Canada Canada's Golden Age of Television timeline is very similar to that of the U.S. (in fact, most Canadians were within the broadcast range of at least one American television station by the 1950s), but there is an overall five-year delay because of the country's sparser population.
CBC Television, the country's official national broadcast organization, launched in 1952, and
CTV Television Network, the oldest commercial network in the country, followed in 1962. Although there were a handful of efforts to produce domestic content for the Canadian networks, most Golden Age shows were imported from the United States until the
Can-Con requirements took effect around 1970. Actor
Lorne Greene, then a news anchor for the CBC, operated a prestigious training academy across from the CBC studios from 1945 to 1952, which developed much of Canada's early homegrown television talent. The school was never profitable, but Greene was unwilling to increase enrollment to levels that would make it sustainable and accommodate overwhelming demand for the academy's courses, because Greene feared it would compromise the academy's standards. The 1956 CBC teleplay
Flight into Danger launched the career of author
Arthur Hailey, who would later write
Airport. Both of Hailey's stories would be adapted to film (
Zero Hour! and the
Airport film series respectively) and would be spoofed in the movie
Airplane!.
Nigeria Nigeria has the earliest television industry on the
African continent and one of the earliest in the world. The Western Nigeria Television Service (WNTV), Nigeria's and Africa's first television station, began operation in the then Western Region in October 1959. The other two regions of the country soon followed suit; with the establishment of the Eastern Nigeria Television Service (ENTV) in
Enugu, in 1960, and the Radio Television Kaduna (RKTV) in Kaduna, in March 1962. Also in 1962, The Federal Government established a fourth station, the Nigerian Television Service, in the then capital,
Lagos. The numbers grew rapidly and in the mid-1980s, every
Nigerian state had its own broadcasting station. Laws were made by regulating bodies to limit foreign contents on television, with the
National Commission recommending a minimum of 60 percent local programming content for all broadcasting stations. This led television producers to begin the broadcast of local popular
theatre productions. At this time, Another very successful television adaptation was the adaptation of
D.O. Fagunwa's 1949 novel
Igbó Olódùmarè. The television series, which is of the same title witnessed a tremendous success, especially in South western states, where it was reported that the show constantly left streets deserted during its broadcast on Sunday evenings. Other television successes in the 1980s include series such as
Adio Family,
The Village Headmaster, ''Cock's Crow at Dawn
, The Masquerade
, Mirror in the Sun
, Checkmate
, Sura The Tailor
, Second Chance and Awada Kerikeri''.
South Africa South Africa was one of the last nations in the world to have television; the
apartheid government resisted television broadcasting until the mid-1970s, with experimental broadcasts only beginning in 1975 and nationwide service starting in January 1976.
United Kingdom British television, like its American subordinate, began developing in the 1930s, with the
BBC Television Service beginning regular broadcasts in 1936. The early British television drama borrowed a great deal from dramatic radio productions developed between the
First and the
Second World Wars. In the 1920s, the BBC pioneered dramatic readings of books. In 1925, it broadcast
A Christmas Carol. Later,
John Reith, wanting to use radio waves to "part the clouds of ignorance", came up with the idea of a
classic serial, based on a "classical" literary text. In 1939, the BBC adapted the romantic novel
The Prisoner of Zenda for radio broadcast. Its adapter, Jack Inglis, summarised his approach as follows: "The story is simple, with clear cut characters, and falls easily into episodes. It always seems to me, that it is the first duty of an adapter to reproduce in another medium the original flavour and atmosphere of the book". Inglis compressed several characters into one and simplified the plotline. The production struck a chord with listeners and served as a prototype for dramatic productions that followed it. BBC television broadcasts ceased in 1939, as did the production of television receivers, resuming in 1946 after
World War II. The golden age of British television has been used to describe the period until the mid-1970s.
Soviet Union / Russia The "Golden Age" of the
Soviet media culture is usually associated with
Khrushchev Thaw, which spanned from the mid-1950s until the end of 1960s. The live nature of television and relatively young age of the people involved in its development afforded certain level of exuberance, edginess, debate and criticism. Like in the United States, this period is notable for many
television plays broadcast on Soviet television. For example, in 1951–1954 the
Central Television Studio broadcast three to six plays a week. As time went on, the quantity and quality of the theatrical television productions diminished. The reasons were technical, social, and economic. Staging a new production in a television studio every other day was expensive. The shortage of mobile cameras often precluded broadcasting live performance from a theater. Theaters became increasingly reluctant to offer their shows to television, claiming that television draws the public away from theaters. Some theatrical directors prohibited actors to participate in television shows. Theaters started demanding payment for broadcasting of their plays, and by the end of 1960s the frequency of theatrical shows fell to one show a week. Because the
State Committee for Cinematography would hold freshly
released movies from television broadcast, television studios started producing their own
made-for-TV movies The Thaw ended
with the crackdown of the
Prague Spring. The Soviet government deemed Czechoslovak mass media, which hosted political disputes and broadcast news about protesting students and young workers, to be complicit in undermining Communist rule in
Czechoslovakia.
Sergey Lapin, installed as the chairman of the
State Committee for Television and Radio Broadcasting in 1970, increased political oversight over television and banned shows that were critical of the system. Most programs except for the evening news were recorded beforehand and censored. This effectively ended the first "Golden Age" of the Soviet television. The second "Golden Age" of television in Russia is associated with
perestroika and
glasnost of the late 1980s and with creation of private television companies in the 1990s. This period is notable for edgy talk shows and comedic productions that targeted youth, such as
Outlook,
Till 16 and older,
12th Floor,
Before and After Midnight,
Oba-na. Political and economic news, live broadcasts from state
Duma, critique of the government became standard fare of 1990s. In 2000s the Russian government increased its control over independent television companies, and applied political and economic pressure to discourage them from criticizing the government and its policies. In 2001
Gazprom took ownership of the private television company
NTV, which aired several gritty programs. The satirical show
Puppets, which mocked major politicians and celebrities, was terminated in 2002 after pressure from the Kremlin. In January 2002 another independent television company TV-6 was terminated. In 2014,
TV Rain was heavily criticized for asking viewers whether
Leningrad should have been surrendered to the invading Nazi army in order to save hundreds of thousands of lives, since Hitler did not offer surrender as an option, only death. After that, the largest Russian television providers stopped carrying the channel. Ultimately, left without money from broadcasters and advertisers, TV Rain was forced to move its studio to a private apartment. Contemporary independent television broadcasters stick mostly to unoffensive soap operas and talk shows, leaving the political programming to government-owned channels. In March 2022, Russian authorities blocked access to TV Rain in response to its coverage of the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. The channel relaunched from studios in
Latvia in July, but after multiple violations had its license cancelled in December. TV Rain continues to broadcast via
YouTube and received a Netherlands broadcast license in January 2023. ==List of selected shows==