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The Inter City Firm (ICF) is an English football hooligan firm associated with West Ham United, which was mainly active in the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s. The name came from the use of InterCity trains to travel to away games. [1] They were the subject of a 1985 Thames Television documentary, Hooligan. [2] [3]
Thames bid £32.5 million while Carlton Television placed a bid of £43.2 million, [46] and, since both Thames and Carlton were deemed to have passed the quality threshold, the licence was awarded to Carlton for having submitted the higher cash bid; the highest bidder in the auction, CPV-TV, was deemed to have failed on quality grounds. [47]
Mind Over Matter (TV series) Minder (TV series) Miracles Take Longer; Miss Jones and Son; Mr. Bean; Mr. Palfrey of Westminster; Moody and Pegg; The Morecambe & Wise Show (1978 TV series) Moving (British TV series) Murder Investigation Team (TV series) A Murder of Quality (film) My Name Is Harry Worth; Mystery and Imagination; Mystic Challenge
Boxing Day highlights on BBC1 include Tenko Reunion, a feature-length episode of Tenko that reunites the cast in a story set five years after the original series. [ 45 ] Boxing Day highlights on ITV include the network television premiere of the 1982 political thriller Who Dares Wins , starring Lewis Collins , Judy Davis , Edward Woodward and ...
Today was Thames Television's first regional news magazine programme, shown in the London area from 1968 to 1977. It was hosted by Eamonn Andrews, Bill Grundy and others. [1] For nine months, the programme featured Barbara Blake Hannah, the first Black reporter on British television, who was eventually driven off-air by racist complaints. [2] [3]
This is a timeline of the history of the British broadcaster Thames Television and its predecessor Associated-Rediffusion. Between them, they provided the ITV weekday service for London from 1955 to 1992, after which Thames continued as an independent production company until 2003.
World of Sport is a British television sport programme which ran on ITV between 2 January 1965 and 28 September 1985 in competition with the BBC's Grandstand.Like Grandstand, the programme ran throughout Saturday afternoon.
The ITV Telethon originated from the 10-hour Thames Telethon, which ran in the Thames/London ITV region only, on 2 October 1980 and raised more than £1 million, [1] one month before the BBC's Children in Need appeal the same year Thames broadcast another Telethon on 29–30 October 1985, which raised more than £2.5 million [2]