Watching America: Global television and the forging of New Zealand national identity in the post-WWII era. - Page 140 |
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132 surveyed were New Zealand Herald, The Press, Dominion, Evening Post, Otago Daily Times, New Zealand Truth, Waikato Times. 50 Day, for example, cites one New Zealander's opinion that "once it's established in Australia no government here will be able to withstand popular pressure to get it installed," p. 12. 51 “"The First Few Years Are Bound to be Hysterical": Sir John Medley talks about Television in Australia,” New Zealand Listener, April 26 1957, p. 6. 52 Ibid. 53 New Zealand Parliamentary Debates, 1957, pp. 1212-13. 54 New Zealand Parliamentary Debates, 1957, pp. 2313-15. 55 Day, pp. 16-19. 56 New Zealand Parliamentary Debates, 1957, pp. 1212-13. In the election campaign of 1957 the Labour Party pledged to introduce television sometime during their three year term if they were elected, which they duly were. But they continued the established policy of political procrastination regarding television once they were in government, citing economic problems. See Day, Voice and Vision, pp. 19-20. 57 Mark Rolfe, “Faraway Fordism: The Americanization of Australia and New Zealand During the 1950s and 1960s,” New Zealand Journal of History, vol. 33, no. 1 (1999), pp. 65-66. 58 Ibid., pp. 75-82. 59 Henry Walter, “Mass Communications,” New Zealand Listener, March 28, 1958, p. 5. 60 A. R. Morman, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 26 March, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 61 P. Williams, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 21 March, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1 E.A. Wilkinson, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 23 February, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 62 Farmers' Trading Co. Ltd., Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 1959, 17 April, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 63 N.Z. Motion Picture Exhibitors' Association, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 17 April, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 64 Mary Elizabeth Greenwood, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 16 February, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 65 Belich, pp. 307; Keith Sinclair, Halfway Round the Harbour: An Autobiography, (Auckland: Penguin Books, 1993), p. 123, cited in Belich, p. 524. 66 Sutch, p. 1. 67 Brian Easton, "Sutch, William Ball, 1907-1975," Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, updated 4 April 2003, URL: http://www.dnzb.government.nz/.
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Title | Watching America: Global television and the forging of New Zealand national identity in the post-WWII era. - Page 140 |
Repository email | cisadmin@lib.usc.edu |
Full text | 132 surveyed were New Zealand Herald, The Press, Dominion, Evening Post, Otago Daily Times, New Zealand Truth, Waikato Times. 50 Day, for example, cites one New Zealander's opinion that "once it's established in Australia no government here will be able to withstand popular pressure to get it installed," p. 12. 51 “"The First Few Years Are Bound to be Hysterical": Sir John Medley talks about Television in Australia,” New Zealand Listener, April 26 1957, p. 6. 52 Ibid. 53 New Zealand Parliamentary Debates, 1957, pp. 1212-13. 54 New Zealand Parliamentary Debates, 1957, pp. 2313-15. 55 Day, pp. 16-19. 56 New Zealand Parliamentary Debates, 1957, pp. 1212-13. In the election campaign of 1957 the Labour Party pledged to introduce television sometime during their three year term if they were elected, which they duly were. But they continued the established policy of political procrastination regarding television once they were in government, citing economic problems. See Day, Voice and Vision, pp. 19-20. 57 Mark Rolfe, “Faraway Fordism: The Americanization of Australia and New Zealand During the 1950s and 1960s,” New Zealand Journal of History, vol. 33, no. 1 (1999), pp. 65-66. 58 Ibid., pp. 75-82. 59 Henry Walter, “Mass Communications,” New Zealand Listener, March 28, 1958, p. 5. 60 A. R. Morman, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 26 March, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 61 P. Williams, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 21 March, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1 E.A. Wilkinson, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 23 February, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 62 Farmers' Trading Co. Ltd., Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 1959, 17 April, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 63 N.Z. Motion Picture Exhibitors' Association, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 17 April, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 64 Mary Elizabeth Greenwood, Submission to the Interdepartmental Committee on Television, 16 February, 1959, New Zealand National Archives, AAFK 798, Box 1. 65 Belich, pp. 307; Keith Sinclair, Halfway Round the Harbour: An Autobiography, (Auckland: Penguin Books, 1993), p. 123, cited in Belich, p. 524. 66 Sutch, p. 1. 67 Brian Easton, "Sutch, William Ball, 1907-1975," Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, updated 4 April 2003, URL: http://www.dnzb.government.nz/. |