• credits - legal obligations to show?

    From J. P. Gilliver (John)@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 20 13:53:52 2021
    (I think I may have raised this one some years ago - I've often thought
    about it, so might have - but thought it worth raising again.)

    What _obligation_ do broadcasters have to show credits at the end of
    programmes and films?

    (Whether they can squash, squeeze, or talk over them is a separate, but related, question.)

    I presume that in at least _some_ cases - even if it's very few - some
    people (acting/presenting, or technical), might have agreed to appear
    in/work on something for a lower fee, provided they were named in the
    credits.

    _Companies_ - mainly production companies, but sometimes archiving
    companies - put their name on the end: "made by Desilu productions" is
    the one that comes to my mind first (followed by lots of BBC), but I've
    also seen words to the effect of "you're only seeing this at all because
    XYZ gave it shelf space" - these can accumulate to several shown in
    quick succession for obscure old material, I think the most I've seen is
    six or seven such.

    Presumably for first showing, there _is_ an obligation to show the full credits. (I'm thinking mainly of end credits, but it also applies to
    start ones.) but when a broadcaster buys a repeat right, do such
    obligations remain and/or get transferred? (If they do, do some
    broadcasters ignore them for ancient material, on the basis that "anyone
    who's likely to sue us over them is long dead"? I think at least the
    archive companies assume this, as they keep theirs very short - less
    than a second, often - presumably in the hope someone won't bother to
    trim them.)

    I'm mainly wondering about the _legal_ aspects, but there's also the
    question of the _desirability_: I can understand the argument, if
    someone makes it, that they could be extremely tedious in some cases.
    (On commercial channels, definitely causing loss of viewers.)
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    "To YOU I'm an atheist; to God, I'm the Loyal Opposition." - Woody Allen

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  • From Brian Gaff (Sofa)@21:1/5 to G6JPG@255soft.uk on Thu Oct 21 08:20:56 2021
    Don't know about now, but when I could see, often very old rare films would
    say archived by smallfilms or something like that,which I seem to recall was the company the late Bob Monkhouse started.
    Brian

    --

    This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
    The Sofa of Brian Gaff...
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    Blind user, so no pictures please
    Note this Signature is meaningless.!
    "J. P. Gilliver (John)" <G6JPG@255soft.uk> wrote in message news:XX$VCNGgFBchFws7@255soft.uk...
    (I think I may have raised this one some years ago - I've often thought
    about it, so might have - but thought it worth raising again.)

    What _obligation_ do broadcasters have to show credits at the end of programmes and films?

    (Whether they can squash, squeeze, or talk over them is a separate, but related, question.)

    I presume that in at least _some_ cases - even if it's very few - some
    people (acting/presenting, or technical), might have agreed to appear
    in/work on something for a lower fee, provided they were named in the credits.

    _Companies_ - mainly production companies, but sometimes archiving
    companies - put their name on the end: "made by Desilu productions" is the one that comes to my mind first (followed by lots of BBC), but I've also
    seen words to the effect of "you're only seeing this at all because XYZ
    gave it shelf space" - these can accumulate to several shown in quick succession for obscure old material, I think the most I've seen is six or seven such.

    Presumably for first showing, there _is_ an obligation to show the full credits. (I'm thinking mainly of end credits, but it also applies to start ones.) but when a broadcaster buys a repeat right, do such obligations
    remain and/or get transferred? (If they do, do some broadcasters ignore
    them for ancient material, on the basis that "anyone who's likely to sue
    us over them is long dead"? I think at least the archive companies assume this, as they keep theirs very short - less than a second, often -
    presumably in the hope someone won't bother to trim them.)

