I wonder if the market is still flooded with BBC "Doctor Who" 2"
videotapes for erasing and re-use?
On Wed, 24 May 2017, ben via cctalk wrote:
Well if you have any BBC DR WHO tapes, there are several gaps
in the surviving recordings that need filling in.

For any unfamiliar with the reference, . . .
from 1967 to 1978, BBC routinely erased and reused the tapes of shows, including "Doctor Who".
And, occasionally would dumpster film copies to free up shelf space.

Some of that was an assumption that there was no further value or use in retaining copies, since nobody would be interested in reruns, along with cost of paying royalties for any re-broadcast (Equity contract was draconian);
some was cost and value of blank tape;
and much was assumptions that "some other department" maintained archival copies.

In 1978, executives were finally convinced that due to the advent of home videotape, that there might be future value, and there was a policy change to stop disposing of them.

152 episodes, mostly from the 1960s, were missing.

Efforts have been made to locate missing episodes. That includes retrieving copies sent overseas, buying some from personal collections, finds in storage sheds in the outback, even gathering home audio tapes and amateur 8mm and Super-8 "kinetoscope" (movie camera aimed at TV screen).

Copies that had been transcoded from PAL to NTSC or SECAM have now been transcoded back.

BBC had "professionally" done some kinetoscope copies. Those were 16mm B&W, and BBC colorised some of those, including some commercial colorisation services. But contrary to common knowledge that when making B&W films, better image quality results from using a B&W monitor, the BBC kinetoscope had had a color monitor. Fortuitously, the B&W film was sharp enough to be able to make out the dot mask of the CRT! That made possible the development of a new technique - computer recognition of which pixels were the original RGB dots of the image! That, unlike manual colorisation, results in reasonably exact recreation of the original colors.

Some of the missing content has even been replaced with animation,
synched to home audio.   Earlier this year, BBC released animated
version of "Power Of The Daleks"

97 of the 253 episodes from the first six years are still unavailable.


Almost all of the content that they have was released first as VHS, and now on DVD. The DVDs all have SDH (Subtitles for Deaf/Hard-of-hearing) available. To complete my collection of the released ones, I had to buy quite a few through ebay.co.uk . ANYDVD and Handbrake worked surprisingly smoothly.


So, yes, if I had any of those 2" videotapes, 16mm films, or even off-air tapes of missing episodes, I would contact BBC.

--
Grumpy Ol' Fred                 ci...@xenosoft.com

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