The Television & Radio Database

Home  
Members  
Join  
Search  
Listings  

Just A Minute

JAM Series | JAM Stats | JAM Today | JAM Group

Search the JAM Yahoo Group Archive:

 
<<<<   6915   >>>>

Topic: Missing JAMs

Message 1 / 40
nylon netApr 9, 2012
 
 
Hi Jamfans

I emailed the ABC about the missing 'Joy' broadcast. They're looking for it right now! And that got me thinking about the other missing bottles of JAM...

I then got to creating stub files to fill in the places of the missing episodes in my collection when it occurred to me that we should really get active on the missing JAM episodes... and what better time than now during 45th anniversary fever?

What we need, methinks, is publicity, and the man for the job is (I reckon) our Dean who has done some BBC hobnobbing and could maybe nob some further hobs to forward our destiny. Or someone else who has the time and/or monomania required.

How about we ask the BBC (very nicely) to start promoting a search for missing JAMs?
They could put a link on their website to a 'Missing JAM' page (to be created on Dean's site, perhaps, or I could do it on nylon.net)
 
They could add a voiceover at the end of the episodes in the next series of radio JAM (or even TV if it returns?) asking for people to rummage in their attics for tapes. It might arouse some garage reel-to-reel recorder who might have an extant recording for us. Maybe. It can't hurt to ask.

We've found one missing episode just within our little community, so the chances will be greatly magnified if the larger unwashed masses also started rooting in their archives.

Mark
Secretary of the Jam Preserving Company



Smileys Preview
Get Free Smileys for Your IM & Email - Learn more at www.crawler.com/smileys
Works with AIM®, MSN® Messenger, Yahoo!® Messenger, ICQ®, Google Talk and most webmails

 
<<<<   6918   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 2 / 40
mathewApr 10, 2012
 
 
Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.
 
<<<<   6919   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 3 / 40
badger danceApr 10, 2012
 
 
The only problem with the idea of seeking deleted or missing programmes is that a majority of those that respond just offer something that they have downloaded in response to a Google search etc. Any general public request generates a huge amount of low quality responses. 

When they used on-air advertising for technical staff they were swamped with people wanting to read the news or work on Blue Peter etc.

Sadly I think that any hidden programmes will be among the members here and other torrent sites, maybe overseas broadcaster's storage room  or in a 50p box at a boot fair.

 
<<<<   6920   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 4 / 40
delmelzaApr 10, 2012
 
 
On the other hand a "public" appeal has well worked for finding "lost/missing" episodes of early Doctor Who. Just a thought.


--- In just-a-minute@..., badger dance <badger_dance@...> wrote:
>
> The only problem with the idea of seeking deleted or missing programmes is that a majority of those that respond just offer something that they have downloaded in response to a Google search etc. Any general public request generates a huge amount of low quality responses. 
>
> When they used on-air advertising for technical staff they were swamped with people wanting to read the news or work on Blue Peter etc.
>
> Sadly I think that any hidden programmes will be among the members here and other torrent sites, maybe overseas broadcaster's storage room  or in a 50p box at a boot fair.
>

 
<<<<   6921   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 5 / 40
Espen KrømkeApr 10, 2012
 
 
JAM - 1974.10.21 - Getting Wound Up

A fellow list member (who was it again?) found it on a good old cassette tape he had stashed away. Awesome moment.



Den 10. april 2012 20:46, skrev mathew:
 

Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.



 
<<<<   6922   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 6 / 40
James R CurryApr 10, 2012
 
 
I believe we're down to eleven missing episodes, yes?

Really quite astonishing when you consider the age of the show.

--
James R Curry
scratchy@...

On Apr 10, 2012, at 3:05 PM, "Espen Krømke" <espen.kromke@...> wrote:

JAM - 1974.10.21 - Getting Wound Up

A fellow list member (who was it again?) found it on a good old cassette tape he had stashed away. Awesome moment.



Den 10. april 2012 20:46, skrev mathew:
 

Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.



 
<<<<   6923   >>>>

Topic: Fwd: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 7 / 40
Jozo CapkunApr 10, 2012
 
 

Digging through my emails I find it was Dave B, back in April 1, 2011 (but thankfully it wasnb't an April Fool's joke) who found it.

... Joe

-------- Original Message --------
Subject:Re: [just-a-minute] Re: Missing JAMs
Date:Tue, 10 Apr 2012 22:05:25 +0200
From:Espen Krømke <espen.kromke@...>
Reply-To:just-a-minute@...
To:just-a-minute@...


 

JAM - 1974.10.21 - Getting Wound Up

A fellow list member (who was it again?) found it on a good old cassette tape he had stashed away. Awesome moment.



Den 10. april 2012 20:46, skrev mathew:

 

Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.


~-|**|PrettyHtmlEnd|**|-~ ~-|**|PrettyHtmlStart|**|-~

 
<<<<   6924   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 8 / 40
Don JudgeApr 10, 2012
 
 
Yupp, 11 missing according to Charlie last month in post #6705

MISSING
1968.01.05 s01e03 #003
1968.01.12 s01e04 #004
1968.01.19 s01e05 #005
1968.01.26 s01e06 #006
1968.02.16 s01e09 #009
1968.03.01 s01e11 #011
1968.03.08 s01e12 #012
1968.12.31 s03e01 #023
1969.03.18 s03e12 #034
1969.04.02 s03e14 #036
1974.12.23 s09e15 #182
 
--
Cheers

Don   __o
      \<,
.....O/ O




From: James R Curry <scratchy@...>
To: "just-a-minute@..." <just-a-minute@...>
Cc: "just-a-minute@..." <just-a-minute@...>
Sent: Tuesday, 10 April 2012, 21:10
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Re: Missing JAMs



I believe we're down to eleven missing episodes, yes?

Really quite astonishing when you consider the age of the show.

--
James R Curry

On Apr 10, 2012, at 3:05 PM, "Espen Krømke" <espen.kromke@...> wrote:

JAM - 1974.10.21 - Getting Wound Up

A fellow list member (who was it again?) found it on a good old cassette tape he had stashed away. Awesome moment.



Den 10. april 2012 20:46, skrev mathew:
 
Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.







 
<<<<   6927   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 9 / 40
simonbkellyApr 11, 2012
 
 
I've put a shout-out in the JAM thread on missing-episodes.com - they have over 2000 members interested in archive radio and tv, including many collectors actively searching for missing BBC material. Whenever anything turns up, you'll often read about it there first!
 
<<<<   6932   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 10 / 40
nylon netApr 11, 2012
 
 
Thanks, Simon. Even if the chances of finding a lost bottle of JAM are .001%, it's better than 0.00%.
 
Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: simonbkelly@...
Sent: Wed, 11 Apr 2012 18:34:06 -0000
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: Missing JAMs

 

I've put a shout-out in the JAM thread on missing-episodes.com - they have over 2000 members interested in archive radio and tv, including many collectors actively searching for missing BBC material. Whenever anything turns up, you'll often read about it there first!


3D Earth Screensaver Preview
Free 3D Earth Screensaver
Watch the Earth right on your desktop! Check it out at www.inbox.com/earth

 
<<<<   6934   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 11 / 40
simonbkellyApr 11, 2012
 
 
I wouldn't put the odds as low as .001%, Mark. The fact that the BBC pressed transcription discs of early episodes suggests that there may still be copies residing in an archive or private collection somewhere.

Failing that, there is a good chance of off-air recordings turning up, especially if repeats of those early series were broadcast during the seventies or eighties, which they probably were.

Does anyone know the LAST dates that the missing episodes were broadcast? Which countries were sold JAM? Have they been contacted yet?

As you can see, there are many routes to follow...

Simon
 
<<<<   6941   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 12 / 40
Dave BApr 14, 2012
 
 
Has anyone actually "asked the BBC" whether on not they have copies of the missing episodes? We know we haven't got them, and surely that's all we know for certain.

I wrote to the BBC webpage dealing with lost treasures last year after finding Getting Wound Up and never got a response, though I think it had become a mothballed inititative of Greg Dyke's.

Someone said (last year) they'd probably have been broadcast again if they had them but that's supposition and not fact.

It would be great if we had a patron to help us get the BBC to search. How about Nicholas or Paul?

Anyway, I'll just take my virtual bow for Getting Wound Up, my sole contribution to the hundreds that have been provided by fellow members.


Dave

From: nylon net <nylon@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Tuesday, 10 April 2012 7:15 AM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 
Hi Jamfans

I emailed the ABC about the missing 'Joy' broadcast. They're looking for it right now! And that got me thinking about the other missing bottles of JAM...

I then got to creating stub files to fill in the places of the missing episodes in my collection when it occurred to me that we should really get active on the missing JAM episodes... and what better time than now during 45th anniversary fever?

What we need, methinks, is publicity, and the man for the job is (I reckon) our Dean who has done some BBC hobnobbing and could maybe nob some further hobs to forward our destiny. Or someone else who has the time and/or monomania required.

How about we ask the BBC (very nicely) to start promoting a search for missing JAMs?
They could put a link on their website to a 'Missing JAM' page (to be created on Dean's site, perhaps, or I could do it on nylon.net)
 
They could add a voiceover at the end of the episodes in the next series of radio JAM (or even TV if it returns?) asking for people to rummage in their attics for tapes. It might arouse some garage reel-to-reel recorder who might have an extant recording for us. Maybe. It can't hurt to ask.

We've found one missing episode just within our little community, so the chances will be greatly magnified if the larger unwashed masses also started rooting in their archives.

Mark
Secretary of the Jam Preserving Company



Smileys Preview
Get Free Smileys for Your IM & Email - Learn more at www.crawler.com/smileys
Works with AIM®, MSN® Messenger, Yahoo!® Messenger, ICQ®, Google Talk and most webmails



 
<<<<   6948   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 13 / 40
DeanApr 15, 2012
 
 
I’m the one who commented last year that the BBC is very unlikely to still have these shows. My reasoning is a bit more sophisticated than your summary here, but your basic point, that we don’t know for sure, is true.
 