    I'm mainly wondering about the _legal_ aspects, but there's also the
    question of the _desirability_: I can understand the argument, if someone makes it, that they could be extremely tedious in some cases. (On
    commercial channels, definitely causing loss of viewers.)
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    "To YOU I'm an atheist; to God, I'm the Loyal Opposition." - Woody Allen

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  • From J. P. Gilliver (John)@21:1/5 to briang1@blueyonder.co.uk on Thu Oct 21 14:59:49 2021
    On Thu, 21 Oct 2021 at 08:20:56, "Brian Gaff (Sofa)"
    <briang1@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote (my responses usually follow points
    raised):
    Don't know about now, but when I could see, often very old rare films
    would say archived by smallfilms or something like that,which I seem to >recall was
    the company the late Bob Monkhouse started.
    Brian

    There are two aspects to that: there are the companies who don't do
    anything to it, but still give it shelf space; such companies still
    arguably provide a useful service, in that they prevent it ending up in
    a skip. Then there are the ones who do active restoration (sometimes
    amazingly so).

    (I think Smallfilms was the company that made a lot of the classic
    children's TV stuff - Ivor Postgate stuff was it? - rather than an
    archiving company.)

    But I was _really_ wondering about the obligation to _show_ credits
    (more the original ones than the extra flashes added to the end by
    archiving companies); I've preserved the part of my original post that
    would have been lost. (Brian - we do accept your reason for top-posting,
    but if you are going to do so, could you perhaps _not_ use a proper .sig-separator line, so that the post you are replying to _doesn't_
    appear part of your signature and thus get cut by default by better
    software? Thanks, John)
    --

    This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
    The Sofa of Brian Gaff...
    briang1@blueyonder.co.uk
    Blind user, so no pictures please
    Note this Signature is meaningless.!
    "J. P. Gilliver (John)" <G6JPG@255soft.uk> wrote in message >news:XX$VCNGgFBchFws7@255soft.uk...
    (I think I may have raised this one some years ago - I've often thought
    about it, so might have - but thought it worth raising again.)

    What _obligation_ do broadcasters have to show credits at the end of
    programmes and films?

    (Whether they can squash, squeeze, or talk over them is a separate, but
    related, question.)

    I presume that in at least _some_ cases - even if it's very few - some
    people (acting/presenting, or technical), might have agreed to appear
    in/work on something for a lower fee, provided they were named in the
    credits.

    _Companies_ - mainly production companies, but sometimes archiving
    companies - put their name on the end: "made by Desilu productions" is the >> one that comes to my mind first (followed by lots of BBC), but I've also
    seen words to the effect of "you're only seeing this at all because XYZ
    gave it shelf space" - these can accumulate to several shown in quick
    succession for obscure old material, I think the most I've seen is six or
    seven such.

    Presumably for first showing, there _is_ an obligation to show the full
    credits. (I'm thinking mainly of end credits, but it also applies to start >> ones.) but when a broadcaster buys a repeat right, do such obligations
    remain and/or get transferred? (If they do, do some broadcasters ignore
    them for ancient material, on the basis that "anyone who's likely to sue
    us over them is long dead"? I think at least the archive companies assume
    this, as they keep theirs very short - less than a second, often -
    presumably in the hope someone won't bother to trim them.)

    I'm mainly wondering about the _legal_ aspects, but there's also the
    question of the _desirability_: I can understand the argument, if someone
    makes it, that they could be extremely tedious in some cases. (On
    commercial channels, definitely causing loss of viewers.)
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    "To YOU I'm an atheist; to God, I'm the Loyal Opposition." - Woody Allen


    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    The breathtaking wonders of nature revealed to the soothing tones of Sir David Attenborough. Life doesn't get much better than that.
    - Ben Preston, Radio Times editor (2016/11/26-12/2)

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  • From Robin@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 21 15:32:36 2021
    On 21/10/2021 14:59, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
    <snip>
    But I was _really_ wondering about the obligation to _show_ credits
    (more the original ones than the extra flashes added to the end by
    archiving companies)
    AIUI it's essentially down to the contracts - i.e. what conditions they
    impose (including conditions to impose the same condition - c.f. book
    covers).

