=LDR 03362nam 2200289 i 4500 =001 BOA000019 =005 20180925152016.0 =006 m\\\\|\\\d\|\\\\\\ =007 cr\|n||||||||n =008 180925t20062006enk\\\\\\\\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$a9781851171248 =040 \\$aUtOrBLW$beng$erda$cUtOrBLW =043 \\$an-us--- =050 \4$aTK6548.G7$bB33 2006 =245 00$aBBC Listener Research Department reports, 1937-c.1950. =264 \1$aEast Ardsley, Wakefield, United Kingdom :$bMicroform Academic Publishers,$c[2006] =264 \4$c{copy}2006 =300 \\$a4 volumes (10,298 pages) =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aDate range: 1937-1953. =520 \\$aThe Audience Research Reports of the BBC", covering the period 1937-c.1950, present the early research of the British Broadcasting Corporation's pioneering Listener Research Department (LRD) into wireless listening in Britain nationwide and at a regional level. From the controversial founding of the Department in 1936, it takes in the turbulent years of the Second World War through to the early post-war period leading up to launch of Britain's first national television channel. These items reproduce the entire available collection of weekly Audience Summaries, together with the weekly then daily Listening Barometers. Also included are the Audience Reaction Reports on specific programmes and Special Reports on particular themes or issues for the period, as well as some key policy documents produced by the LRD during these years, tracing the early development of what has come to be known as market research within the BBC. During the Second World War, listener research took on a new urgency as the BBC became an indispensable part of life on the Home Front. The LRD's wartime audience research, reproduced here for the first time, provides crucial insights into the listening habits and cultural preferences of the British people at this time, as well as detailed listener responses to some of the key radio programmes and personalities of the era, from ITMA and The Brains Trust to Winston Churchill and William Joyce, the voice of Nazi propaganda better known as Lord Haw-Haw. Through its special reports on topics ranging from news readers' accents and evening listening habits to listeners' views about Russia, this collection provides a unique and revealing window onto the behaviour, attitudes and preoccupations of the British people at a key moment in their history. Accompanied by an online guide by Si{acute}n Nicholas, University of Wales Aberystwyth. (Note: To help with searching, optical character recognition (OCR) software has been used on the scanned images of the archived documents, and the resultant uncorrected OCR'd text has been associated to most images in this collection. The quality of the OCR output varies, depending on the clarity of the typeface, which are often carbon copies of the originals, using relatively low-grade paper and ink available during the austere WW2 and immediate post-war years). =610 20$aBritish Broadcasting Corporation$xResearch. =650 \0$aRadio$zGreat Britain$xHistory$y20th century. =610 20$aBritish Broadcasting Corporation$xHistory. =856 40$uhttps://microform.digital/boa/collections/16/bbc-listener-research-department-reports-1937-c1950