You have to remember that for a long time the BBC said it didn’t even hold episode one and it was an Australian friend who pointed out it was still running occasionally on the ABC. As is reasonably well known the BBC had a policy of using tapes several times in the late 60s and my strong suspicion is that the only one that may possibly turn up is the Christmas 1974 one.
 
Still as you say we don’t know for sure.
 
I have tried to get the BBC archives to help me with things a couple of times and like you never even had a “sorry but we are too busy to help” in reply. But again, to be fair, it has been a while. A couple of years ago the BBC talked about opening up its archives to the public entirely, so maybe they are a bit more open about things.
 
I tend to think it would be best pursued by someone in London who could physically go to the archives if that proved to be the best thing to do. From a website POV it would be good to complete the lists of subjects and winners on the website though it of course is very unlikely they would release the tapes to us even if they do still exist.
 
In terms of having an appeal made on the radio for anyone with tapes to come forward, if you like I am happy to help with this. Again I tend to think the best thing though would be for a British person to do this who is happy to have their address and/or phone number broadcast. Anyone willing to step forward? If someone is prepared to take this under their wing as a project...
 
I should make it clear though that I have never had any significant help of any sort from the BBC, until my recent contact with Andy Brereton (who has now left the BBC). Still if someone is willing to be a contact point I am prepared to try.
 
cheers, Dean
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
From: Dave B
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 

Has anyone actually "asked the BBC" whether on not they have copies of the missing episodes? We know we haven't got them, and surely that's all we know for certain.

I wrote to the BBC webpage dealing with lost treasures last year after finding Getting Wound Up and never got a response, though I think it had become a mothballed inititative of Greg Dyke's.
 
Someone said (last year) they'd probably have been broadcast again if they had them but that's supposition and not fact.
 
It would be great if we had a patron to help us get the BBC to search. How about Nicholas or Paul?
 
Anyway, I'll just take my virtual bow for Getting Wound Up, my sole contribution to the hundreds that have been provided by fellow members.

 
<<<<   6950   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 14 / 40
StevenApr 16, 2012
 
 
So where might one find copies of the (until recently) missing episodes one hasn't got?

--- In just-a-minute@..., James R Curry <scratchy@...> wrote:
>
> I believe we're down to eleven missing episodes, yes?
>
> Really quite astonishing when you consider the age of the show.
>
> --
> James R Curry
> scratchy@...
>
> On Apr 10, 2012, at 3:05 PM, "Espen Krømke" <espen.kromke@...> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > JAM - 1974.10.21 - Getting Wound Up
> >
> > A fellow list member (who was it again?) found it on a good old cassette tape he had stashed away. Awesome moment.
> >
> >
> >
> > Den 10. april 2012 20:46, skrev mathew:
> >>
> >> Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
>

 
<<<<   6951   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 15 / 40
James R CurryApr 16, 2012
 
 
Personally, my collection came from a number of sources.

Recently, a lot of fills came from this group; the group search feature on the Yahoo Groups page was invaluable.

I'm sure if you noted what you are missing then someone here may point you in the right direction, too.

--
James R Curry


On Apr 16, 2012, at 4:52 AM, Steven <stevenwickham@...> wrote:

> So where might one find copies of the (until recently) missing episodes one hasn't got?
>
> --- In just-a-minute@..., James R Curry <scratchy@...> wrote:
>>
>> I believe we're down to eleven missing episodes, yes?
>>
>> Really quite astonishing when you consider the age of the show.
>>
>> --
>> James R Curry
>> scratchy@...
>>
>> On Apr 10, 2012, at 3:05 PM, "Espen Krømke" <espen.kromke@...> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> JAM - 1974.10.21 - Getting Wound Up
>>>
>>> A fellow list member (who was it again?) found it on a good old cassette tape he had stashed away. Awesome moment.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Den 10. april 2012 20:46, skrev mathew:
>>>>
>>>> Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>

 
<<<<   6952   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 16 / 40
Dave BApr 16, 2012
 
 
Steven, If you are after Getting Wound Up 259 from 1978, and its not the show noted below from 1974 which had the same lead subject, then Espen uploaded it, so best to check with him. There were a few seconds missing which my car cassette player ate, and the missing text can be found on the transcript (which I made before the eating) on Dean's excellent website.

Dave


From: Steven <stevenwickham@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Monday, 16 April 2012 10:52 AM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: Missing JAMs

 
So where might one find copies of the (until recently) missing episodes one hasn't got?

--- In just-a-minute@..., James R Curry <scratchy@...> wrote:
>
> I believe we're down to eleven missing episodes, yes?
>
> Really quite astonishing when you consider the age of the show.
>
> --
> James R Curry
> scratchy@...
>
> On Apr 10, 2012, at 3:05 PM, "Espen Krømke" <espen.kromke@...> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > JAM - 1974.10.21 - Getting Wound Up
> >
> > A fellow list member (who was it again?) found it on a good old cassette tape he had stashed away. Awesome moment.
> >
> >
> >
> > Den 10. april 2012 20:46, skrev mathew:
> >>
> >> Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
>




 
<<<<   6954   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 17 / 40
Espen KrømkeApr 16, 2012
 
 
Hold on a sec, wasn't your show from 1974, but broadcast in 1978? Cause if so then I suspect I have messed up in my tagging of the files here... Cause I imagined your show were from 1974?

Either way I'll upload the show to Mediafire, I just gotta sort this out first.


On 16. april 2012 17:39, Dave B wrote:  
Steven, If you are after Getting Wound Up 259 from 1978, and its not the show noted below from 1974 which had the same lead subject, then Espen uploaded it, so best to check with him. There were a few seconds missing which my car cassette player ate, and the missing text can be found on the transcript (which I made before the eating) on Dean's excellent website.

Dave


From: Steven <stevenwickham@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Monday, 16 April 2012 10:52 AM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: Missing JAMs

 
So where might one find copies of the (until recently) missing episodes one hasn't got?

--- In just-a-minute@..., James R Curry <scratchy@...> wrote:
>
> I believe we're down to eleven missing episodes, yes?
>
> Really quite astonishing when you consider the age of the show.
>
> --
> James R Curry
> scratchy@...
>
> On Apr 10, 2012, at 3:05 PM, "Espen Krømke" <espen.kromke@...> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > JAM - 1974.10.21 - Getting Wound Up
> >
> > A fellow list member (who was it again?) found it on a good old cassette tape he had stashed away. Awesome moment.
> >
> >
> >
> > Den 10. april 2012 20:46, skrev mathew:
> >>
> >> Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
>





 
<<<<   6955   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 18 / 40
Dave BApr 16, 2012
 
 
Hi Espen. Nope. I even got out the cassette box dated 1978. I don't recall, until the advent of digital radio (7 or 4 extra) that the BBC ever repeated a JAM, and certainly not at peak times during the week or weekends, and they held back the second broadcast of each show to play them later in the year I recall.

As I noted in 2010 the earlier Getting Wound Up was appearing in downloadable lists twice, with the earlier show masquerading as the 1978 show. Which is what led me to eventually search my attic.

Dave


From: Espen Krømke <espen.kromke@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Monday, 16 April 2012 5:13 PM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Re: Missing JAMs

 
Hold on a sec, wasn't your show from 1974, but broadcast in 1978? Cause if so then I suspect I have messed up in my tagging of the files here... Cause I imagined your show were from 1974?

Either way I'll upload the show to Mediafire, I just gotta sort this out first.


On 16. april 2012 17:39, Dave B wrote:
 
Steven, If you are after Getting Wound Up 259 from 1978, and its not the show noted below from 1974 which had the same lead subject, then Espen uploaded it, so best to check with him. There were a few seconds missing which my car cassette player ate, and the missing text can be found on the transcript (which I made before the eating) on Dean's excellent website.

Dave


From: Steven <stevenwickham@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Monday, 16 April 2012 10:52 AM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: Missing JAMs

 
So where might one find copies of the (until recently) missing episodes one hasn't got?

--- In just-a-minute@..., James R Curry <scratchy@...> wrote:
>
> I believe we're down to eleven missing episodes, yes?
>
> Really quite astonishing when you consider the age of the show.
>
> --
> James R Curry
> scratchy@...
>
> On Apr 10, 2012, at 3:05 PM, "Espen Krømke" <espen.kromke@...> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > JAM - 1974.10.21 - Getting Wound Up
> >
> > A fellow list member (who was it again?) found it on a good old cassette tape he had stashed away. Awesome moment.
> >
> >
> >
> > Den 10. april 2012 20:46, skrev mathew:
> >>
> >> Out of pure nosyness what was the missing episode that was discovered and by whom? My interest levels are ajar.
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
>







 
<<<<   6957   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 19 / 40
simonbkellyApr 16, 2012
 
 
There is an ebook available that lists the archive status of thousands of old shows from radio and television, but it's not cheap:

http://www.kaleidoscopepublishing.co.uk/books-comedydownload2011-09.html

Perhaps a few of us on here should club together and get a copy to share?

Kaleidoscope also have a database of lost tv shows at lostshows.com

If you enter Just A Minute into their search engine you'll see that all episodes of the show made by ITV and BBC in the nineties still exist. I don't suppose there's much chance of any of them being repeated again or released on DVD, but hopefully they'll make them available for download at some point in the future so that we can complete our collections. ;-)

As the BBC has wiped so much of their history it's more likely that the missing episodes will turn up from overseas stations who broadcast the show.

There may be more information on the missing JAMs in the BBC Written Archives but access is restricted to "accredited academic institutions and commercial researchers" only. You have to book in advance and pay to visit:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/historyofthebbc/contacts/wac_faqs.shtml

Do we know which countries actually broadcast JAM?

Simon
 
<<<<   6958   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 20 / 40
Clitheroe KidApr 16, 2012
 
 
dean, there are many problems with your proposal.
1. bbc sound archives do not allow any form of public access.
2. most documentation such as overseas sales contracts are held by wriftten archive centre not by sound archives.
3. the physical magnetic tapes and vinyl LPs are held in storage, by british library, not at broadcasting house.
4. many tapes and lps are held by bbc worldwide, their commercial arm, not by sound archives; consequently have never been entered into the archive's database. such items are typically held in bristol, not in london.



