| And the music that runs up against it at night, Sailing Away, equally important reference. The nights I lay there, imagining the storms out there, particularly when depressed and alone, listening to the post-midnight "ceremonies" including the national anthem and lulled off to sleep before the World Service crept onto the airwaves... so many nights. It really is a part of me in some ways. It's interesting to me just how important BBC Radio 4 (formerly the Home Service), on which it is broadcast, is and has been to our collective culture. It's now seen in a more middle-class "sniffy" light - Radio 4 listeners are a certain "type", but think what it's given us: - It's where The Goons became famous: Peter Sellers, Spike Milligan and Harry Seacombe defined a certain age of comedy and inspired Monty Python and others. - Mornington Crescent is ironically one of the most iconic stations on the London Underground thanks to the game from the R4 show - All of Churchill's war-time speeches were broadcast there first - In the event of the death of the Queen, it will be announced first on the 8am Radio 4 news broadcast the following day (I'm not sure that can work in the modern era, but there we are) - Royal Navy Nuclear (weapon) submarines are to open a safe with hand-written letters of instruction from the Prime Minister if they can't pick up Radio 4 long-wave That's just off the top of my head. |
It is one of many factors. Shutting down Radio 4 will not send the subs into attack mode. I do laugh every time I read about the "hand written" part. The assumption is that PMs are unable to use typewriters. Anything typed would therefore have been handled by their secretaries/PAs, making them a target. I have this image in my head of a sub captain not being able to read the PM's handwriting. These are embellished protections generated by novelists.