World in Action

World in Action

British News Documentary

World in Action, Britain's long-running and most illustrious current-affairs program, goes out in prime time on ITV (the main commercial channel) and is produced by Granada Television, a company with a reputation for innovation and "quality"  programming. First launched in 1963, with Tim Hewat, an ex-Daily Express reporter, as its editor, World in Action was the first weekly current-affairs program in Britain to pioneer pictorial journalism on film and to risk taking an independent editorial stance. In comparison with Panorama, the BBC's rival current­ affairs program, which was  studio  based  and featured several items, World in Action was, in the words of Gus McDonald, "born brash." It devoted each half-hour episode to a single issue and, abandoning the studio and presenter, put the story itself up-front. The lightweight film equipment gave the production team the mobility to follow up the stories firsthand and to bring raw images of the world into  the living room. A conspicuous and influential style evolved with interviewees framed in close-up talking directly to camera, cross-cut with fast-edited observation of relevant action and environmental  detail. The hard-hitting approach compelled attention and made complex social issues accessible to a mass audience for the first time.

Bio

     Having  firmly established  the idea of  picture jour­nalism on TV, World in Action consolidated its position in 1967 under David Plowright when an investigative bureau was set up, and it is on the quality of its investigative journalism that the program's reputation chiefly rests. Award-winning episodes have included "The Demonstration" (1968) observing the mass  protest  outside  the  U.S.  embassy  against  the bombing of North Vietnam; "Nuts and Bolts of the Economy" (1976), a series exploring different aspects of the world economy; and an investigation into "The Life and Death of Steve Biko" (1978). The program has been equally wide ranging with domestic topics, covering the exposure of police corruption in "Scotland Yard's Cocaine Connection" (1985),  revealing the British Royal Family's tax loophole (1991), and investigating the dangers of different types of contraceptive pill (1995). Over the years, the program has fearlessly and impartially pursued the truth, exposing injustice and falsehood, and frequently running  at odds with the powers that be. In this respect the programme's long-standing, but eventually successful, fight to secure the release of the six men wrongfully convicted for the IRA pub bombing in Birmingham provides the outstanding example.

     World in Action stands as one of the finest achievements of public service television in Britain--of programming driven by the desire to inform and educate viewers as much as to entertain them. In the course of its long run it has provided the training ground for some of the most distinguished names in British broadcasting, as well as pioneering innovative program approaches such as undercover and surveillance work and drama documentaries. How it will continue to fare in the more competitive broadcast market following deregulation remains to be seen. However, it is possible that to maintain its prime-time slot the emphasis will shift away from costly long-term investigations and international stories to focus on populist health and consumer issues that can be guaranteed to deliver large audiences.


Series Info

  • ITV

    1963-1965

    1967-

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