Chock-A-Block
Chock-A-Block | |
---|---|
Genre | Children's |
Created by | Michael Cole |
Presented by |
Carol Leader Fred Harris |
Theme music composer | Peter Gosling |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Cynthia Felgate |
Producer(s) | Michael Cole |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | BBC One |
Original run | 1981-05-21 – 1981-08-13 |
- This article is about a children's television programme. "Chock-a-block" is also an English phrase meaning "packed" or "crowded".
Chock-A-Block was a BBC children's television programme, first shown in 1981 and repeated through to 1989 and shown as part of the children's programme cycle See-Saw (the "new" name for the cycle originally known as Watch with Mother). "Chock-A-Block" was an extremely large yellow computer, modelled to resemble a mainframe of the time; it filled the entire studio and provided the entire backdrop for the show. The presenter of the show supposedly played the part of a technician maintaining the computer; there were two presenters, Fred Harris ("Chock-A-Bloke") and Carol Leader ("Chock-A-Girl"), but only one appeared in each episode. At the start of the show, the presenter would drive around the studio towards the machine in a small yellow electric car, before saying the catchphrase "Chock-A-Bloke (or Girl), checking in!").
The presenter would then use the machine to find out about a particular topic. The name "chock-a-block" was supposedly derived from the machine's ability to read data from "blocks" - which were just that, physical blocks painted different colours. A typical show would include dialogue from the presenter, a brief clip played on Chock-a-block's video screen, and the presenter recording a song on Chock-a-block's audio recorder (which resembled the reel-to-reel tape drives used on actual mainframes, but with a design below to cause the reels to resemble the eyes of a smiling face).
According to the Kaleidoscope 'Lost Shows' database, eight out of thirteen episodes are no longer in the BBC archives.
Episodes
# | Title | Presenter | Airdate | Catalogue#[1] |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "UNKNOWN" | Fred Harris | 21 May 1981 | LCHS566P |
Featured the song "The Clock That Lost Its Tock". | ||||
2 | "Crow" | Carol Leader. | 28 May 1981 | LCHS573Y |
Featured the song "Ballad of Jo Crow". | ||||
3 | "The Sheep" | Fred Harris | 4 June 1981 | LCHS567J |
4 | "The Train" | Carol Leader | 11 June 1981 | LCHS574S |
5 | "The Sun and The Moon" | Fred Harris | 18 June 1981 | LCHS568D |
Featured the song "Out Shone a ray". | ||||
6 | "Magpie" | Carol Leader | 25 June 1981 | LCHS575L |
7 | "UNKNOWN" | Fred Harris | 2 July 1981 | LCHS569X |
Featured the song "King Cole's Mole" | ||||
8 | "UNKNOWN" | Carol Leader | 9 July 1981 | LCHS576F |
9 | "UNKNOWN" | Fred Harris | 16 July 1981 | LCHS570R |
Featured the song "The Dancing Pig" | ||||
10 | "Shoes" | Carol Leader | 23 July 1981 | LCHS577A |
11 | "Words with "ake"?" | Fred Harris | 30 July 1981 | LCHS571K |
Featured the song "Drake on the Lake" | ||||
12 | "Bee At The Sea" | Carol Leader | 6 August 1981 | LCHS578T |
Featured the poem "If All The Seas Were One Sea". | ||||
13 | "UNKNOWN" | Fred Harris | 13 August 1981 | LCHS572E |
Featured the poem "Pussy Cat, Pussy Cat, Where Have You Been?" |
The presenter Fred Harris went on to present the serious computing programme Micro Live and to become a personality strongly associated with computers in the public eye.
References
- ↑ "BBC Catalogue: Chock-a-block". BBC. Retrieved 6 May 2007.