Episodes
Title | Comments |
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Genome: [r4 Bd=19910516] | The second of two programmes about German propaganda broadcasts to Britain during the Second World War. Who was the first Lord Haw-Haw? Was it the traitor Norman Baillie-Stewart or an anglophile German who read P.G. Wodehouse and rounded off his broadcasts with the expression 'hearty cheerios'? Denys Blakeway follows the Haw-Haw signal back to Broadcasting House, Berlin and talks to survivors from the incongruous band of traitors and Nazi sympathisers whose blend of lies and half-truths mesmerised British listeners in the early years of the war. Producer Nigel Acheson. Stereo ContributorsPresenter: Denys BlakewayProducer: Nigel Acheson. The second of two programmes about German propaganda broadcasts to Britain during the Second World War. Who was the first Lord Haw-Haw? Was it the traitor Norman Baillie-Stewart or an anglophile German who read P.G. Wodehouse and rounded off his broadcasts with the expression 'hearty cheerios'? Denys Blakeway follows the Haw-Haw signal back to Broadcasting House, Berlin and talks to survivors from the incongruous band of traitors and Nazi sympathisers whose blend of lies and half-truths mesmerised British listeners in the early years of the war. Producer Nigel Acheson. Stereo ContributorsPresenter: Denys Blakeway"The second of two programmes about German propaganda broadcasts to Britain during the Second World War. Who was the first Lord Haw-Haw? Was it the traitor Norman Baillie-Stewart or an anglophile German who read P.G. Wodehouse and rounded off his broadcasts with the expression 'hearty cheerios'? Denys Blakeway follows the Haw-Haw signal back to Broadcasting House, Berlin and talks to survivors from the incongruous band of traitors and Nazi sympathisers whose blend of lies and half-truths mesmerised British listeners in the early years of the war. Producer Nigel Acheson. Stereo ContributorsPresenter: Denys Blakeway"The second of two programmes about German propaganda broadcasts to Britain during the Second World War. Who was the first Lord Haw-Haw? Was it the traitor Norman Baillie-Stewart or an anglophile German who read P.G. Wodehouse and rounded off his broadcasts with the expression 'hearty cheerios'? Denys Blakeway follows the Haw-Haw signal back to Broadcasting House, Berlin and talks to survivors from the incongruous band of traitors and Nazi sympathisers whose blend of lies and half-truths mesmerised British listeners in the early years of the war. Producer Nigel Acheson. Stereo ContributorsPresenter: Denys Blakeway" |
Genome: [r4 Bd=19910516] | Presenter: Denys Blakeway Producer: Nigel Acheson. |