To: just-a-minute@...
From: dbedford@...
Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2012 18:22:25 +1200
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs



I’m the one who commented last year that the BBC is very unlikely to still have these shows. My reasoning is a bit more sophisticated than your summary here, but your basic point, that we don’t know for sure, is true.
 
You have to remember that for a long time the BBC said it didn’t even hold episode one and it was an Australian friend who pointed out it was still running occasionally on the ABC. As is reasonably well known the BBC had a policy of using tapes several times in the late 60s and my strong suspicion is that the only one that may possibly turn up is the Christmas 1974 one.
 
Still as you say we don’t know for sure.
 
I have tried to get the BBC archives to help me with things a couple of times and like you never even had a “sorry but we are too busy to help” in reply. But again, to be fair, it has been a while. A couple of years ago the BBC talked about opening up its archives to the public entirely, so maybe they are a bit more open about things.
 
I tend to think it would be best pursued by someone in London who could physically go to the archives if that proved to be the best thing to do. From a website POV it would be good to complete the lists of subjects and winners on the website though it of course is very unlikely they would release the tapes to us even if they do still exist.
 
In terms of having an appeal made on the radio for anyone with tapes to come forward, if you like I am happy to help with this. Again I tend to think the best thing though would be for a British person to do this who is happy to have their address and/or phone number broadcast. Anyone willing to step forward? If someone is prepared to take this under their wing as a project...
 
I should make it clear though that I have never had any significant help of any sort from the BBC, until my recent contact with Andy Brereton (who has now left the BBC). Still if someone is willing to be a contact point I am prepared to try.
 
cheers, Dean
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
From: Dave B
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 
Has anyone actually "asked the BBC" whether on not they have copies of the missing episodes? We know we haven't got them, and surely that's all we know for certain.

I wrote to the BBC webpage dealing with lost treasures last year after finding Getting Wound Up and never got a response, though I think it had become a mothballed inititative of Greg Dyke's.
 
Someone said (last year) they'd probably have been broadcast again if they had them but that's supposition and not fact.
 
It would be great if we had a patron to help us get the BBC to search. How about Nicholas or Paul?
 
Anyway, I'll just take my virtual bow for Getting Wound Up, my sole contribution to the hundreds that have been provided by fellow members.



 
<<<<   6960   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 21 / 40
DeanApr 16, 2012
 
 
I haven’t made any proposals, I’m just commenting on two separate suggestions made in this thread – that we ask the BBC if they have these shows, and that we try a broadcast appeal for people with tapes to come forward. As I’ve made clear I am pessimistic about our chances of success, but given there was interest, I was trying to be helpful.
 
You appear to know more than the rest of us. Do you think either of these suggestions is practical? If so, what course do you think should be adopted?
 
 
 
 
 
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2012 11:59 AM
Subject: RE: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 

dean, there are many problems with your proposal.
1. bbc sound archives do not allow any form of public access.
2. most documentation such as overseas sales contracts are held by wriftten archive centre not by sound archives.
3. the physical magnetic tapes and vinyl LPs are held in storage, by british library, not at broadcasting house.
4. many tapes and lps are held by bbc worldwide, their commercial arm, not by sound archives; consequently have never been entered into the archive's database. such items are typically held in bristol, not in london.



To: just-a-minute@...
From: dbedford@...
Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2012 18:22:25 +1200
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs



I’m the one who commented last year that the BBC is very unlikely to still have these shows. My reasoning is a bit more sophisticated than your summary here, but your basic point, that we don’t know for sure, is true.
 
You have to remember that for a long time the BBC said it didn’t even hold episode one and it was an Australian friend who pointed out it was still running occasionally on the ABC. As is reasonably well known the BBC had a policy of using tapes several times in the late 60s and my strong suspicion is that the only one that may possibly turn up is the Christmas 1974 one.
 
Still as you say we don’t know for sure.
 
I have tried to get the BBC archives to help me with things a couple of times and like you never even had a “sorry but we are too busy to help” in reply. But again, to be fair, it has been a while. A couple of years ago the BBC talked about opening up its archives to the public entirely, so maybe they are a bit more open about things.
 
I tend to think it would be best pursued by someone in London who could physically go to the archives if that proved to be the best thing to do. From a website POV it would be good to complete the lists of subjects and winners on the website though it of course is very unlikely they would release the tapes to us even if they do still exist.
 
In terms of having an appeal made on the radio for anyone with tapes to come forward, if you like I am happy to help with this. Again I tend to think the best thing though would be for a British person to do this who is happy to have their address and/or phone number broadcast. Anyone willing to step forward? If someone is prepared to take this under their wing as a project...
 
I should make it clear though that I have never had any significant help of any sort from the BBC, until my recent contact with Andy Brereton (who has now left the BBC). Still if someone is willing to be a contact point I am prepared to try.
 
cheers, Dean
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
From: Dave B
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 
Has anyone actually "asked the BBC" whether on not they have copies of the missing episodes? We know we haven't got them, and surely that's all we know for certain.

I wrote to the BBC webpage dealing with lost treasures last year after finding Getting Wound Up and never got a response, though I think it had become a mothballed inititative of Greg Dyke's.
 
Someone said (last year) they'd probably have been broadcast again if they had them but that's supposition and not fact.
 
It would be great if we had a patron to help us get the BBC to search. How about Nicholas or Paul?
 
Anyway, I'll just take my virtual bow for Getting Wound Up, my sole contribution to the hundreds that have been provided by fellow members.



 
<<<<   6962   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 22 / 40
Dave BApr 17, 2012
 
 
Dean,

With reference to completing the stats, there's just a chance that the ever? presents from the missing episodes Nicholas and Ian Messiter kept diaries, which may well haver indicated the winners.

Of course right now we seem to be mulling over ideas. When we have finished mulling, maybe we will end up with a plan of action.

I tried to speak with Nicholas at the end of a recording when he was left alone on stage and was told I was not allowed to approach the stage. But I know he has a website. When we decide what to do it's who should do it. We need someone with people skills, which is not me.

Dave


From: Dean <dbedford@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Tuesday, 17 April 2012 2:15 AM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 
I haven’t made any proposals, I’m just commenting on two separate suggestions made in this thread – that we ask the BBC if they have these shows, and that we try a broadcast appeal for people with tapes to come forward. As I’ve made clear I am pessimistic about our chances of success, but given there was interest, I was trying to be helpful.
 
You appear to know more than the rest of us. Do you think either of these suggestions is practical? If so, what course do you think should be adopted?
 
 
 
 
 
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2012 11:59 AM
Subject: RE: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 
dean, there are many problems with your proposal.
1. bbc sound archives do not allow any form of public access.
2. most documentation such as overseas sales contracts are held by wriftten archive centre not by sound archives.
3. the physical magnetic tapes and vinyl LPs are held in storage, by british library, not at broadcasting house.
4. many tapes and lps are held by bbc worldwide, their commercial arm, not by sound archives; consequently have never been entered into the archive's database. such items are typically held in bristol, not in london.



To: just-a-minute@...
From: dbedford@...
Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2012 18:22:25 +1200
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs



I’m the one who commented last year that the BBC is very unlikely to still have these shows. My reasoning is a bit more sophisticated than your summary here, but your basic point, that we don’t know for sure, is true.
 
You have to remember that for a long time the BBC said it didn’t even hold episode one and it was an Australian friend who pointed out it was still running occasionally on the ABC. As is reasonably well known the BBC had a policy of using tapes several times in the late 60s and my strong suspicion is that the only one that may possibly turn up is the Christmas 1974 one.
 
Still as you say we don’t know for sure.
 
I have tried to get the BBC archives to help me with things a couple of times and like you never even had a “sorry but we are too busy to help” in reply. But again, to be fair, it has been a while. A couple of years ago the BBC talked about opening up its archives to the public entirely, so maybe they are a bit more open about things.
 
I tend to think it would be best pursued by someone in London who could physically go to the archives if that proved to be the best thing to do. From a website POV it would be good to complete the lists of subjects and winners on the website though it of course is very unlikely they would release the tapes to us even if they do still exist.
 
In terms of having an appeal made on the radio for anyone with tapes to come forward, if you like I am happy to help with this. Again I tend to think the best thing though would be for a British person to do this who is happy to have their address and/or phone number broadcast. Anyone willing to step forward? If someone is prepared to take this under their wing as a project...
 
I should make it clear though that I have never had any significant help of any sort from the BBC, until my recent contact with Andy Brereton (who has now left the BBC). Still if someone is willing to be a contact point I am prepared to try.
 
cheers, Dean
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
From: Dave B
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 
Has anyone actually "asked the BBC" whether on not they have copies of the missing episodes? We know we haven't got them, and surely that's all we know for certain.

I wrote to the BBC webpage dealing with lost treasures last year after finding Getting Wound Up and never got a response, though I think it had become a mothballed inititative of Greg Dyke's.
 
Someone said (last year) they'd probably have been broadcast again if they had them but that's supposition and not fact.
 
It would be great if we had a patron to help us get the BBC to search. How about Nicholas or Paul?
 
Anyway, I'll just take my virtual bow for Getting Wound Up, my sole contribution to the hundreds that have been provided by fellow members.





 
<<<<   6963   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 23 / 40
Clitheroe KidApr 17, 2012
 
 
Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.
If bbc have any recordings, it will be BBC Worldwide who have them, held as 25 min LP recordings. But if Worldwide have them, they are not 'lost'. If not, they stil are NOT lost, because ABC have them.
So we are really talking about money: the cost of digital conversion and' restoration, but bbc are facing budget cuts. ironically, if ABC had only one or 2 editions it might be affordable, but the cost per LP multiplied by 200 is not.


