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AJP at the BBC

4 Extra Debut. Joe Queenan explores the first and arguably the best media don, historian AJP Taylor, whose relationship with broadcasters was the stormiest. From February 2010.

Joe Queenan recalls the long and turbulent relationship between the BBC and the first television don, historian AJP Taylor.

Taylor's broadcasting career spanned five decades, beginning on BBC radio and then switching to the new medium of television, where his unscripted lectures brought serious history out of the university lecture halls and into the living rooms of millions of people for the first time. His broadcasts were as provocative as they were popular, at one point arousing bitter condemnation in the House of Commons, and his relationship with the corporation was often far from cordial.

It dropped the sulky don, as he became known, from the airwaves on numerous occasions - once for refusing to speak any further in a live discussion programme. For his part, Taylor campaigned vigorously for an independent competitor to the BBC, and frequently mocked it in the press. Still, the relationship served both well over the years, providing Taylor with the mass audience he craved and the BBC with many hours of entertaining and enlightening broadcasting from one of the greatest academics of his day.

Queenan, a long-term admirer of Taylor, tells the story of the historian and the corporation through written and broadcast archives.

1 hour

Last on

Sun 11 May 201401:00

Broadcasts

  • Sat 13 Feb 201020:00
  • Mon 15 Feb 201015:00
  • Sat 10 May 201408:00
  • Sat 10 May 201415:00
  • Sun 11 May 201401:00