In the 1950s a pressure group campaigned with the help of
Winston Churchill to pass the
Television Act 1954 that broke the BBC television monopoly by creating
ITV. Some members wanted commercial competition to radio but were thwarted by a succession of governments. By the 1960s, several companies formed in the hope that radio licences would be issued. Radio monopolies in adjoining nations had been broken by transmitters on ships in international waters. The first attempt to broadcast offshore to Britain was by
CNBC, an English-language station from the same ship as
Radio Veronica broadcasting in Dutch to the
Netherlands. CNBC ended transmissions but press reports followed that GBLN,
The Voice of Slough, would transmit from a ship with sponsored programming already booked and advertised by
Herbert W. Armstrong. GBLN was followed by reports that GBOK was attempting to get on the air from another ship, both ships to be anchored off south-east England. Many in these early ventures were known to each other. Some of the commercial television group members had registered broadcasting companies and were working to create offshore radio. The first venture was "Project Atlanta" in 1963, which had ties to British political leaders, bankers, the music industry and to
Gordon McLendon, who had helped
Radio Nord broadcast from a ship off Sweden. When that was put off the air by Swedish law it became available to British entrepreneurs. Before
Radio Atlanta got on the air,
Radio Caroline began broadcasting in March 1964. Texas connections to British stations led
Don Pierson of
Eastland, Texas to promote three American-radio format stations off Britain:
Wonderful Radio London or Big L,
Swinging Radio England and Britain Radio. By 1966 other stations had come on the air transmitting to
Scotland, northern and southern England, or were in the process of doing so. Press reports included rumours of offshore television stations and the brief success of the Dutch
REM Island operation called Radio and TV Noordzee heightened the fear of the authorities that de facto unregulated broadcasting was becoming so entrenched due to its popularity that it would not be possible to stop it. ==Existing laws ==