    --
    Robin
    reply-to address is (intended to be) valid

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  • From J. P. Gilliver (John)@21:1/5 to Robin on Thu Oct 21 19:17:01 2021
    On Thu, 21 Oct 2021 at 15:32:36, Robin <rbw@outlook.com> wrote (my
    responses usually follow points raised):
    On 21/10/2021 14:59, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
    <snip>
    But I was _really_ wondering about the obligation to _show_ credits
    (more the original ones than the extra flashes added to the end by >>archiving companies)
    AIUI it's essentially down to the contracts - i.e. what conditions they

    Yes, I guessed that ...

    impose (including conditions to impose the same condition - c.f. book >covers).

    ... and was wondering if ones that include such pass-on conditions are
    common, and what sort/level of enforcement there is, after the first
    showing.
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    Science isn't about being right every time, or even most of the time. It is about being more right over time and fixing what it got wrong.
    - Scott Adams, 2015-2-2

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  • From Robin@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 21 21:05:00 2021
    On 21/10/2021 19:17, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
    On Thu, 21 Oct 2021 at 15:32:36, Robin <rbw@outlook.com> wrote (my
    responses usually follow points raised):
    On 21/10/2021 14:59, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
    <snip>
    But I was _really_ wondering about the obligation to _show_ credits
    (more the original ones than the extra flashes added to the end by
    archiving companies)
    AIUI it's essentially down to the contracts - i.e. what conditions they

    Yes, I guessed that ...

    impose (including conditions to impose the same condition - c.f. book
    covers).

    ... and was wondering if ones that include such pass-on conditions are common, and what sort/level of enforcement there is, after the first
    showing.

    Not me, guv! You'd do better to ask the various "trade unions".

    --
    Robin
    reply-to address is (intended to be) valid

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  • From Brian Gaff (Sofa)@21:1/5 to G6JPG@255soft.uk on Sun Oct 24 09:55:19 2021
    One of the issues is that I think about if there is an obligation to show credits, is, would that extend to also reading them out on an audio
    described version?
    Brian

    Rest of post is quotes.



    --

    This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
    The Sofa of Brian Gaff...
    briang1@blueyonder.co.uk
    Blind user, so no pictures please
    Note this Signature is meaningless.!
    "J. P. Gilliver (John)" <G6JPG@255soft.uk> wrote in message news:ZZS2RGmVJXchFwMp@255soft.uk...
    On Thu, 21 Oct 2021 at 08:20:56, "Brian Gaff (Sofa)" <briang1@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote (my responses usually follow points
    raised):
    Don't know about now, but when I could see, often very old rare films
    would say archived by smallfilms or something like that,which I seem to >>recall was
    the company the late Bob Monkhouse started.
    Brian

    There are two aspects to that: there are the companies who don't do
    anything to it, but still give it shelf space; such companies still
    arguably provide a useful service, in that they prevent it ending up in a skip. Then there are the ones who do active restoration (sometimes
    amazingly so).

    (I think Smallfilms was the company that made a lot of the classic
    children's TV stuff - Ivor Postgate stuff was it? - rather than an
    archiving company.)

    But I was _really_ wondering about the obligation to _show_ credits (more
    the original ones than the extra flashes added to the end by archiving companies); I've preserved the part of my original post that would have
    been lost. (Brian - we do accept your reason for top-posting, but if you
    are going to do so, could you perhaps _not_ use a proper .sig-separator
    line, so that the post you are replying to _doesn't_ appear part of your signature and thus get cut by default by better software? Thanks, John)
    --

    This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
    The Sofa of Brian Gaff...
    briang1@blueyonder.co.uk
    Blind user, so no pictures please
    Note this Signature is meaningless.!
    "J. P. Gilliver (John)" <G6JPG@255soft.uk> wrote in message >>news:XX$VCNGgFBchFws7@255soft.uk...
    (I think I may have raised this one some years ago - I've often thought
    about it, so might have - but thought it worth raising again.)

    What _obligation_ do broadcasters have to show credits at the end of
    programmes and films?

    (Whether they can squash, squeeze, or talk over them is a separate, but
    related, question.)