To: just-a-minute@...
From: dbedford@...
Date: Tue, 17 Apr 2012 13:15:47 +1200
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs



I haven’t made any proposals, I’m just commenting on two separate suggestions made in this thread – that we ask the BBC if they have these shows, and that we try a broadcast appeal for people with tapes to come forward. As I’ve made clear I am pessimistic about our chances of success, but given there was interest, I was trying to be helpful.
 
You appear to know more than the rest of us. Do you think either of these suggestions is practical? If so, what course do you think should be adopted?
 
 
 
 
 
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2012 11:59 AM
Subject: RE: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 
dean, there are many problems with your proposal.
1. bbc sound archives do not allow any form of public access.
2. most documentation such as overseas sales contracts are held by wriftten archive centre not by sound archives.
3. the physical magnetic tapes and vinyl LPs are held in storage, by british library, not at broadcasting house.
4. many tapes and lps are held by bbc worldwide, their commercial arm, not by sound archives; consequently have never been entered into the archive's database. such items are typically held in bristol, not in london.



To: just-a-minute@...
From: dbedford@...
Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2012 18:22:25 +1200
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs



I’m the one who commented last year that the BBC is very unlikely to still have these shows. My reasoning is a bit more sophisticated than your summary here, but your basic point, that we don’t know for sure, is true.
 
You have to remember that for a long time the BBC said it didn’t even hold episode one and it was an Australian friend who pointed out it was still running occasionally on the ABC. As is reasonably well known the BBC had a policy of using tapes several times in the late 60s and my strong suspicion is that the only one that may possibly turn up is the Christmas 1974 one.
 
Still as you say we don’t know for sure.
 
I have tried to get the BBC archives to help me with things a couple of times and like you never even had a “sorry but we are too busy to help” in reply. But again, to be fair, it has been a while. A couple of years ago the BBC talked about opening up its archives to the public entirely, so maybe they are a bit more open about things.
 
I tend to think it would be best pursued by someone in London who could physically go to the archives if that proved to be the best thing to do. From a website POV it would be good to complete the lists of subjects and winners on the website though it of course is very unlikely they would release the tapes to us even if they do still exist.
 
In terms of having an appeal made on the radio for anyone with tapes to come forward, if you like I am happy to help with this. Again I tend to think the best thing though would be for a British person to do this who is happy to have their address and/or phone number broadcast. Anyone willing to step forward? If someone is prepared to take this under their wing as a project...
 
I should make it clear though that I have never had any significant help of any sort from the BBC, until my recent contact with Andy Brereton (who has now left the BBC). Still if someone is willing to be a contact point I am prepared to try.
 
cheers, Dean
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
From: Dave B
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 
Has anyone actually "asked the BBC" whether on not they have copies of the missing episodes? We know we haven't got them, and surely that's all we know for certain.

I wrote to the BBC webpage dealing with lost treasures last year after finding Getting Wound Up and never got a response, though I think it had become a mothballed inititative of Greg Dyke's.
 
Someone said (last year) they'd probably have been broadcast again if they had them but that's supposition and not fact.
 
It would be great if we had a patron to help us get the BBC to search. How about Nicholas or Paul?
 
Anyway, I'll just take my virtual bow for Getting Wound Up, my sole contribution to the hundreds that have been provided by fellow members.





 
<<<<   6964   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 24 / 40
DeanApr 17, 2012
 
 
hi again
 
we are really talking only about these 11 “missing” shows. We are not talking about 200 shows.
 
We can be absolutely sure the ABC doesn’t have them, as in the past 12 years they have run through all their early shows three, maybe four times and have never played these. They have responded to people asking about these missing shows saying they are playing all the shows they have. I think there is no point at all making any requests of them.
 
Is there any point, in your opinion, in contacting BBC Worldwide? Or does the last para below mean you think there isn’t? I think at least some of the group would be happy just to know if they do still exist.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2012 11:51 AM
Subject: RE: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 

Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.
If bbc have any recordings, it will be BBC Worldwide who have them, held as 25 min LP recordings. But if Worldwide have them, they are not 'lost'. If not, they stil are NOT lost, because ABC have them.
So we are really talking about money: the cost of digital conversion and' restoration, but bbc are facing budget cuts. ironically, if ABC had only one or 2 editions it might be affordable, but the cost per LP multiplied by 200 is not.

 
<<<<   6965   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 25 / 40
Dave BApr 18, 2012
 
 
Hi All,

I am just wondering what the BBC thinks of us sharing shows recorded as broadcast. Maybe we are seen as taking away the potential for sales of CDs of the back issues they do occasionally. I am sure no one has uploaded a JAM taken from a compilation CD.

Dave


From: Dean <dbedford@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Wednesday, 18 April 2012 2:03 AM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 
hi again
 
we are really talking only about these 11 “missing” shows. We are not talking about 200 shows.
 
We can be absolutely sure the ABC doesn’t have them, as in the past 12 years they have run through all their early shows three, maybe four times and have never played these. They have responded to people asking about these missing shows saying they are playing all the shows they have. I think there is no point at all making any requests of them.
 
Is there any point, in your opinion, in contacting BBC Worldwide? Or does the last para below mean you think there isn’t? I think at least some of the group would be happy just to know if they do still exist.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2012 11:51 AM
Subject: RE: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 
Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.
If bbc have any recordings, it will be BBC Worldwide who have them, held as 25 min LP recordings. But if Worldwide have them, they are not 'lost'. If not, they stil are NOT lost, because ABC have them.
So we are really talking about money: the cost of digital conversion and' restoration, but bbc are facing budget cuts. ironically, if ABC had only one or 2 editions it might be affordable, but the cost per LP multiplied by 200 is not.



 
<<<<   6966   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 26 / 40
James R CurryApr 18, 2012
 
 
On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 6:51 PM, Clitheroe Kid <clitheroekid@...> wrote:

Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.

My Forebears: 1 December, 1969
The First of a New Series: 16 September, 1974
What to Do With The Hole in the Doughnut: 27 February, 1973
When We Meet Again: 27 April 1977
Jockeys: 30 January 1979
Parbuckles & The Most Extraordinary Person I Have Ever Met: 22 May 1979

These are the clips used in Parts 3 and 4 of Silver Minutes, a clip show made in 1992, long after the BBC's practice of junking tapes had come to an end.

From this, we know for certain that the BBC hold at least six editions from before 1980, and as we know they have the very first episode, we know they hold at least seven.

If the Sound Archives only hold three editions, was BBC Worldwide involved in the production of Silver Minutes, or another source?

Per Dean's Site, the CD releases include shows from:

1967
1968 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1969
1971
1976 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1977 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute range)
1978 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1979 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)

I don't have the patience to research which specific episodes are in each collection, but for each year, if we subtract episodes that we already know exist (assuming they're also on these CDs) then we can still deduce that there are at least 9 additional episodes here, bringing the total up to 12.

So for certain, the BBC have (and KNOW they have) 12 editions of Just a Minute from before 1980.  I'd be willing to be that the total is greater than this...

A final thought.  The missing episode from Series 9 bothers me.  It seems strange that ABC wouldn't have it.  What's our source for knowing that this was a Christmas Special?  With it being Christmas Week, is it possible that the BBC just threw a repeat into this timeslot?  Are we absolutely certain it's a missing episode?


--
James R Curry
scratchy@...


 
<<<<   6967   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 27 / 40
Dave BApr 18, 2012
 
 
Hello all,

I just Googled Missing Just A Minute Episodes and came across this message from our group from 20th May 2009 and thought it relevant to what we are talking about. I wonder what progress we have made? Has anyone checked please? This is something I wanted go check on but I haven't got to grips with the fresh editions that have come out of Australia. Apologies to Matthew if he isn't happy about this reappearing. I just thought it a great bit of research.

Dave


Re: Two more editions of Just A Minute: #403 Sneezes & #417 The Boot

(Medium-term group member, first time poster.)

First and foremost, I would like to join everyone in saying a colossal "THANK
YOU!" to everyone who has made the episode collection what it is, particularly
the inimitable Dean Bedford and Martin Hood. I have to wonder what it says
about the BBC that the two people most responsible for making the rich history
of "Just a Minute" accessible to the curious are from New Zealand and Australia!
Nevertheless, Dean, Martin (Dean Martin?), and everyone else who has at some
point ripped and otherwise encoded part of the surviving JAM catalogue, I salute
you.

The thought has occurred that alongside assembling the current list of
unavailable episodes (that this list is now down to the thirteen "officially
missing" radio episodes - including the one Martin Hood recently managed to
unearth, a transcript of which I see has appeared on Dean Bedford's website - is
truly staggering), it might also be worth noting which episodes are available
for download but are substantially incomplete or have particularly bad problems
with the sound. By "substantially incomplete" I mean episodes where actual
gameplay is missing - there are a fair few episodes where all or part of
Nicholas' introduction is cut off, or all or part of the "Minute" Waltz at
either the beginning or the end, or even sometimes all or part of Nicholas'
salutatory "Welcome to 'Just a Minute'!", but all the important material is
there. This way we will have a short list of the episodes for which upgrades
would be most helpful.

I recently skimmed my entire collection to check that the files were labelled
correctly, and I think the episodes where the most widely available downloads
are incomplete are as follows (series and episodes numbered according to the
standard on Dean Bedford's page):

Series 4 - [52] (missing most of intro)
Series 5 - [91] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing last round), [93] (missing start
and end credits)
Series 16 - [307] (missing start and end credits), [313] (missing most of
intro), [315] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 18 - [340] (missing intro, starts with first round), [342] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round), [351] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first three and a half rounds), [353] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE
- missing first round and part of second)
Series 20 - [369] (missing most of intro), [371] (missing most of intro)
Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first
round), [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 24 - [414] (missing part of intro)
Series 28 - [448] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing part of last round)

As only eight of those are missing actual gameplay, that really means there are
only eight incomplete episodes - the other eight listed above are missing less
important things such as Nicholas introducing the panellists and/or explaining
the rules.

