The
Television Act 1954 was a British law which
permitted the creation of the first commercial television network in the United Kingdom
, ITV. Royal Assent was
given to the Act on
30 July 1954.
By the early 1950s, the only television service in Britain was
operated as a monopoly by the
British Broadcasting
Corporation, and financed by the annual
television licence fee payable by each
household which contained one or more television sets.
The new Conservative government elected in
1951 wanted to create a commercial
television channel, but this was a controversial subject -- the
only other examples of commercial television were to be found in
the United
States
, and it was widely considered that the commercial
television found there was "vulgar".
The solution to the problem was to create the
Independent Television
Authority which would closely regulate the new commercial
channel in the interests of good taste, and award franchises to
commercial companies for fixed terms. Aware that TV coverage of the
Coronation of
Queen
Elizabeth II in the USA had been interrupted by advertisements
one of which featured a celebrity chimpanzee
J. Fred Muggs, a
clause was included in the Act banning advertising breaks during
broadcasts featuring the Royal Family.
The first commercial franchises were awarded in 1954, and
commercial television started broadcasting in stages between 1955
and 1962. The first advertisement aired by ITV promoted Gibbs SR
tubepaste at 20.12hrs local time on
22
September 1955. Household cleaners were the most frequently
advertised products over the 1955-1960 period.