Wallen Matthie talks about the views of the black communities in Manchester and Liverpool towards Granada TV

A lot of people have talked about Granada being really important to the North West, Manchester. What was the view of the black community towards Granada, did it view it with any affection? It’s quite interesting. I felt that the black community in Manchester felt that Granada was one of those companies that they were…

Read More

Ian Hunton recalls the Granada canteen

The canteen was the hub. We used to have a tea break every morning and afternoon, and of course you’d go in for lunch, and if you were working late into the night you’d go in for your dinner as well. But it was the place where everybody went. All the turns went in there.…

Read More

Wallen Matthie talks about whether there was bullying at Granada

Was there a certain amount of bullying do you think? Oh gosh yes, absolutely there was a certain amount of bullying went on. I mentioned the newsroom earlier on and certainly when I first joined in terms of the producer and the news editor were all females. It was quite interesting that because they were…

Read More

Ian Hunton describes his work as an online editor

I never did film editing. All the editing then was called ‘online editing’. It was traditional. Because the online editing suite was so complicated – with videotape machines and the mixers – it was generally accepted that the people who got those jobs were ex-engineers. I decided after I’d had eighteen years doing the engineering…

Read More

Joan Riley on how she came to be employed at Granada

There was an advert in the Evening News for a fast typist for the Granada Newsroom. I applied and was asked to go for an interview; a typing test. This was 1960. At that time the main building hadn’t been finished, so all the offices were opposite Granada in Quay Street in an old warehouse.…

Read More

Joan Riley remembers the variety of performers on ‘Scene at 6.30’

A lot of the performers would come down chatting to us in-between, because we were permanent staff there. One day a little red headed girl, very small, about sixteen, Scottish. She came and was chatting away with us and they decided she would rehearse her song at our end. I was very grateful I had…

Read More

Joan Riley meets the Beatles

They were going to have a late news bulletin so Joyce and I did split shifts. One week we’d have two days 10-6 and three days 6-11 and then swap round. Promptly at 8 o’clock every night we’d get the empty flask and go to the canteen for refills to keep us going. One night…

Read More

Joan Riley remembers a union dispute about appearance fees

It was decided to have ‘Scene’ at 11 o’clock as well. So we all went back to Quay Street side, directly above where the original newsroom had been, a very large area. At the far end was the studio. I don’t know whether you remember it but the studio was partitioned off with a large…

Read More

Joan Riley describes her impressions of Granada as a company

Was Granada a paternalistic company? I think so and unfortunately I think the unions, in a way, stopped a lot of that because we used to get two bonuses one in May and one in October. There was one strike so they stopped one bonus and then another strike and they stopped another bonus. They…

Read More

Sandy Ross on how he was first employed by Granada

How did you actually come to work for Granada, because I know that Granada didn’t always take people who were obvious like journalists? It’s quite difficult to try and understand but I think I was part of the working class phase because you’re absolutely right, they had quite an eclectic hiring policy. Sometimes they would…

Read More

Janice Finch talks about the size of documentary film crews in the 1980s

So my first taste of programmes was helping out one weekend on a mammoth documentary Granada was making about the Liverpool-Everton Milk Cup Final in 1984. That was my first taste of working with a documentary crew and I remember on that occasion there were eight people. Wherever you went filming, even in people’s living…

Read More

Job roles

Producing television programmes is a team job. Producers, directors, presenters and camera operators may get the plaudits and the awards but there area just as many important people working alongside them. Granada not only employed the former but also sound personnel, film and VTR editors, accountants, electricians, secretaries, set builders, designers, graphic artists, canteen staff,…

Read More

Changing Technology

The period 1956-1990 saw massive changes in television technology. Outside broadcasts became a regular occurrence with live coverage of events, particularly sports events, beamed in from all around the world. Early episodes of Coronation Street and many other Granada programmes had been made live and in studio but as technology improved programmes were recorded and…

Read More

Janice Finch recalls her pride in working at Granada

I felt incredibly proud to work there, not least because I had grown up in Manchester, so I’d always seen the building and I was familiar with its programmes. I used to think it made programmes I would want to watch; intelligent programmes. Yes they did the whole gamut of entertainment and drama and so…

Read More

Janice Finch on Granada as a company

I always felt that it was small enough so people knew who you were. What I also loved, that even before the Internet and people sending emails to people left right and centre, you could send notes to those in authority. The line of command at Granada was really short. So you could see Denis…

Read More

Granada and the North West

Granada originally operated to the whole of the north of England. This area included not only the North West but Yorkshire, Cumbria and the North East. The region was soon to be split so that Granada merely held the franchise for the north west. Over the years Granada TV became synonymous with the region to…

Read More

Janice Finch talks about Sidney Bernstein

I had to work on preparing the obituary of Sidney Bernstein at one stage, when I was working at Granada, when he was not well. Immediately we were asked to go and interview people who had been key in his life. I had to read up a great deal about him and how the company…

Read More