Fletch
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 8,865
- Location
- Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
"Achtung! Achtung! Fernsehsender Paul Nipkow!"
From 1935 to 1943, that commanding cry signaled "Attention!" to people gathered in public viewing parlors throughout Berlin, as well as private sets in the homes of Nazi big shots - viewers of the world's first full-scale television program service.
Television under the Swastika, an hour-long documentary produced by Germany's Spiegel TV, tells the story in newly rediscovered film, produced for broadcast before and during WW2, and then lost track of for 60+ years amid the archives of Communist East Germany.
Previously, so little film survived from pre-1948 telecasts that the origins of TV programming were as good as lost. Now it's evident that even in that early day, TV technology and the visual medium were developing fast under the Goebbels propaganda machine, helped along by German engineering know-how.
Nazi TV presented entertainment, documentaries (themselves mostly propaganda), sports including the 1936 Olympics, and public spectacles like the Party Congresses at Nuremberg. When live cameras did not work outdoors, a film truck with high-speed processor and transmitter link aired remote pickups with only a minute's delay, complete with announcer commentary.
With the start of war, the Deutscher Fernseh gave its facilities over to the fighting forces, installing TVs in barracks and hospitals. In Paris, where the French Post Office had had its own TV station, this too was used to entertain the troops and for French-language propaganda. The Berlin station was bombed off the air in 1943, but the Paris operation continued until the liberation in August 1944.
Anyone at all interested in broadcast history should run, not walk, to smashing telly! and view this incredible discovery!