    I presume that in at least _some_ cases - even if it's very few - some
    people (acting/presenting, or technical), might have agreed to appear
    in/work on something for a lower fee, provided they were named in the
    credits.

    _Companies_ - mainly production companies, but sometimes archiving
    companies - put their name on the end: "made by Desilu productions" is
    the
    one that comes to my mind first (followed by lots of BBC), but I've also >>> seen words to the effect of "you're only seeing this at all because XYZ
    gave it shelf space" - these can accumulate to several shown in quick
    succession for obscure old material, I think the most I've seen is six
    or
    seven such.

    Presumably for first showing, there _is_ an obligation to show the full
    credits. (I'm thinking mainly of end credits, but it also applies to
    start
    ones.) but when a broadcaster buys a repeat right, do such obligations
    remain and/or get transferred? (If they do, do some broadcasters ignore
    them for ancient material, on the basis that "anyone who's likely to sue >>> us over them is long dead"? I think at least the archive companies
    assume
    this, as they keep theirs very short - less than a second, often -
    presumably in the hope someone won't bother to trim them.)

    I'm mainly wondering about the _legal_ aspects, but there's also the
    question of the _desirability_: I can understand the argument, if
    someone
    makes it, that they could be extremely tedious in some cases. (On
    commercial channels, definitely causing loss of viewers.)
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    "To YOU I'm an atheist; to God, I'm the Loyal Opposition." - Woody Allen


    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    The breathtaking wonders of nature revealed to the soothing tones of Sir David
    Attenborough. Life doesn't get much better than that.
    - Ben Preston, Radio Times editor (2016/11/26-12/2)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From MB@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 24 11:13:51 2021
    On 24/10/2021 09:55, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote:
    One of the issues is that I think about if there is an obligation to show credits, is, would that extend to also reading them out on an audio
    described version?
    Brian

    Probably goes back a long time to before any thought of AD.

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  • From Gerard K@21:1/5 to Max Demian on Sun Oct 24 09:03:31 2021
    On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 4:50:25 PM UTC+1, Max Demian wrote:
    On 24/10/2021 09:55, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote:
    One of the issues is that I think about if there is an obligation to show credits, is, would that extend to also reading them out on an audio described version?
    If TV broadcasters are obliged to show credits at the end, why are they allowed to squash them to illegibility?

    --
    Max Demian

    Orson Welles used spoken only (by the man himself) credits at the end of
    his 1942 film The Magnificent Ambersons.

    Gerard.

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  • From Max Demian@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 24 16:50:21 2021
    On 24/10/2021 09:55, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote:

    One of the issues is that I think about if there is an obligation to show credits, is, would that extend to also reading them out on an audio
    described version?

    If TV broadcasters are obliged to show credits at the end, why are they
    allowed to squash them to illegibility?

    --
    Max Demian

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  • From J. P. Gilliver (John)@21:1/5 to briang1@blueyonder.co.uk on Sun Oct 24 19:15:03 2021
    On Sun, 24 Oct 2021 at 09:55:19, "Brian Gaff (Sofa)"
    <briang1@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote (my responses usually follow points
    raised):
    One of the issues is that I think about if there is an obligation to show >credits, is, would that extend to also reading them out on an audio
    described version?

    Excellent point!

    I've noticed that, where something has the leading cast shown on screen
    near the beginning ("starring X as Y"), the AD often _does_ read it out
    - as well as "produced/directed by" if it appears similarly.

    Brian

    Rest of post is quotes.



    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    (please reply to group - they also serve who only look and lurk)
    (William Allen, 1999 - after Milton, of course)

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  • From Stephen Wolstenholme@21:1/5 to max_demian@bigfoot.com on Mon Oct 25 13:07:28 2021
    On Sun, 24 Oct 2021 16:50:21 +0100, Max Demian
    <max_demian@bigfoot.com> wrote:

    On 24/10/2021 09:55, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote:

    One of the issues is that I think about if there is an obligation to show
    credits, is, would that extend to also reading them out on an audio
    described version?

