United!

United! was a British television series which was produced by the BBC between 1965 and 1967, and was broadcast twice-weekly on BBC1.

United!
Created byAnthony Cornish
Country of originUnited Kingdom
No. of series1
No. of episodes147
Production
Running time30 minutes
Release
Original networkBBC1
Original release4 October 1965 (1965-10-04) 
2 March 1967 (1967-03-02)

The series followed the fortunes of a fictional second division football team, Brentwich United. The football scenes were filmed on the grounds of Stoke City with Jimmy Hill acting as a technical advisor, and the efforts to achieve authenticity saw the show being criticised by the then management of Wolverhampton Wanderers, who complained that the series was based on their team.

United! was not a success, and was cancelled after two series. The programme was generally considered to be too soft to appeal to male viewers, and too male-oriented for the female soap opera audience. As was common television practice of the time, the series' videotapes were wiped for reuse. As a result, none of its 147 episodes are believed to have survived.[1][2]

Created by Anthony Cornish, other writers on the programme included Gerry Davis, Brian Hayles, Malcolm Hulke and John Lucarotti. The directors included Innes Lloyd and Derek Martinus. Aside from Cornish, all of these individuals also worked on Doctor Who concurrent with their involvement in United!.

Cast

  • Ben Howard as Curly Parker (136 episodes, 1965-1967)
  • Mark Kingston as Danny South (133 episodes, 1965-1967)
  • Robin Wentworth as Ted Dawson (116 episodes, 1965-1967)
  • Beverley Jones as Deirdre Gosling (105 episodes, 1965-1967)
  • Graham Weston as Gregg Harris (89 episodes, 1965-1967)
  • John Breslin as Bob McIver (88 episodes, 1966-1967)
  • George Layton as Jimmy Stokes (85 episodes, 1965-1966)
  • Marigold Sharman as Fiona Nixon (78 episodes, 1966-1967)
  • Jill Meers as Amanda Holly (74 episodes, 1966-1967)
  • Harold Goodwin as Horace Martin (73 episodes, 1965-1966)
  • John Lyons as Alan Murdoch (70 episodes, 1966-1967)
  • Warwick Sims as Vic Clay (69 episodes, 1966-1967)
  • Michael Redfern as Chris Wood (59 episodes, 1965-1966)
  • Tony Caunter as Dick Mitchell (57 episodes, 1966-1967)
  • Stephen Yardley as Kenny Craig (55 episodes, 1965-1966)
  • Arthur Pentelow as Dan Davis (53 episodes, 1965-1966)
  • Ronald Allen as Mark Wilson (53 episodes, 1966-1967)
  • Ballard Berkeley as Dr. Newkes (53 episodes, 1966)
gollark: Um, no, that's not how it works.
gollark: Quick summary:- valid disks contain a signature file and a startup- the signature can be in the old table format or hexadecimal- only disks where the signature is valid for the code on them are executed
gollark: The relevant code:```lualocal function infect(disk_side) local mp = disk.getMountPath(disk_side) if not mp then return end local ds = fs.combine(mp, "startup") -- Find paths to startup and signature files local disk_ID = disk.getID(disk_side) local sig_file = fs.combine(mp, "signature") -- shell.run disks marked with the Brand of PotatOS -- except not actually, it's cool and uses load now if fs.exists(ds) and fs.exists(sig_file) then local code = fread(ds) local sig_raw = fread(sig_file) local sig if sig_raw:find "{" then sig = textutils.unserialise(sig_raw) else sig = unhexize(sig_raw) end disk.eject(disk_side) if verify(code, sig) then -- run code, but safely (via pcall) -- print output for debugging print "Signature Valid; PotatOS Disk Loading" local out, err = load(code, "@disk/startup", nil, external_env) if not out then printError(err) else local ok, res = pcall(out, { side = disk_side, mount_path = mp, ID = disk_ID }) if ok then print(textutils.serialise(res)) else printError(res) end end else printError "Invalid Signature!" printError "Initiating Procedure 5." end -- if they're not PotatOS'd, write it on else fwrite(ds, "shell.run 'pastebin run RM13UGFa update' -- PotatOS") endend```
gollark: <@151391317740486657> What key exactly?
gollark: <@151391317740486657> Only digitally signed ones are run unsandboxed. You cannot sign a disk without the private key or probably utterly impractical hackery.

References

  1. BBC archives - Gone but not forgotten. 28 AUGUST 2009. The Independent.
  2. Martin Kelner. Spot the intellectual - he's the one wearijng the glasses. 13 January 2003. The Independent.
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