
The Beatles, photographed at a special media event to promote their upcoming participation in the ''Our World'' broadcast the following day.
'''Our World''' was the first live, international,
satellite television production, which was broadcast on
25 June 1967. Performers in nineteen nations were invited to perform in separate segments featuring their respective countries, and the two-and-half-hour event had the largest television
audience ever up to that date: an estimated 400 million people around the globe watched the broadcast.
[1]
Today, it is most famous for the segment starring
The Beatles. Performing at the height of the
Vietnam War, the group wanted to spread a message of
peace and love to the world. They gave a live performance, transmitted at 8:54 p.m.
GMT, performing a new song written primarily by
John Lennon "
All You Need Is Love", composed especially for the occasion. The Beatles invited many of their friends to the event to create a festive atmosphere and to join in on the song's chorus. Among the friends were members of
The Rolling Stones,
Eric Clapton,
Marianne Faithfull,
Keith Moon and
Graham Nash. The performance required only a single rehearsal.
[2] [3]
Planning
The project was conceived by
BBC producer
Aubrey Singer. It was transferred to the
European Broadcasting Union, but the
master control room for the broadcast was still at the BBC in
London. The satellites used were
Intelsat I, Intelsat II and ATS-1.
[4]
It took ten months to bring everything together. One hitch was the sudden pull-out of the
Eastern bloc countries headed by the
Soviet Union in the week leading up to the broadcast. Apparently it was a protest to the Western nations' response to the
Six Day War.
[5]
The ground rules included that no politicians or heads of state could participate in the broadcast. As well, everything had to be 'live', so no use of videotape or film was permitted. 10,000 technicians, producers, and translators took part in this massive broadcast. Each country would have its own announcers, due to language issues, and translators would voice-over the original sound when not in a country's native language. In the end 14 countries participated in the production that was transmitted to 31 countries with an estimated audience ranging between 400 to 700 million.
The broadcast
Canada's
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation had
Marshall McLuhan being interviewed in a
Toronto T.V. control room. At 7:17 p.m. GMT, the show switched to the
United States' segment about the
Glassboro, New Jersey, conference between American president
Lyndon Johnson and
Soviet premier Alexey Kosygin. Since ''Our World'' insisted that no politicians be shown, only the house where the conference was being held was televised. The
National Educational Television's (NET) Dick McCutcheon ended up talking about the impact of the new television technology on a global scale.
The show switched back to Canada at 7:18 p.m. GMT. Segments that were beamed worldwide were from a Ghost Lake,
Alberta ranch, showing a rancher, and his
cutting horse, cutting out a herd of cattle. The last Canadian segment was from
Kitsilano Beach, located in
Vancouver, British Columbia's
Point Grey district at 7:19 p.m. GMT.
At 7:20 p.m. GMT, the program shifted continents to
Asia, with
Tokyo,
Japan being the next segment. It was 4:20 a.m. local time and
NHK showed the construction of the
Tokyo Subway system.
The equator was crossed for the first time in the program when it switched to the Australian contribution, which was at 5:22 a.m.
Australian Eastern Daylight Time (AEDT). This was the most technically complicated point in the broadcast, as both the Japanese and Australian satellite ground stations had to reverse their actions: Tokyo had to go from transmit mode to receive mode, while
Melbourne had to switch from receive to transmit mode. The segment dealt with
Trams leaving the
Hammer Street Depot in Melbourne with
Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Brian King explaining that sunrise was many hours away as it was winter there.
A scientific segment, later on in the broadcast, was also included that dealt with the
Parkes Observatory tracking a deep space object.
[6]
References and notes
1. His Musical Notes Have Become TV Landmarks Richard Harrington
2. Granada TV documentary shows the Beatles' ''Our World'' broadcast segment.
3. Although the entire program was originally transmitted in black and white (and thus the videotape recording was also in black and white), for its usage in the 1995 TV special The Beatles Anthology, the majority of the Beatles' performance on the 1967 program was colourized - using color photographs taken at the event as a reference.
4. The Whole World's Watching, , , , Air and Space Magazine,
5. Our World - A Sunday in 1967 Stanley Burke
6. Moment in Time Episode 12: First Satellite Broadcast Peter Rowsthorn
External links
★
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's segment during the ''Our World'' broadcast, with outtakes of the Australian, Japanese and American segments.