    If TV broadcasters are obliged to show credits at the end, why are they >allowed to squash them to illegibility?

    I've got reasonably good eyesight but I can't read end credits on TVs
    less than about 24". Even on very big screens the credits are shown
    too quickly for me to read.

    Steve

    --
    Neural Network Software http://www.npsnn.com
    JustNN Just a neural network http://www.justnn.com SwingNN Prediction software http://www.swingnn.com EasyNN-plus More than a neural network. Free from steve@easynn.com

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  • From MB@21:1/5 to All on Mon Oct 25 19:11:02 2021
    On 20/10/2021 13:53, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
    What_obligation_ do broadcasters have to show credits at the end of programmes and films?

    I can't imagine it being a "legal" obligation.

    If true it will in contracts of the actors and all the others. Probably
    vary from person to person depending on how much clout they have.

    There is a lot online.

    I think these are online but UK will be similar.

    "If you’re expecting to be credited in a certain way for your
    performance, make sure that’s in writing, too — sometimes projects are acquired partway through, and a new company coming in won’t be bound by
    oral promises the former company made."

    "Who decides on the names displayed in movie credits?
    The opening credits are strictly done decided by the film unions."

    There are speciment contracts online.




    I wonder if they can decide between a credit and getting more money?

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  • From joe bloggs@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 27 01:28:11 2021
    On Monday, October 25, 2021 at 7:10:01 PM UTC+1, MB wrote:
    On 20/10/2021 13:53, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
    What_obligation_ do broadcasters have to show credits at the end of programmes and films?

    I can't imagine it being a "legal" obligation.

    If true it will in contracts of the actors and all the others. Probably
    vary from person to person depending on how much clout they have.

    There is a lot online.

    I think these are online but UK will be similar.

    "If you’re expecting to be credited in a certain way for your
    performance, make sure that’s in writing, too — sometimes projects are acquired partway through, and a new company coming in won’t be bound by oral promises the former company made."

    "Who decides on the names displayed in movie credits?
    The opening credits are strictly done decided by the film unions."

    There are speciment contracts online.




    I wonder if they can decide between a credit and getting more money?

    From memory the people who got TV credits were traditionally freelance employees, I'm thinking here of designers, directors, producers etc since they tended to be 'guns for hire' and the credits were the only 'shop window' through which their talents
    could be disseminated throughout the industry. They did not generally have the luxury of permanent employment at one company and indeed I suspect many creative people did not want that. Look at a lot of 1960/70s TV programmes being shown on Talking
    Pictures TV and you will see the same names working for many different tv companies. (Dramas by YTV/Granada/LWT etc all have much the same troupe of directors for example). In the past it was not an uncommon practice to offer staff who were after a pay
    rise the 'carrot' of less of an increase in return for a screen credit. It's one of the reasons credits got longer and longer.

    It's amazing how someone wanting a pay rise can be placated at the prospect of their dear old Mum seeing their name in lights as it were. Showbiz eh.

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  • From J. P. Gilliver (John)@21:1/5 to reel.sounds.of.the.seventies@gmail. on Wed Oct 27 15:35:15 2021
    On Wed, 27 Oct 2021 at 01:28:11, joe bloggs <reel.sounds.of.the.seventies@gmail.com> wrote (my responses usually
    follow points raised):
    []
    From memory the people who got TV credits were traditionally freelance >employees, I'm thinking here of designers, directors, producers etc
    since they tended to be 'guns for hire' and the credits were the only
    'shop window' through which their talents could be disseminated
    throughout the industry. They did not generally have the luxury of
    permanent employment at one company and indeed I suspect many creative
    people did not want that. Look at a lot of 1960/70s TV programmes being
    shown on Talking Pictures TV and you will see the same names working
    for many different tv companies. (Dramas by YTV/Granada/LWT etc all
    have much the same troupe of directors for example). In the past it
    was not an uncommon practice to offer staff who were after a pay rise
    the 'carrot' of less of an increase in return for a screen credit. It's
    one of the reasons credits got longer and longer.

