In this BBC clip from 1964, the Irish journalist and presenter Cathal O’Shannon visits the Shetland Islands to report on the arrival of a television transmitter, which will make the remote Scottish archipelago the last part of the United Kingdom to receive broadcasts. Detailing local traditions of self-sufficiency, hand-knitting and fiddle music among the islands’ 19,000 inhabitants, O’Shannon wonders aloud if the arrival of television will sand away at the edges of the unique local culture. Viewed today, the clip serves as something of a Rorschach test for one’s views on the global modern world: does the report simply represent the latest alarmist tech panic, or did the arrival of television truly portend the end of an era?
Video by BBC Archive
video
Family life
One family’s harrowing escape from postwar Vietnam, told in a poignant metaphor
10 minutes
video
Fairness and equality
Visit the small Texas community that lives in the shadow of SpaceX launches
14 minutes
video
War and peace
A frontline soldier’s moving account of the fabled ‘Christmas truce’ of 1914
12 minutes
video
Bioethics
What a 1970 experiment reveals about the possibility and perils of ‘head transplants’
6 minutes
video
History of technology
Replicating Shakespearean-era printing brings its own dramas and comedy
19 minutes
video
Animals and humans
The wild tale of a young animal keeper, an angry tiger and a torn circle net
10 minutes
video
Technology and the self
Why single Chinese women are freezing their eggs in California
24 minutes
video
The ancient world
Petty squabbles and bloody battles – the life of an ancient Roman soldier
18 minutes
video
Childhood and adolescence
The police camp where tween girls enter a sisterhood of law and order
28 minutes