The following episodes have particularly severe sound quality problems - in some
cases it is difficult to make out what the panellists are saying through static
or, in some cases, intereference from other radio stations:

Series 2 - [19], [22]
Series 3 - [25], [28]
Series 6 - [106], [108]
Series 19 - [360], [365]
Series 24 - [412]
Series 30 - [470]
Series 31 - [477]

There are a few other episodes with audio issues, but they can still be heard
and understood and enjoyed for the most part. It seems fair to assume that ABC
will broadcast some of the more recent ones at some point, but the older ones
may require someone with a bit of sound software know-how to clean up a bit
(sadly, I do not fit that bill or I'd try it myself).

Again, though, this still means that all but thirteen "Just a Minute" episodes
from the over seven hundred that have aired since 1967 are available in some
form for fans to listen to, and that is truly remarkable. Again, Dean, Martin,
and everyone else who has contributed in some way to making this collection what
it is, I salute you - my only sorrow is that I don't really have a way to
contribute to this collection myself as "Just a Minute" seems to be pretty much
unknown outside the British expat community here in the States!


-Matthew.


From: James R Curry <scratchy@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Wednesday, 18 April 2012 3:36 PM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 


On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 6:51 PM, Clitheroe Kid <clitheroekid@...> wrote:

Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.

My Forebears: 1 December, 1969
The First of a New Series: 16 September, 1974
What to Do With The Hole in the Doughnut: 27 February, 1973
When We Meet Again: 27 April 1977
Jockeys: 30 January 1979
Parbuckles & The Most Extraordinary Person I Have Ever Met: 22 May 1979

These are the clips used in Parts 3 and 4 of Silver Minutes, a clip show made in 1992, long after the BBC's practice of junking tapes had come to an end.

From this, we know for certain that the BBC hold at least six editions from before 1980, and as we know they have the very first episode, we know they hold at least seven.

If the Sound Archives only hold three editions, was BBC Worldwide involved in the production of Silver Minutes, or another source?

Per Dean's Site, the CD releases include shows from:

1967
1968 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1969
1971
1976 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1977 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute range)
1978 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1979 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)

I don't have the patience to research which specific episodes are in each collection, but for each year, if we subtract episodes that we already know exist (assuming they're also on these CDs) then we can still deduce that there are at least 9 additional episodes here, bringing the total up to 12.

So for certain, the BBC have (and KNOW they have) 12 editions of Just a Minute from before 1980.  I'd be willing to be that the total is greater than this...

A final thought.  The missing episode from Series 9 bothers me.  It seems strange that ABC wouldn't have it.  What's our source for knowing that this was a Christmas Special?  With it being Christmas Week, is it possible that the BBC just threw a repeat into this timeslot?  Are we absolutely certain it's a missing episode?


--
James R Curry



 
<<<<   6968   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 28 / 40
James R CurryApr 18, 2012
 
 
It seems some of these have been replaced since the message was originally posted.

I think the most notable issues remaining from this list are:

448 - The Firth of Forth - does ANYONE have a complete version of this episode?
470 - The Highlands - this is REALLY hard listening.  Is there a version 2?

The numbering seems off for #91 - it's part of season 6, not season 5, and I appear to have a complete version.

Another notable problem:

118 - Sneakers - last few minutes are badly garbled.  Does ABC have this episode?

On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 3:21 PM, Dave B <pondydave@...> wrote:


Hello all,

I just Googled Missing Just A Minute Episodes and came across this message from our group from 20th May 2009 and thought it relevant to what we are talking about. I wonder what progress we have made? Has anyone checked please? This is something I wanted go check on but I haven't got to grips with the fresh editions that have come out of Australia. Apologies to Matthew if he isn't happy about this reappearing. I just thought it a great bit of research.

Dave


Re: Two more editions of Just A Minute: #403 Sneezes & #417 The Boot

(Medium-term group member, first time poster.)

First and foremost, I would like to join everyone in saying a colossal "THANK
YOU!" to everyone who has made the episode collection what it is, particularly
the inimitable Dean Bedford and Martin Hood. I have to wonder what it says
about the BBC that the two people most responsible for making the rich history
of "Just a Minute" accessible to the curious are from New Zealand and Australia!
Nevertheless, Dean, Martin (Dean Martin?), and everyone else who has at some
point ripped and otherwise encoded part of the surviving JAM catalogue, I salute
you.

The thought has occurred that alongside assembling the current list of
unavailable episodes (that this list is now down to the thirteen "officially
missing" radio episodes - including the one Martin Hood recently managed to
unearth, a transcript of which I see has appeared on Dean Bedford's website - is
truly staggering), it might also be worth noting which episodes are available
for download but are substantially incomplete or have particularly bad problems
with the sound. By "substantially incomplete" I mean episodes where actual
gameplay is missing - there are a fair few episodes where all or part of
Nicholas' introduction is cut off, or all or part of the "Minute" Waltz at
either the beginning or the end, or even sometimes all or part of Nicholas'
salutatory "Welcome to 'Just a Minute'!", but all the important material is
there. This way we will have a short list of the episodes for which upgrades
would be most helpful.

I recently skimmed my entire collection to check that the files were labelled
correctly, and I think the episodes where the most widely available downloads
are incomplete are as follows (series and episodes numbered according to the
standard on Dean Bedford's page):

Series 4 - [52] (missing most of intro)
Series 5 - [91] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing last round), [93] (missing start
and end credits)
Series 16 - [307] (missing start and end credits), [313] (missing most of
intro), [315] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 18 - [340] (missing intro, starts with first round), [342] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round), [351] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first three and a half rounds), [353] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE
- missing first round and part of second)
Series 20 - [369] (missing most of intro), [371] (missing most of intro)
Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first
round), [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 24 - [414] (missing part of intro)
Series 28 - [448] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing part of last round)

As only eight of those are missing actual gameplay, that really means there are
only eight incomplete episodes - the other eight listed above are missing less
important things such as Nicholas introducing the panellists and/or explaining
the rules.

The following episodes have particularly severe sound quality problems - in some
cases it is difficult to make out what the panellists are saying through static
or, in some cases, intereference from other radio stations:

Series 2 - [19], [22]
Series 3 - [25], [28]
Series 6 - [106], [108]
Series 19 - [360], [365]
Series 24 - [412]
Series 30 - [470]
Series 31 - [477]

There are a few other episodes with audio issues, but they can still be heard
and understood and enjoyed for the most part. It seems fair to assume that ABC
will broadcast some of the more recent ones at some point, but the older ones
may require someone with a bit of sound software know-how to clean up a bit
(sadly, I do not fit that bill or I'd try it myself).

Again, though, this still means that all but thirteen "Just a Minute" episodes
from the over seven hundred that have aired since 1967 are available in some
form for fans to listen to, and that is truly remarkable. Again, Dean, Martin,
and everyone else who has contributed in some way to making this collection what
it is, I salute you - my only sorrow is that I don't really have a way to
contribute to this collection myself as "Just a Minute" seems to be pretty much
unknown outside the British expat community here in the States!


-Matthew.


From: James R Curry <scratchy@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Wednesday, 18 April 2012 3:36 PM

Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 


On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 6:51 PM, Clitheroe Kid <clitheroekid@...> wrote:

Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.

My Forebears: 1 December, 1969
The First of a New Series: 16 September, 1974
What to Do With The Hole in the Doughnut: 27 February, 1973
When We Meet Again: 27 April 1977
Jockeys: 30 January 1979
Parbuckles & The Most Extraordinary Person I Have Ever Met: 22 May 1979

These are the clips used in Parts 3 and 4 of Silver Minutes, a clip show made in 1992, long after the BBC's practice of junking tapes had come to an end.

From this, we know for certain that the BBC hold at least six editions from before 1980, and as we know they have the very first episode, we know they hold at least seven.

If the Sound Archives only hold three editions, was BBC Worldwide involved in the production of Silver Minutes, or another source?

Per Dean's Site, the CD releases include shows from:

1967
1968 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1969
1971
1976 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1977 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute range)
1978 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1979 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)

I don't have the patience to research which specific episodes are in each collection, but for each year, if we subtract episodes that we already know exist (assuming they're also on these CDs) then we can still deduce that there are at least 9 additional episodes here, bringing the total up to 12.

So for certain, the BBC have (and KNOW they have) 12 editions of Just a Minute from before 1980.  I'd be willing to be that the total is greater than this...

A final thought.  The missing episode from Series 9 bothers me.  It seems strange that ABC wouldn't have it.  What's our source for knowing that this was a Christmas Special?  With it being Christmas Week, is it possible that the BBC just threw a repeat into this timeslot?  Are we absolutely certain it's a missing episode?


--
James R Curry







--
James R Curry
scratchy@...


 
<<<<   6969   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 29 / 40
nylon netApr 18, 2012
 
 
In terms of progress, thanks to the ABC we now have top-quality replacements for the horrible-sounding...

Series 2 - [19], [22]
Series 3 - [25], [28]
 
And if things go according to plan by year's end the ABC should be up to about episode 99.
According to my collection, here is an updated status... the first two should be remedied by the end of 2012!

* Now complete, albeit dirty sound - Series 4 - [52] (missing most of intro)
* Now complete - Series 5 - [91] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing last round),
* Now complete - [93] (missing start and end credits)
- Unchanged - Series 16 - [307] (missing start and end credits),
- Unchanged - [313] (missing most of intro),
- Unchanged - [315] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
* Now complete - Series 18 - [340] (missing intro, starts with first round),
- Unchanged - [342] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round),
* Now complete (but bad sound) - [351] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first three and a half rounds),
* Now complete - [353] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first round and part of second)
- Unchanged - Series 20 - [369] (missing most of intro),
- Unchanged - [371] (missing most of intro)
- Unchanged - Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round),
- Unchanged - [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
- Unchanged - Series 24 - [414] (missing part of intro)
* Now complete - Series 28 - [448] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing part of last round)

So, there has indeed been quite a bit of progress since 2009, thanks to our intrepid crew!

Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: pondydave@...
Sent: Wed, 18 Apr 2012 13:21:23 -0700 (PDT)
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 

Hello all,

I just Googled Missing Just A Minute Episodes and came across this message from our group from 20th May 2009 and thought it relevant to what we are talking about. I wonder what progress we have made? Has anyone checked please? This is something I wanted go check on but I haven't got to grips with the fresh editions that have come out of Australia. Apologies to Matthew if he isn't happy about this reappearing. I just thought it a great bit of research.

Dave


Re: Two more editions of Just A Minute: #403 Sneezes & #417 The Boot

(Medium-term group member, first time poster.)

First and foremost, I would like to join everyone in saying a colossal "THANK
YOU!" to everyone who has made the episode collection what it is, particularly
the inimitable Dean Bedford and Martin Hood. I have to wonder what it says
about the BBC that the two people most responsible for making the rich history
of "Just a Minute" accessible to the curious are from New Zealand and Australia!
Nevertheless, Dean, Martin (Dean Martin?), and everyone else who has at some
point ripped and otherwise encoded part of the surviving JAM catalogue, I salute
you.

The thought has occurred that alongside assembling the current list of
unavailable episodes (that this list is now down to the thirteen "officially
missing" radio episodes - including the one Martin Hood recently managed to
unearth, a transcript of which I see has appeared on Dean Bedford's website - is
truly staggering), it might also be worth noting which episodes are available
for download but are substantially incomplete or have particularly bad problems
with the sound. By "substantially incomplete" I mean episodes where actual
gameplay is missing - there are a fair few episodes where all or part of
Nicholas' introduction is cut off, or all or part of the "Minute" Waltz at
either the beginning or the end, or even sometimes all or part of Nicholas'
salutatory "Welcome to 'Just a Minute'!", but all the important material is
there. This way we will have a short list of the episodes for which upgrades
would be most helpful.

I recently skimmed my entire collection to check that the files were labelled
correctly, and I think the episodes where the most widely available downloads
are incomplete are as follows (series and episodes numbered according to the
standard on Dean Bedford's page):

Series 4 - [52] (missing most of intro)
Series 5 - [91] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing last round), [93] (missing start
and end credits)
Series 16 - [307] (missing start and end credits), [313] (missing most of
intro), [315] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 18 - [340] (missing intro, starts with first round), [342] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round), [351] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first three and a half rounds), [353] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE
- missing first round and part of second)
Series 20 - [369] (missing most of intro), [371] (missing most of intro)
Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first
round), [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 24 - [414] (missing part of intro)
Series 28 - [448] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing part of last round)

As only eight of those are missing actual gameplay, that really means there are
only eight incomplete episodes - the other eight listed above are missing less
important things such as Nicholas introducing the panellists and/or explaining
the rules.

The following episodes have particularly severe sound quality problems - in some
cases it is difficult to make out what the panellists are saying through static
or, in some cases, intereference from other radio stations:

Series 2 - [19], [22]
Series 3 - [25], [28]
Series 6 - [106], [108]
Series 19 - [360], [365]
Series 24 - [412]
Series 30 - [470]
Series 31 - [477]

There are a few other episodes with audio issues, but they can still be heard
and understood and enjoyed for the most part. It seems fair to assume that ABC
will broadcast some of the more recent ones at some point, but the older ones
may require someone with a bit of sound software know-how to clean up a bit
(sadly, I do not fit that bill or I'd try it myself).

Again, though, this still means that all but thirteen "Just a Minute" episodes
from the over seven hundred that have aired since 1967 are available in some
form for fans to listen to, and that is truly remarkable. Again, Dean, Martin,
and everyone else who has contributed in some way to making this collection what
it is, I salute you - my only sorrow is that I don't really have a way to
contribute to this collection myself as "Just a Minute" seems to be pretty much
unknown outside the British expat community here in the States!


-Matthew.


From: James R Curry <scratchy@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Wednesday, 18 April 2012 3:36 PM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 


On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 6:51 PM, Clitheroe Kid <clitheroekid@...> wrote:

Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.

My Forebears: 1 December, 1969
The First of a New Series: 16 September, 1974
What to Do With The Hole in the Doughnut: 27 February, 1973
When We Meet Again: 27 April 1977
Jockeys: 30 January 1979
Parbuckles & The Most Extraordinary Person I Have Ever Met: 22 May 1979

These are the clips used in Parts 3 and 4 of Silver Minutes, a clip show made in 1992, long after the BBC's practice of junking tapes had come to an end.

From this, we know for certain that the BBC hold at least six editions from before 1980, and as we know they have the very first episode, we know they hold at least seven.

If the Sound Archives only hold three editions, was BBC Worldwide involved in the production of Silver Minutes, or another source?

Per Dean's Site, the CD releases include shows from:

1967
1968 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1969
1971
1976 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1977 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute range)
1978 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1979 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)

I don't have the patience to research which specific episodes are in each collection, but for each year, if we subtract episodes that we already know exist (assuming they're also on these CDs) then we can still deduce that there are at least 9 additional episodes here, bringing the total up to 12.

So for certain, the BBC have (and KNOW they have) 12 editions of Just a Minute from before 1980.  I'd be willing to be that the total is greater than this...

A final thought.  The missing episode from Series 9 bothers me.  It seems strange that ABC wouldn't have it.  What's our source for knowing that this was a Christmas Special?  With it being Christmas Week, is it possible that the BBC just threw a repeat into this timeslot?  Are we absolutely certain it's a missing episode?


--
James R Curry



3D Marine Aquarium Screensaver Preview
Free 3D Marine Aquarium Screensaver
Watch dolphins, sharks & orcas on your desktop! Check it out at www.inbox.com/marineaquarium

 
<<<<   6970   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 30 / 40
nylon netApr 18, 2012
 
 

I have a complete 448 - with good audio too. Is that unusual?

http://nylon.net/up/JAM-1995-01-21@448=Firth_Of_Forth-v2.mp3

Sorry I can't help with a better 470.


Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: scratchy@...
Sent: Wed, 18 Apr 2012 18:45:58 -0500
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 

It seems some of these have been replaced since the message was originally posted.

I think the most notable issues remaining from this list are:

448 - The Firth of Forth - does ANYONE have a complete version of this episode?
470 - The Highlands - this is REALLY hard listening.  Is there a version 2?

The numbering seems off for #91 - it's part of season 6, not season 5, and I appear to have a complete version.

Another notable problem:

118 - Sneakers - last few minutes are badly garbled.  Does ABC have this episode?

On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 3:21 PM, Dave B <pondydave@...> wrote:


Hello all,

I just Googled Missing Just A Minute Episodes and came across this message from our group from 20th May 2009 and thought it relevant to what we are talking about. I wonder what progress we have made? Has anyone checked please? This is something I wanted go check on but I haven't got to grips with the fresh editions that have come out of Australia. Apologies to Matthew if he isn't happy about this reappearing. I just thought it a great bit of research.

Dave


Re: Two more editions of Just A Minute: #403 Sneezes & #417 The Boot

(Medium-term group member, first time poster.)

First and foremost, I would like to join everyone in saying a colossal "THANK
YOU!" to everyone who has made the episode collection what it is, particularly
the inimitable Dean Bedford and Martin Hood. I have to wonder what it says
about the BBC that the two people most responsible for making the rich history
of "Just a Minute" accessible to the curious are from New Zealand and Australia!
Nevertheless, Dean, Martin (Dean Martin?), and everyone else who has at some
point ripped and otherwise encoded part of the surviving JAM catalogue, I salute
you.

The thought has occurred that alongside assembling the current list of
unavailable episodes (that this list is now down to the thirteen "officially
missing" radio episodes - including the one Martin Hood recently managed to
unearth, a transcript of which I see has appeared on Dean Bedford's website - is
truly staggering), it might also be worth noting which episodes are available
for download but are substantially incomplete or have particularly bad problems
with the sound. By "substantially incomplete" I mean episodes where actual
gameplay is missing - there are a fair few episodes where all or part of
Nicholas' introduction is cut off, or all or part of the "Minute" Waltz at
either the beginning or the end, or even sometimes all or part of Nicholas'
salutatory "Welcome to 'Just a Minute'!", but all the important material is
there. This way we will have a short list of the episodes for which upgrades
would be most helpful.

I recently skimmed my entire collection to check that the files were labelled
correctly, and I think the episodes where the most widely available downloads
are incomplete are as follows (series and episodes numbered according to the
standard on Dean Bedford's page):

Series 4 - [52] (missing most of intro)
Series 5 - [91] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing last round), [93] (missing start
and end credits)
Series 16 - [307] (missing start and end credits), [313] (missing most of
intro), [315] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 18 - [340] (missing intro, starts with first round), [342] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round), [351] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first three and a half rounds), [353] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE
- missing first round and part of second)
Series 20 - [369] (missing most of intro), [371] (missing most of intro)
Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first
round), [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 24 - [414] (missing part of intro)
Series 28 - [448] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing part of last round)

As only eight of those are missing actual gameplay, that really means there are
only eight incomplete episodes - the other eight listed above are missing less
important things such as Nicholas introducing the panellists and/or explaining
the rules.

The following episodes have particularly severe sound quality problems - in some
cases it is difficult to make out what the panellists are saying through static
or, in some cases, intereference from other radio stations:

Series 2 - [19], [22]
Series 3 - [25], [28]
Series 6 - [106], [108]
Series 19 - [360], [365]
Series 24 - [412]
Series 30 - [470]
Series 31 - [477]

There are a few other episodes with audio issues, but they can still be heard
and understood and enjoyed for the most part. It seems fair to assume that ABC
will broadcast some of the more recent ones at some point, but the older ones
may require someone with a bit of sound software know-how to clean up a bit
(sadly, I do not fit that bill or I'd try it myself).

Again, though, this still means that all but thirteen "Just a Minute" episodes
from the over seven hundred that have aired since 1967 are available in some
form for fans to listen to, and that is truly remarkable. Again, Dean, Martin,
and everyone else who has contributed in some way to making this collection what
it is, I salute you - my only sorrow is that I don't really have a way to
contribute to this collection myself as "Just a Minute" seems to be pretty much
unknown outside the British expat community here in the States!


