Thursday, 31 December 2015
311 Panorama
First viewed : Uncertain
As with World in Action , against which it was often scheduled, Panorama appears here now due to an episode that I clearly recall seeing. Before that it was always the one programme - apart from the cricket coverage - that my dad wanted to watch and so its powerful theme music was usually the cue to go to bed.
The episode in question, on 14.11.77, featured a 35 minute film report, introduced by the venerable news reporter Charles Wheeler , about organised football hooliganism at Millwall FC who bafflingly agreed to co-operate with the programme. The Millwall firm's tripartite structure meant you started off as a school boy causing bother around the half way line then chose whether to join "Treatment" a bunch of goons wearing surgical helmets who guarded the home end against incursions or the real nutters the "F Troop" to whom the football was clearly incidental to looking for a ruck. On one occasion when Millwall went to Sunderland, the F Troop chose instead to go to Charlton v Tottenham to soften up the Spurs fans for their visit later in the season.
All the cliches of reporting on the subject were introduced here such as trying to fit the phenomenon into a sociological framework and the obligatory footage of an avowed hooligan working with kids in his day job. We all know that's often the case now but it was a revelation then. The main spokesman for Treatment was a surely untypical teenager called David who wore glasses and looked like a puff of wind would knock him down.
In fairness to the club their efforts to get to grips with the hooligan problem were given appropriate coverage. Then-manager Gordon Jago made the prescient suggestion of making games home fans only nearly a decade before Luton Town tried it ( largely as a result of Millwall fans wrecking their ground during a cup tie in 1985 ).
Panorama remains BBC 's flagship current affairs programme , still going strong after 63 years and all the Beeb's top rank political journalists have cut their teeth on it - Dimbleby, Vine, Day , Kennedy etc. Its coups are too numerous to list but I guess the 1995 interview with Princess Diana must top the bill. For me it didn't do her any favours ; the "Queen of People's Hearts" line in particular showed a lack of self-awareness that left her open to ridicule.
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