    It's amazing how someone wanting a pay rise can be placated at the
    prospect of their dear old Mum seeing their name in lights as it were. >Showbiz eh.

    That makes sense. I wonder how much the obligation - if any - gets
    passed on, when the material is repeated, especially when sold (or
    whatever) to a different broadcaster. Similarly, the recent* tendency to
    hack credits to a shadow of their original selves.

    *OK, it's probably always gone on, but I think more so - in the case of made-for-TV-in-the-first-place material, such as Morse - in, oh, I
    suppose it'll now be the last 20 years or so.

    Has there _ever_ been a case of someone (including a company) taking
    legal action for the credit they are named/shown in not being shown,
    when the material is repeated/shown elsewhere?
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    Everyone learns from science. It all depends how you use the knowledge. - "Gil Grissom" (CSI).

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  • From SimonM@21:1/5 to joe bloggs on Tue Nov 2 09:21:49 2021
    On 27/10/2021 09:28, joe bloggs wrote:
    From memory the people who got TV credits were traditionally freelance employees, I'm thinking here of designers, directors, producers etc since they tended to be 'guns for hire' and the credits were the only 'shop window' through which their talents
    could be disseminated throughout the industry.

    BBC: Nice idea, but staff, in specific roles, were
    credited as a matter of course. That included
    Lighting (TM1s, Engineering Managers (OBs),
    Technical Managers (TM2s, sometimes), Camera
    supervisors, Sound supers, etc. Freelancers were
    typically employed on location work (originally
    almost entirely in film), and I think the credits
    hierarchy came from union agreement there (so they
    could advertise their skills for work, as you say).

    Radio was different. Certainly on the domestic
    services, studio managers (SMs) and engineers were
    never credited (not even the balancers for major
    music such as the Proms), but producers were. My
    only R4 credits were as a producer.

    Sometime in the late 1980s early 1990s this
    started to change, around the time "sound design"
    became a thing. I don't remember an entire drama
    team being credited |(possibly once, on a major
    series), but usually the senior SM does get a
    credit. Nowadays, too, the Grams role is defunct,
    so at maximum it's a technical team of two.

    It's still the case that the balance engineers are
    rarely if ever mentioned for radio music (at least
    not when I dip into R3 from time to time).

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  • From joe bloggs@21:1/5 to SimonM on Tue Nov 2 04:14:49 2021
    On Tuesday, November 2, 2021 at 9:21:51 AM UTC, SimonM wrote:
    On 27/10/2021 09:28, joe bloggs wrote:
    From memory the people who got TV credits were traditionally freelance employees, I'm thinking here of designers, directors, producers etc since they tended to be 'guns for hire' and the credits were the only 'shop window' through which their talents
    could be disseminated throughout the industry.
    BBC: Nice idea, but staff, in specific roles, were
    credited as a matter of course. That included
    Lighting (TM1s, Engineering Managers (OBs),
    Technical Managers (TM2s, sometimes), Camera
    supervisors, Sound supers, etc. Freelancers were
    typically employed on location work (originally
    almost entirely in film), and I think the credits
    hierarchy came from union agreement there (so they
    could advertise their skills for work, as you say).

    Radio was different. Certainly on the domestic
    services, studio managers (SMs) and engineers were
    never credited (not even the balancers for major
    music such as the Proms), but producers were. My
    only R4 credits were as a producer.

    Sometime in the late 1980s early 1990s this
    started to change, around the time "sound design"
    became a thing. I don't remember an entire drama
    team being credited |(possibly once, on a major
    series), but usually the senior SM does get a
    credit. Nowadays, too, the Grams role is defunct,
    so at maximum it's a technical team of two.

    It's still the case that the balance engineers are
    rarely if ever mentioned for radio music (at least
    not when I dip into R3 from time to time).

