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Journal article 1793 views

A cultural exchange - S4C, Channel 4 and film

Elain Price Orcid Logo

Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television

Swansea University Author: Elain Price Orcid Logo

Abstract

S4C, launched one day prior to Channel 4 on 1 November 1982, depended heavily in its formative years on its sister channel for content to fill the schedules around its 22 hours a week of original Welsh content broadcast at peak hours. Freed from any constraints by the ‘once around the transmitters’...

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Published in: Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television
Published: 2013
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa14556
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first_indexed 2013-07-23T12:12:27Z
last_indexed 2018-02-09T04:46:00Z
id cronfa14556
recordtype SURis
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spelling 2013-09-23T12:32:29.1334629 v2 14556 2013-04-11 A cultural exchange - S4C, Channel 4 and film c5cbd2cf318775d472d3eb298ac8ed79 0000-0002-7872-5998 Elain Price Elain Price true false 2013-04-11 AMED S4C, launched one day prior to Channel 4 on 1 November 1982, depended heavily in its formative years on its sister channel for content to fill the schedules around its 22 hours a week of original Welsh content broadcast at peak hours. Freed from any constraints by the ‘once around the transmitters’ agreement and a strong relationship between its two Chief Executives, the Welsh channel was given free rein to select and schedule Channel 4’s programmes as it wished and broadcast them free of charge. With no room for all of the Channel 4 programmes within the S4C schedules, some programmes would have to be omitted and the complexities of the relationship would be exposed by the difference in style between the programmes produced in English and in Welsh. This article will explore the relationship between the two channels and the tensions and difficulties which arose by studying the way that the films purchased and produced by Channel 4 were broadcast on S4C as a case study. The article will also consider how the relationship between both channels influenced the commissioning of Welsh-language films by S4C. Journal Article Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television Film, S4C, Wales, Television, Channel 4, Collaboration 31 12 2013 2013-12-31 COLLEGE NANME Media COLLEGE CODE AMED Swansea University 2013-09-23T12:32:29.1334629 2013-04-11T11:57:52.0100389 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - Modern Languages, Translation, and Interpreting Elain Price 0000-0002-7872-5998 1
title A cultural exchange - S4C, Channel 4 and film
spellingShingle A cultural exchange - S4C, Channel 4 and film
Elain Price
title_short A cultural exchange - S4C, Channel 4 and film
title_full A cultural exchange - S4C, Channel 4 and film
title_fullStr A cultural exchange - S4C, Channel 4 and film
title_full_unstemmed A cultural exchange - S4C, Channel 4 and film
title_sort A cultural exchange - S4C, Channel 4 and film
author_id_str_mv c5cbd2cf318775d472d3eb298ac8ed79
author_id_fullname_str_mv c5cbd2cf318775d472d3eb298ac8ed79_***_Elain Price
author Elain Price
author2 Elain Price
format Journal article
container_title Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television
publishDate 2013
institution Swansea University
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str School of Culture and Communication - Modern Languages, Translation, and Interpreting{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - Modern Languages, Translation, and Interpreting
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description S4C, launched one day prior to Channel 4 on 1 November 1982, depended heavily in its formative years on its sister channel for content to fill the schedules around its 22 hours a week of original Welsh content broadcast at peak hours. Freed from any constraints by the ‘once around the transmitters’ agreement and a strong relationship between its two Chief Executives, the Welsh channel was given free rein to select and schedule Channel 4’s programmes as it wished and broadcast them free of charge. With no room for all of the Channel 4 programmes within the S4C schedules, some programmes would have to be omitted and the complexities of the relationship would be exposed by the difference in style between the programmes produced in English and in Welsh. This article will explore the relationship between the two channels and the tensions and difficulties which arose by studying the way that the films purchased and produced by Channel 4 were broadcast on S4C as a case study. The article will also consider how the relationship between both channels influenced the commissioning of Welsh-language films by S4C.
published_date 2013-12-31T03:16:40Z
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score 10.998228