As a contemporary programme
Nationwide was recorded on broadcast
videotape only in case of possible
complaint or
litigation; after a period of time tapes would be
wiped and re-used although filmed reports were archived. Consequently, only a few complete editions exist in their original form. However, in his book
The Television Heritage (1989), author Steve Bryant claimed that "a virtually complete collection of the BBC magazine programme
Nationwide from 1971 to 1980" existed as domestic recordings. He wrote: "Already virtually doomed is material held on early domestic tape formats manufactured by Sony,
Shibaden and Philips. The pictures from these tapes are very poor – indeed, the Sony and Shibaden
reel-to-reel tapes are monochrome only – but some unique collections exist on these formats. Most significant is a virtually complete collection of the BBC magazine programme
Nationwide from 1971 to 1980, mostly on Sony and Shibaden, but on Philips for the programmes after 1977. This collection is held by the NFA (
National Film Archive) and represents the only copies of the complete programmes in existence. The BBC has all the film reports and a small selection of pre-recorded video inserts, but the programmes themselves were live and were not recorded off-air. Neither the machinery nor the funds are currently available to save the contents of these tapes, so a valuable daily record of British life in the 70s, including a large number of live interviews with leading politicians and celebrities of the time, looks like being lost." The
British Film Institute website stated in 2003 "so far we have successfully dubbed 500 [Philips] N-1500 [tapes] as part of an
HLF-funded Nationwide preservation project". In November 2016, the BFI's holdings of Nationwide, described as being on an "exceptionally rare" video format, were included in a list of 100,000 most at risk television episodes which were to be digitised following £13.5 million of
National Lottery funding. ==Documentaries==