    I'm actually referring to the period before that - 50/60/early 70's. If you have a look at some of the old ITV series being transmitted by TPTV such as Rediffusion's 1960's 'No Hiding Place' or 'Boyd QC' or perhaps YTV's 1970's 'Justice' or 'The Main
    chance' or even LWT"s 'Budgie' or 'Upstairs Downstairs" you'll notice its the same happy band of freelance producer/directors going round the companies plying their studio director trade (Christopher Hodson/James Omerod/Herbert Wise/Mike Vardy/Mike
    Lindsay-Hogg etc). It was the same with other major key production roles such as the designers etc. Of course the local companies had their own internal resources but they generally handled run of the mill stuff but key positions on big occasional series
    were put out to freelancers. 'James Hill' of the BBC trade test film fame 'The Car' for example is all over the place - Southern's late 1970's 'Worzel Gummidge' for example and ABC's 1960's 'The Human Jungle'. Herbie Wise mentioned above is perhaps more
    well known for the BBC's 'I Clavdus" rather than Central's 'Inspector Morse'. If you do care to look you may be surprised at how restricted the credits originally were going back.

    I remember chatting to one floor manager who said their department had been after a significant local pay rise but were offered half the percentage they were after and an on screen credit. They voted to take the latter deal even though he personally
    wanted the 'cash'. As I said above 'Show biz eh'. As the early 80's rolled by so more and more people seemed to get credits - vision mixers, sound and camera supervisors (as you say) etc etc but these were not credited roles in the 50's/60's unless they
    were externally produced material for purchase, I'm thinking here of stuff like 'Robin Hood', ITC stuff and latterly 'The Avengers" and the like etc but of course these were more akin to film productions rather than television and perhaps followed the
    film tradition.

    For the avoidance of doubt I have never had any screen credit as my roles were so small as to be insignificant (to the management anyway!) and I have no knowledge of the BBC's policies.

    You ever get a credit?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From NY@21:1/5 to All on Tue Nov 2 11:23:30 2021
    "joe bloggs" <reel.sounds.of.the.seventies@gmail.com> wrote in message news:1acf482b-9aac-48a4-a89c-09b7e54906bdn@googlegroups.com...

    I'm actually referring to the period before that - 50/60/early 70's. If
    you have a look at some of the old ITV series being transmitted by TPTV
    such as Rediffusion's 1960's 'No Hiding Place' or 'Boyd QC' or perhaps
    YTV's 1970's 'Justice' or 'The Main chance' or even LWT"s 'Budgie' or 'Upstairs Downstairs" you'll notice its the same happy band of freelance producer/directors going round the companies plying their studio director trade (Christopher Hodson/James Omerod/Herbert Wise/Mike Vardy/Mike Lindsay-Hogg etc). It was the same with other major key production roles
    such as the designers etc. Of course the local companies had their own internal resources but they generally handled run of the mill stuff but
    key positions on big occasional series were put out to freelancers. 'James Hill' of the BBC trade test film fame 'The Car' for example is all over
    the place - Southern's late 1970's 'Worzel Gummidge' for example and ABC's 1960's 'The Human Jungle'. Herbie Wise mentioned above is perhaps more
    well known for the BBC's 'I Clavdus" rather than Central's 'Inspector
    Morse'. If you do care to look you may be surprised at how restricted the credits originally were going back.

    I remember chatting to one floor manager who said their department had
    been after a significant local pay rise but were offered half the
    percentage they were after and an on screen credit. They voted to take the latter deal even though he personally wanted the 'cash'. As I said above 'Show biz eh'. As the early 80's rolled by so more and more people seemed
    to get credits - vision mixers, sound and camera supervisors (as you say)
    etc etc but these were not credited roles in the 50's/60's unless they
    were externally produced material for purchase, I'm thinking here of stuff like 'Robin Hood', ITC stuff and latterly 'The Avengers" and the like etc
    but of course these were more akin to film productions rather than
    television and perhaps followed the film tradition.

    For the avoidance of doubt I have never had any screen credit as my roles were so small as to be insignificant (to the management anyway!) and I
    have no knowledge of the BBC's policies.

