It Sticks Out Half a Mile was a BBC Radio sitcom created by Harold Snoad and Michael Knowles as a sequel to the television war sitcom Dad's Army, for which Snoad and Knowles had written radio adaptations. The original pilot
It Sticks Out Half a Mile



It Sticks Out Half a Mile was a BBC Radio sitcom created by Harold Snoad and Michael Knowles as a sequel to the television war sitcom Dad's Army, for which Snoad and Knowles had written radio adaptations. The original pilot

Harold Peary created Honest Harold after his departure from The Great Gildersleeve in the 1950's, the role of Gildersleeve being filled by Willard Waterman, and The Great Gildersleeve show's fans seemed satisfied with the change even though Peary had let

Radio comedy has not only entertained audiences for some 70 years, it's also been a medium for change in British society itself. Bandwaggon established a new formula of comedy sketches and music. At the beginning of the war it was

I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again (often abbreviated ISIRTA) was a BBC radio comedy programme which originated from the Cambridge University Footlights revue Cambridge Circus.

The Falcon radio series premiered on the Blue Network on April 10, 1943, continuing on NBC and Mutual until November 27, 1954. Some 70 episodes were produced. "Drexel Drake" (a pseudonym of Charles H. Huff) created Michael Waring, alias the