-Matthew.


From: James R Curry <scratchy@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Wednesday, 18 April 2012 3:36 PM

Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 


On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 6:51 PM, Clitheroe Kid <clitheroekid@...> wrote:

Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.

My Forebears: 1 December, 1969
The First of a New Series: 16 September, 1974
What to Do With The Hole in the Doughnut: 27 February, 1973
When We Meet Again: 27 April 1977
Jockeys: 30 January 1979
Parbuckles & The Most Extraordinary Person I Have Ever Met: 22 May 1979

These are the clips used in Parts 3 and 4 of Silver Minutes, a clip show made in 1992, long after the BBC's practice of junking tapes had come to an end.

From this, we know for certain that the BBC hold at least six editions from before 1980, and as we know they have the very first episode, we know they hold at least seven.

If the Sound Archives only hold three editions, was BBC Worldwide involved in the production of Silver Minutes, or another source?

Per Dean's Site, the CD releases include shows from:

1967
1968 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1969
1971
1976 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1977 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute range)
1978 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1979 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)

I don't have the patience to research which specific episodes are in each collection, but for each year, if we subtract episodes that we already know exist (assuming they're also on these CDs) then we can still deduce that there are at least 9 additional episodes here, bringing the total up to 12.

So for certain, the BBC have (and KNOW they have) 12 editions of Just a Minute from before 1980.  I'd be willing to be that the total is greater than this...

A final thought.  The missing episode from Series 9 bothers me.  It seems strange that ABC wouldn't have it.  What's our source for knowing that this was a Christmas Special?  With it being Christmas Week, is it possible that the BBC just threw a repeat into this timeslot?  Are we absolutely certain it's a missing episode?


--
James R Curry







--
James R Curry


3D Marine Aquarium Screensaver Preview
Free 3D Marine Aquarium Screensaver
Watch dolphins, sharks & orcas on your desktop! Check it out at www.inbox.com/marineaquarium

 
<<<<   6971   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 31 / 40
James R CurryApr 18, 2012
 
 
Er...  it might be.  I don't know.  :)

I'm pretty much new to this group, but it was certainly missing the last few minutes in my collection and a search of the group turned up posts with others in the same predicament.

Thanks - downloaded and put in my "Get around to merging this into my collection" folder.

On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 7:29 PM, nylon net <nylon@...> wrote:



I have a complete 448 - with good audio too. Is that unusual?

http://nylon.net/up/JAM-1995-01-21@448=Firth_Of_Forth-v2.mp3

Sorry I can't help with a better 470.


Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: scratchy@...
Sent: Wed, 18 Apr 2012 18:45:58 -0500
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 

It seems some of these have been replaced since the message was originally posted.

I think the most notable issues remaining from this list are:

448 - The Firth of Forth - does ANYONE have a complete version of this episode?
470 - The Highlands - this is REALLY hard listening.  Is there a version 2?

The numbering seems off for #91 - it's part of season 6, not season 5, and I appear to have a complete version.

Another notable problem:

118 - Sneakers - last few minutes are badly garbled.  Does ABC have this episode?

On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 3:21 PM, Dave B <pondydave@...> wrote:


Hello all,

I just Googled Missing Just A Minute Episodes and came across this message from our group from 20th May 2009 and thought it relevant to what we are talking about. I wonder what progress we have made? Has anyone checked please? This is something I wanted go check on but I haven't got to grips with the fresh editions that have come out of Australia. Apologies to Matthew if he isn't happy about this reappearing. I just thought it a great bit of research.

Dave


Re: Two more editions of Just A Minute: #403 Sneezes & #417 The Boot

(Medium-term group member, first time poster.)

First and foremost, I would like to join everyone in saying a colossal "THANK
YOU!" to everyone who has made the episode collection what it is, particularly
the inimitable Dean Bedford and Martin Hood. I have to wonder what it says
about the BBC that the two people most responsible for making the rich history
of "Just a Minute" accessible to the curious are from New Zealand and Australia!
Nevertheless, Dean, Martin (Dean Martin?), and everyone else who has at some
point ripped and otherwise encoded part of the surviving JAM catalogue, I salute
you.

The thought has occurred that alongside assembling the current list of
unavailable episodes (that this list is now down to the thirteen "officially
missing" radio episodes - including the one Martin Hood recently managed to
unearth, a transcript of which I see has appeared on Dean Bedford's website - is
truly staggering), it might also be worth noting which episodes are available
for download but are substantially incomplete or have particularly bad problems
with the sound. By "substantially incomplete" I mean episodes where actual
gameplay is missing - there are a fair few episodes where all or part of
Nicholas' introduction is cut off, or all or part of the "Minute" Waltz at
either the beginning or the end, or even sometimes all or part of Nicholas'
salutatory "Welcome to 'Just a Minute'!", but all the important material is
there. This way we will have a short list of the episodes for which upgrades
would be most helpful.

I recently skimmed my entire collection to check that the files were labelled
correctly, and I think the episodes where the most widely available downloads
are incomplete are as follows (series and episodes numbered according to the
standard on Dean Bedford's page):

Series 4 - [52] (missing most of intro)
Series 5 - [91] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing last round), [93] (missing start
and end credits)
Series 16 - [307] (missing start and end credits), [313] (missing most of
intro), [315] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 18 - [340] (missing intro, starts with first round), [342] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round), [351] (GAMEPLAY
INCOMPLETE - missing first three and a half rounds), [353] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE
- missing first round and part of second)
Series 20 - [369] (missing most of intro), [371] (missing most of intro)
Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first
round), [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)
Series 24 - [414] (missing part of intro)
Series 28 - [448] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing part of last round)

As only eight of those are missing actual gameplay, that really means there are
only eight incomplete episodes - the other eight listed above are missing less
important things such as Nicholas introducing the panellists and/or explaining
the rules.

The following episodes have particularly severe sound quality problems - in some
cases it is difficult to make out what the panellists are saying through static
or, in some cases, intereference from other radio stations:

Series 2 - [19], [22]
Series 3 - [25], [28]
Series 6 - [106], [108]
Series 19 - [360], [365]
Series 24 - [412]
Series 30 - [470]
Series 31 - [477]

There are a few other episodes with audio issues, but they can still be heard
and understood and enjoyed for the most part. It seems fair to assume that ABC
will broadcast some of the more recent ones at some point, but the older ones
may require someone with a bit of sound software know-how to clean up a bit
(sadly, I do not fit that bill or I'd try it myself).

Again, though, this still means that all but thirteen "Just a Minute" episodes
from the over seven hundred that have aired since 1967 are available in some
form for fans to listen to, and that is truly remarkable. Again, Dean, Martin,
and everyone else who has contributed in some way to making this collection what
it is, I salute you - my only sorrow is that I don't really have a way to
contribute to this collection myself as "Just a Minute" seems to be pretty much
unknown outside the British expat community here in the States!


-Matthew.


From: James R Curry <scratchy@...>
To: just-a-minute@...
Sent: Wednesday, 18 April 2012 3:36 PM

Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 


On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 6:51 PM, Clitheroe Kid <clitheroekid@...> wrote:

Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.

My Forebears: 1 December, 1969
The First of a New Series: 16 September, 1974
What to Do With The Hole in the Doughnut: 27 February, 1973
When We Meet Again: 27 April 1977
Jockeys: 30 January 1979
Parbuckles & The Most Extraordinary Person I Have Ever Met: 22 May 1979

These are the clips used in Parts 3 and 4 of Silver Minutes, a clip show made in 1992, long after the BBC's practice of junking tapes had come to an end.

From this, we know for certain that the BBC hold at least six editions from before 1980, and as we know they have the very first episode, we know they hold at least seven.

If the Sound Archives only hold three editions, was BBC Worldwide involved in the production of Silver Minutes, or another source?

Per Dean's Site, the CD releases include shows from:

1967
1968 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1969
1971
1976 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1977 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute range)
1978 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1979 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)

I don't have the patience to research which specific episodes are in each collection, but for each year, if we subtract episodes that we already know exist (assuming they're also on these CDs) then we can still deduce that there are at least 9 additional episodes here, bringing the total up to 12.

So for certain, the BBC have (and KNOW they have) 12 editions of Just a Minute from before 1980.  I'd be willing to be that the total is greater than this...

A final thought.  The missing episode from Series 9 bothers me.  It seems strange that ABC wouldn't have it.  What's our source for knowing that this was a Christmas Special?  With it being Christmas Week, is it possible that the BBC just threw a repeat into this timeslot?  Are we absolutely certain it's a missing episode?


--
James R Curry







--
James R Curry


3D Marine Aquarium Screensaver Preview
Free 3D Marine Aquarium Screensaver
Watch dolphins, sharks & orcas on your desktop! Check it out at www.inbox.com/marineaquarium





--
James R Curry
scratchy@...


 
<<<<   6972   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 32 / 40
James R CurryApr 18, 2012
 
 
On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 7:24 PM, nylon net <nylon@...> wrote:


- Unchanged - Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round),
- Unchanged - [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)--

Hrmm.  These two episodes have been completed.  I could *swear* my complete versions came from this group.  Thing is, I thought the sound was noticeably muddier on the complete versions, so I merged the first minute or so of the replacement with the incomplete version I already had.  I then saved them out at a slightly higher bitrate so as to not do too much additional damage when I re-encoded them.

Unfortunately, I didn't keep the source files I used to do this.

If you want my hack job versions of these two episodes, I'm more than willing to upload them with apologies to the original uploaders of the source material.

--
James R Curry
scratchy@...


 
<<<<   6973   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 33 / 40
nylon netApr 19, 2012
 
 
Hi James. The only versions I can find in the Yahoo links are incomplete too. 

I'd love to get complete copies!
 
Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: scratchy@...
Sent: Wed, 18 Apr 2012 19:45:09 -0500
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 



On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 7:24 PM, nylon net <nylon@...> wrote:


- Unchanged - Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round),
- Unchanged - [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)--

Hrmm.  These two episodes have been completed.  I could *swear* my complete versions came from this group.  Thing is, I thought the sound was noticeably muddier on the complete versions, so I merged the first minute or so of the replacement with the incomplete version I already had.  I then saved them out at a slightly higher bitrate so as to not do too much additional damage when I re-encoded them.

Unfortunately, I didn't keep the source files I used to do this.

If you want my hack job versions of these two episodes, I'm more than willing to upload them with apologies to the original uploaders of the source material.

--
James R Curry


Free Online Photosharing - Share your photos online with your friends and family!
Visit http://www.inbox.com/photosharing to find out more!

 
<<<<   6974   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 34 / 40
James R CurryApr 19, 2012
 
 
Happy to share:

http://3pb.net/jam

You can hear the join between versions at 1:29 on #392 and right around the 2:00 mark on #397.

I'm absolutely certain I grabbed the complete versions from a thread on this very group.  Therefore, my absolute apologies to whoever's work I've badly spliced here.  I did this for my own listening when hearing my collection.  If I'd thought I'd be sharing, I would have kept those files...

--
James R Curry


On Apr 19, 2012, at 5:18 PM, nylon net <nylon@...> wrote:

Hi James. The only versions I can find in the Yahoo links are incomplete too. 

I'd love to get complete copies!
 
Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: scratchy@...
Sent: Wed, 18 Apr 2012 19:45:09 -0500
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 



On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 7:24 PM, nylon net <nylon@...> wrote:


- Unchanged - Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round),
- Unchanged - [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)--

Hrmm.  These two episodes have been completed.  I could *swear* my complete versions came from this group.  Thing is, I thought the sound was noticeably muddier on the complete versions, so I merged the first minute or so of the replacement with the incomplete version I already had.  I then saved them out at a slightly higher bitrate so as to not do too much additional damage when I re-encoded them.

Unfortunately, I didn't keep the source files I used to do this.

If you want my hack job versions of these two episodes, I'm more than willing to upload them with apologies to the original uploaders of the source material.

--
James R Curry


Free Online Photosharing - Share your photos online with your friends and family!
Visit http://www.inbox.com/photosharing to find out more!

 
<<<<   6975   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 35 / 40
nylon netApr 19, 2012
 
 

Many thanks, James.
Looking into one of my other archives, I did find the full (poor quality) version of 392, but I'm glad you did the splicing so I didn't have to  :-)

And thanks for 397!  Much appreciated...
 
Regards
Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: scratchy@...
Sent: Thu, 19 Apr 2012 17:45:54 -0500
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 

Happy to share:


You can hear the join between versions at 1:29 on #392 and right around the 2:00 mark on #397.

I'm absolutely certain I grabbed the complete versions from a thread on this very group.  Therefore, my absolute apologies to whoever's work I've badly spliced here.  I did this for my own listening when hearing my collection.  If I'd thought I'd be sharing, I would have kept those files...

--
James R Curry


On Apr 19, 2012, at 5:18 PM, nylon net <nylon@...> wrote:

Hi James. The only versions I can find in the Yahoo links are incomplete too. 

I'd love to get complete copies!
 
Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: scratchy@...
Sent: Wed, 18 Apr 2012 19:45:09 -0500
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 



On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 7:24 PM, nylon net <nylon@...> wrote:


- Unchanged - Series 22 - [392] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round),
- Unchanged - [397] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)--

Hrmm.  These two episodes have been completed.  I could *swear* my complete versions came from this group.  Thing is, I thought the sound was noticeably muddier on the complete versions, so I merged the first minute or so of the replacement with the incomplete version I already had.  I then saved them out at a slightly higher bitrate so as to not do too much additional damage when I re-encoded them.

Unfortunately, I didn't keep the source files I used to do this.

If you want my hack job versions of these two episodes, I'm more than willing to upload them with apologies to the original uploaders of the source material.

--
James R Curry


Free Online Photosharing - Share your photos online with your friends and family!
Visit http://www.inbox.com/photosharing to find out more!


Smileys Preview
Get Free Smileys for Your IM & Email - Learn more at www.crawler.com/smileys
Works with AIM®, MSN® Messenger, Yahoo!® Messenger, ICQ®, Google Talk and most webmails

 
<<<<   6976   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 36 / 40
James R CurryApr 19, 2012
 
 
On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 7:24 PM, nylon net <nylon@...> wrote:

- Unchanged - [315] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)

Hey Mark,

Not sure where this one came from, I don't know if it was from this group or elsewhere, but I have a complete version of 315.

I've uploaded it to the same place as the other two.

Hope it helps the collection!
 
--
James R Curry
scratchy@...


 
<<<<   6977   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 37 / 40
nylon netApr 20, 2012
 
 

May your dog lick your nose on my behalf.

Thanks!
 
Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: scratchy@...
Sent: Thu, 19 Apr 2012 23:50:20 -0500
To: just-a-minute@...
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs

 



On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 7:24 PM, nylon net <nylon@...> wrote:

- Unchanged - [315] (GAMEPLAY INCOMPLETE - missing first few seconds of first round)

Hey Mark,

Not sure where this one came from, I don't know if it was from this group or elsewhere, but I have a complete version of 315.

I've uploaded it to the same place as the other two.

Hope it helps the collection!
 
--
James R Curry


3D Marine Aquarium Screensaver Preview
Free 3D Marine Aquarium Screensaver
Watch dolphins, sharks & orcas on your desktop! Check it out at www.inbox.com/marineaquarium

 
<<<<   6985   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 38 / 40
Espen KrømkeApr 21, 2012
 
 
I've done the same on several shows I got in my archive too! First done some basic tweaking to remove hiss and balance out the audio to the best of my abilities, then spliced them whenever I had a better, incomplete snippet.

Now that I think about it, that might have been the explenation on how I have been able to offer requested complete recordings of some shows earlier!


On 19. april 2012 02:45, James R Curry wrote:  
Hrmm.  These two episodes have been completed.  I could *swear* my complete versions came from this group.  Thing is, I thought the sound was noticeably muddier on the complete versions, so I merged the first minute or so of the replacement with the incomplete version I already had.  I then saved them out at a slightly higher bitrate so as to not do too much additional damage when I re-encoded them.





 
<<<<   6999   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 39 / 40
DeanApr 23, 2012
 
 
I had a lot of contact with the guy that recently produced the three hour Radio Four Extra special and it was pretty clear to me that he could call up whatever shows he wanted very easily. He was responding to my suggestions with “I’ve just listened to that”sort of replies within an hour or so. So the BBC definitely has more pre-1980 shows than just three. I guess we don’t know for sure which branch of the BBC holds them.
 
 
 
Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2012 2:36 AM
Subject: Re: [just-a-minute] Missing JAMs
 
 



On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 6:51 PM, Clitheroe Kid <clitheroekid@...> wrote:
 
Contacting sound archives is a waste of time, I too tried that already and was simply ignored. my contacts at radio 4 extra have investigated in any case, so I already know that s.a. only hold 3 editions of jam from before 1980.

My Forebears: 1 December, 1969
The First of a New Series: 16 September, 1974
What to Do With The Hole in the Doughnut: 27 February, 1973
When We Meet Again: 27 April 1977
Jockeys: 30 January 1979
Parbuckles & The Most Extraordinary Person I Have Ever Met: 22 May 1979

These are the clips used in Parts 3 and 4 of Silver Minutes, a clip show made in 1992, long after the BBC's practice of junking tapes had come to an end.

From this, we know for certain that the BBC hold at least six editions from before 1980, and as we know they have the very first episode, we know they hold at least seven.

If the Sound Archives only hold three editions, was BBC Worldwide involved in the production of Silver Minutes, or another source?

Per Dean's Site, the CD releases include shows from:

1967
1968 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1969
1971
1976 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1977 (Three different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute range)
1978 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)
1979 (Two different shows in the "Classic Just a Minute" range)

I don't have the patience to research which specific episodes are in each collection, but for each year, if we subtract episodes that we already know exist (assuming they're also on these CDs) then we can still deduce that there are at least 9 additional episodes here, bringing the total up to 12.

So for certain, the BBC have (and KNOW they have) 12 editions of Just a Minute from before 1980.  I'd be willing to be that the total is greater than this...

A final thought.  The missing episode from Series 9 bothers me.  It seems strange that ABC wouldn't have it.  What's our source for knowing that this was a Christmas Special?  With it being Christmas Week, is it possible that the BBC just threw a repeat into this timeslot?  Are we absolutely certain it's a missing episode?


--
James R Curry

 
<<<<   7000   >>>>

Topic: Re: Missing JAMs

Message 40 / 40
DeanApr 23, 2012
 
 
my friend Keith went through the BBC archives in respect of JAM a year or two back – he was thinking of writing a book. It was vaguely interesting, letters between producers and panellists and contracts and so on. There wasn’t information about the archiving of recordings or anything that would help me complete the winners list.
 
 
 
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2012 10:57 AM
Subject: [just-a-minute] Re: Missing JAMs
 

There may be more information on the missing JAMs in the BBC Written Archives but access is restricted to "accredited academic institutions and commercial researchers" only. You have to book in advance and pay to visit:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/historyofthebbc/contacts/wac_faqs.shtml

 
<<<<   7000   >>>>

Back to the Top
 

Message History

 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
201910231211351191231414
201847218937951925514
20174342212172041923442316
201613493957608710322412923
201551973249415420280143116
201497568332833528251323879
2013463251988781192889886385427
2012921211801991258871155118166125144
20111127871731342252521526218316563
20101421171539469496918382716875
200967454297901491107063423539
2008200120175120701098711571455838
2007165447132999557140118748812599

|   FAQ   |   Contact   |   Services   |   Terms   |   Privacy   |   Credits   |

[Page generated in 0.081 seconds under 1.66% server load]

© 2012-2025 TVRDb.com. All rights reserved.