    There was a tendency at one time to show a longer credit sequence after the final episode which mentioned some of the "lesser" jobs/people who weren't mentioned for the other episodes in the series.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ashley Booth@21:1/5 to joe bloggs on Wed Nov 3 08:33:26 2021
    joe bloggs wrote:

    On Tuesday, November 2, 2021 at 9:21:51 AM UTC, SimonM wrote:
    On 27/10/2021 09:28, joe bloggs wrote:
    From memory the people who got TV credits were traditionally
    freelance employees, I'm thinking here of designers, directors,
    producers etc since they tended to be 'guns for hire' and the
    credits were the only 'shop window' through which their talents
    could be disseminated throughout the industry.
    BBC: Nice idea, but staff, in specific roles, were
    credited as a matter of course. That included
    Lighting (TM1s, Engineering Managers (OBs),
    Technical Managers (TM2s, sometimes), Camera
    supervisors, Sound supers, etc. Freelancers were
    typically employed on location work (originally
    almost entirely in film), and I think the credits
    hierarchy came from union agreement there (so they
    could advertise their skills for work, as you say).

    Radio was different. Certainly on the domestic
    services, studio managers (SMs) and engineers were
    never credited (not even the balancers for major
    music such as the Proms), but producers were. My
    only R4 credits were as a producer.

    Sometime in the late 1980s early 1990s this
    started to change, around the time "sound design"
    became a thing. I don't remember an entire drama
    team being credited |(possibly once, on a major
    series), but usually the senior SM does get a
    credit. Nowadays, too, the Grams role is defunct,
    so at maximum it's a technical team of two.

    It's still the case that the balance engineers are
    rarely if ever mentioned for radio music (at least
    not when I dip into R3 from time to time).

    I'm actually referring to the period before that - 50/60/early 70's.
    If you have a look at some of the old ITV series being transmitted by
    TPTV such as Rediffusion's 1960's 'No Hiding Place' or 'Boyd QC' or
    perhaps YTV's 1970's 'Justice' or 'The Main chance' or even LWT"s
    'Budgie' or 'Upstairs Downstairs" you'll notice its the same happy
    band of freelance producer/directors going round the companies plying
    their studio director trade (Christopher Hodson/James Omerod/Herbert Wise/Mike Vardy/Mike Lindsay-Hogg etc). It was the same with other
    major key production roles such as the designers etc. Of course the
    local companies had their own internal resources but they generally
    handled run of the mill stuff but key positions on big occasional
    series were put out to freelancers. 'James Hill' of the BBC trade
    test film fame 'The Car' for example is all over the place -
    Southern's late 1970's 'Worzel Gummidge' for example and ABC's 1960's
    'The Human Jungle'. Herbie Wise mentioned above is perhaps more well
    known for the BBC's 'I Clavdus" rather than Central's 'Inspector
    Morse'. If you do care to look you may be surprised at how restricted
    the credits originally were going back.

    I remember chatting to one floor manager who said their department
    had been after a significant local pay rise but were offered half the percentage they were after and an on screen credit. They voted to
    take the latter deal even though he personally wanted the 'cash'. As
    I said above 'Show biz eh'. As the early 80's rolled by so more and
    more people seemed to get credits - vision mixers, sound and camera supervisors (as you say) etc etc but these were not credited roles in
    the 50's/60's unless they were externally produced material for
    purchase, I'm thinking here of stuff like 'Robin Hood', ITC stuff and latterly 'The Avengers" and the like etc but of course these were
    more akin to film productions rather than television and perhaps
    followed the film tradition.

    For the avoidance of doubt I have never had any screen credit as my
    roles were so small as to be insignificant (to the management
    anyway!) and I have no knowledge of the BBC's policies.

    You ever get a credit?

    In 1981 ITN made a programme about the first space shuttle flight. I
    was in sound maint at the time, standing by in sound control. I got a
    credit for that.

    ITN give credits on their regular news bulletins, unlike the BBC, but
    these are normally short, lisiting director and editor. Occasionally
    they list people under newsgathering and I've appeared there when I was
    in links/SNG.



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