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1 May 1987
- Original release: 1 May 1987 – 29 March 2003 After Dark is a British late-night live television discussion programme that broadcast weekly on Channel 4between 1987 and 1991, and which returned for specials between 1993 and 1997; it was later revived by the BBCfor a single season broadcast on BBC Fourin 2003.
www.openmedia.co.uk/after-dark
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When did the Dark Ages begin?
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Is the Dark Age a literal & figurative 'Dark Age'?
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This period, known as the Dark Ages, began around 370,000 years after the Big Bang. During the Dark Ages, the temperature of the universe cooled from some 4000 K to about 60 K (3727 °C to about −213 °C), and only two sources of photons existed: the photons released during recombination/decoupling (as neutral hydrogen atoms formed), which we ...
- Channel 4 Anniversaries
- BFI Inview
- Production
In October 2007, as part of its 25-year anniversary celebrations, Channel 4 repeated the first ever After Dark on the More4 channel, billing it as "Anthony Wilson hosts a discussion concerning secrets – both secrets of the State and the personal secrets we keep from one another."In 2012, on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of Channel 4, After D...
In 2009 the British Film Institute announced that After Dark programmes were available online through its InView service. This web-based learning resource was free but accessible only to UK Higher Education/Further Education institutions, in partnership with The National Archives, the Parliamentary Broadcasting Unit, the BBC, FremantleMedia and the...
Editorial
The producer wrote: "We made programmes about familiar British issues (or 'diseases', as we called them): the treatment of children, of the mentally ill, of prisoners, and about class, cash and racial and sexual difference. Several programmes were concerned with matters of exceptional sensitivity to the then Thatcher government, such as state secrecy or the Troubles in Northern Ireland. Places further afield but just as important – Chile, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Nicaragua, South Africa a...
This article explores the significance of the late-night British discussion programme After Dark (Channel 4, 1987–97) in terms of the production contexts of the time and its distinctive form and structure as television.
- David Lee, John Corner
- 2017
In 2017 calls continue for the return to UK screens of the innovative television programme After Dark, despite it not having been on air since 2003 (the most recent such call was
After Dark is a British late night television discussion programme, produced by Open Media. It was broadcast weekly on Channel 4 between 1 May 1987 and 6 April 1991, and returned with various specials between 1993 and 1997. The programme ran again weekly for a single season in 2003 on the BBC. [1]
After dark matter first clumped together, it attracted large clouds of hydrogen. When the clouds grew large enough, the heat and pressure from gravity started fusing the hydrogen, igniting the first star.
After Dark is a British late-night live discussion programme broadcast on Channel 4 television between 1987 and 1997, and on the BBC in 2003.