Old Lincolnian |
136 of 307
Sun 27th Mar 2016 11:22am
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Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
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Tue 29th Mar 2016 11:59am
Nostalgic night on Radio 2 last night. First, two hours of Bobby Darin, and then further back to the thirties for me with an hour of the great Caruso.
The first records we ever had, played on a His Master's Voice wind up machine, even the song 'Two lovely black eyes' was played. |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
138 of 307
Thu 5th May 2016 8:16pm
I remember just before the war there was a special programe about Orson Wells upsetting the USA by reading part of the book War of the Worlds.
Made quite a stir then, I think that's when I discovered H.G Wells.
We knew little then about space, and I tried to relate it with Flash Gordon at the cinema and if there was another world.
There were a number of announcements on the radio that gripped you as a kid. Another was about this giant fireball (Zeppelin), where the announcer was choked up with tears, you heard something like that on the radio, and that was it, no other source of news to judge things. Left you in the dark often.
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Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Old Lincolnian
Coventry |
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Fri 6th May 2016 11:33am
Hi Kaga. War of the Worlds was transmitted as a series of live bulletins over the course of an evening, it did cause quite a stir but as it had been previously trailed so many people were expecting it. It is generally accepted now that the "panic" caused was greatly over emphasised for publicity reasons.
The Hindenburg was indeed a very traumatic event and was probably the first disaster covered live. |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
140 of 307
Fri 6th May 2016 6:36pm
Old Lincolnian, 'wow', was that some story, that is the first time I have seen anything about it since I was a kid, it did flash through my mind once when I was suspended from a balloon. Thanks for putting that on, Kaga |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
141 of 307
Fri 25th May 2018 3:13am
Yer daft girl's blouse'. Now, who used to say that??? Question |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Slim
Another Coventry kid |
142 of 307
Fri 25th May 2018 11:20am
Hello Dream, wasn't it Hylda Baker in Nearest and Dearest? I think she said "yer big girl's blouse". |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
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Fri 25th May 2018 12:52pm
You are so right Slim, thanks. |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Wearethemods
Aberdeenshire |
144 of 307
Sat 26th May 2018 9:08am
On 25th May 2018 11:20am, Slim said:
Hello Dream, wasn't it Hylda Baker in Nearest and Dearest? I think she said "yer big girl's blouse".
I could remember Hylda Baker and 'Pledge's Pickles', but couldn't the name of the programme! |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
145 of 307
Sat 26th May 2018 12:45pm
Another one, 'Have you been, Walter?' and 'She knows y' know'. There never will be another Hylda Baker and those like her. |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Old Lincolnian
Coventry |
146 of 307
Tue 29th May 2018 6:31pm
As a final comment about Hylda Baker and a very minor claim to fame. I met her a few times when I was very young. All I can remember was she was always laughing. My Grandma knew her because during the war she played the piano at concert parties and accompanied many well-known artists. One of my aunties knew her very well because she ran a theatrical guest house in Barnsley and Hyldas friends stayed there when they were appearing "oop north". My auntie also used to help to organise the clothing for the audience for "The Good Old Days" |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Slim
Another Coventry kid |
147 of 307
Mon 6th Aug 2018 12:09pm
Kaga said:
...and he kept turning the wireless band to hear if there was any news on the Bluebird trials, so we hid the accumulator.
That takes me back to a time before I was born. When my mother was in little girl in Spon End, naturally they were poor, her father was a skinflint, so they had no electricity (not even gas lights), but a wireless set. Every week or so, Mum had to take the accumulator to the local shop to be recharged. That was in the days of valve technology, before transistors. The youth of today have most likely never heard of an accumulator (o.k., maybe in the context of betting!).
My grandfather, when Mum's elder sister suggested having gas lamps, would not hear of having "them new-fangled things in my house". Until he came home one day and she'd had the gas board install them, which was a fait accompli.
The word wireless was replaced by radio for decades, but has in recent years made a comeback with computer technology. Why do people mis-pronounce WIFI "why-fie"? I always call it "whiffy", as it's spelt!
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Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
argon
New Milton |
148 of 307
Mon 6th Aug 2018 12:46pm
Slim, I was interested to hear about the accumulators. My dad had the shop in Spon End in the mid 1930's and used to say he did more business charging accumulators than selling radios. That property was, I believe, 16th century, and my mother always said that whenever she was cooking in the kitchen she could hear the rats above the ceiling and then they would poke their noses through a hole and sniff to see what she was cooking. Eventually they had to get a rat exterminator to try to clear them. The smell of dead rats afterwards was with them for weeks. We all regret the loss of the old buildings in the town, Butcher Row etc. but forget that they must have been infested with rats. |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Annewiggy
Tamworth |
149 of 307
Mon 6th Aug 2018 1:31pm
My grandad had a bit of a shop in Leamington where he made Cossar Radios from kits and he also charged accumulators (he also worked at Coventry Chain). It was mum's job to deliver them and she says all her clothes had holes in them from the acid burns. |
Memories and Nostalgia - Radio and TV - Memories and Favourites | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
150 of 307
Tue 7th Aug 2018 8:15am
We have gone through all this accumulator posting somewhere back a year ago, and yes Coventry was infested with rats in the thirties but the bombing sent them scuttling as well as a lot being killed, but it's not something we want to talk about. |
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