the men are very brave to go up in space. When he grows up, he might like to be an astronaut and then he would be famous.
McDonnell asks a third young lad if he would like to go to the moon and what he thinks he would find there. He says yes and that you would find big men with two things attached to their heads, with big eyes and big feet and big clothes on their feet.
On screen, McDonnell begins to interview the group of young boys together. [Interview cuts abruptly.]
Context
Tyne Tees Television went on air at 5pm, January 15th, 1959, from the City Road studios in Newcastle. A quarter of a million viewers watched on the first night. By all accounts, the early years at Tyne Tees were ‘cheerfully haphazard’, seat-of-the-pants television that ranged from local talent on live variety shows with a shade of the ‘end-of-the-pier’ about them to serious politics and sports. One old City Road hand described the experience as hectic, like ‘being on a switchback ride’.
Show...
Tyne Tees Television went on air at 5pm, January 15th, 1959, from the City Road studios in Newcastle. A quarter of a million viewers watched on the first night. By all accounts, the early years at Tyne Tees were ‘cheerfully haphazard’, seat-of-the-pants television that ranged from local talent on live variety shows with a shade of the ‘end-of-the-pier’ about them to serious politics and sports. One old City Road hand described the experience as hectic, like ‘being on a switchback ride’.
Show business may have been the backbone of Tyne Tees TV production in those first years but the screens buzzed with imaginative regional documentaries that reflected a growing sense of identity between the station and the north-east communities it served. Tyne Tees reporters also blazed a trail in presenting the news over the years. Mike Neville, a much-loved face of TV news in the north east for more than 40 years who launched his broadcast career with Tyne Tees, once suggested that the launch of Tyne Tees enabled local people to be able to hear local accents and dialects on television where once the BBC’s standard cut-glass pronunciation was the norm. Vox pops, credited as a Tyne Tees TV invention, were one of the staples of regional news magazine programmes, although interviewees were not always as young as these excitable kids who visibly delight reporter Phil McDonnell with their imaginative ideas about going to the Moon. Both television and the space race were significant weapons in the Cold War competition between the USA and Soviet Union, at its height in the 60s and 70s, with international diplomacy often conducted on the television screen. The space race was triggered by the Soviet Union’s launch of Sputnik 1 on October 4, 1957, which stoked fears about their ability to deliver nuclear weapons over intercontinental distances. This coup in the propaganda wars of power and military and technological superiority prompted President John F. Kennedy to pursue Project Apollo with the aim of landing a man on the moon. This news piece captures some of the electricity on the British airwaves surrounding the space race as the USA geared up for their second manned spaceflight, NASA’s Apollo 8, launched on December 21, 1968. It became the first manned spacecraft to reach the Moon, orbit it and return. In a year that had seen political unrest on the street globally, Apollo 8 arguably took off some of the heat and refocused attention on the fragile earth. Media was an important part of the mission, the most widely covered since the first American orbital flight, with television transmissions from the craft to introduce the astronauts who gave their impressions of the lunar surface. Frank Borman described "a vast, lonely, forbidding expanse of nothing" albeit without the monsters envisaged by these primary school children. Moon watchers could not help but associate the moon’s desolate surface with the devastated landscapes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki following the USA’s detonation of nuclear weapons in 1945, and some newspaper editorials, such as that of the New York Times, pursued the environmental message. The Earthrise photograph taken by the crew has been credited as one inspiration for the first Earth Day on 22 April 1970. As American scholar Daniel J. Boorstin argued in his book The Image, published in 1961, television was beginning to organise history. A year after Phil McDonnell promised the gaggle of star struck boys that they would certainly appear on the Today at Six news programme, Apollo 11 landed on the surface of the Moon on 20 July 1969. Astronaut Neil Armstrong was the first person to step on its dusty surface and his first task was to switch on a television camera, which broadcast to more than 600 million people he and ‘Buzz’ Aldrin’s momentous moon walk. Soviet viewers were not amongst them. They were treated instead to a Soviet musical. A brief announcement appeared later in the official newspaper of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Pravda. References: Tyne Tees Television: the first 20 years, a portrait, Antony Brown (Tyne Tees Television, 1978) Cold War Modern Design 1945 – 1970, Eds. David Crowley and Jane Pavitt (V&A Publishing, 2008) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_8 |