Watch Panorama (1953) Online!
Current affairs programme, featuring interviews and investigative reports on a wide variety of subjects.
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Episode 1 - Episode 1
Release Date: 1965-09-27 -
Episode 2 - Episode 2
Release Date: 1965-10-04His Holiness Pope Paul VI visits the city of New York to speak at the United Nations. For tonight's Panorama, Richard Dimbleby reports live from New York by Early Bird satellite.
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Episode 3 - Episode 3
Release Date: 1965-10-11 -
Episode 4 - Episode 4
Release Date: 1965-10-18 -
Episode 5 - Episode 5
Release Date: 1965-10-25 -
Episode 6 - Episode 6
Release Date: 1965-11-01 -
Episode 7 - Episode 7
Release Date: 1965-11-08 -
Episode 8 - Episode 8
Release Date: 1965-11-15 -
Episode 9 - Episode 9
Release Date: 1965-11-22 -
Episode 10 - Episode 10
Release Date: 1965-11-29 -
Episode 11 - Episode 11
Release Date: 1965-12-06 -
Episode 12 - Episode 12
Release Date: 1965-12-13 -
Episode 13 - Episode 13
Release Date: 1965-12-20 -
Episode 14 - 1965 Panorama of the Year
Release Date: 1965-12-31Vietnam... Churchill... Rhodesia Ringo married; Malcolm X shot; The Queen in Germany; The Pope in New York Too much happened this year to remember tonight but here are some of the sights and sounds of 1965.
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Episode 15 - Episode 15
Release Date: 1966-01-10 -
Episode 16 - Episode 16
Release Date: 1966-01-17 -
Episode 17 - Episode 17
Release Date: 1966-01-24 -
Episode 18 - Episode 18
Release Date: 1966-01-31 -
Episode 19 - Cancer
Release Date: 1966-02-07Cancer - the disease that strikes hardest, and is talked about least. Cancer is best faced in the open. Early diagnosis can save lives. What causes cancer? How is it treated? Can some cancers be prevented? How long before the different cancers can be cured? This special Panorama report by James Mossman is introduced by David Dimbleby.
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Episode 20 - Episode 20
Release Date: 1966-02-14 -
Episode 21 - Episode 21
Release Date: 1966-02-21 -
Episode 22 - Episode 22
Release Date: 1966-02-28 -
Episode 23 - Episode 23
Release Date: 1966-03-07A fair day’s pay for a fair day's work. But how much pay, and how long a day? How do we compare one man’s income with another's? John Morgan reports on what men and women in industry and the professions think about their earnings, and asks ‘Is an Incomes Policy possible?’
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Episode 24 - Episode 24
Release Date: 1966-03-14 -
Episode 25 - Episode 25
Release Date: 1966-03-21 -
Episode 26 - Episode 26
Release Date: 1966-04-04 -
Episode 27 - Episode 27
Release Date: 1966-04-18 -
Episode 28 - Episode 28
Release Date: 1966-04-25 -
Episode 29 - Episode 29
Release Date: 1966-05-02 -
Episode 30 - Belgium
Release Date: 1966-05-09Belgium, at the heart of united Europe, now itself threatened by disunity. A special Panorama report at the start of the Queen's visit.
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Episode 31 - On Mental Illness
Release Date: 1966-05-16Every ninth woman in Britain today will spend some time in a mental hospital. So will every fourteenth man. Nearly half our hospital beds are occupied by mental patients. But do we do enough for the mentally sick? Or are we still inclined to put them out of sight and out of mind? As attitudes change, a special report by James Mossman.
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Episode 32 - Episode 32
Release Date: 1966-05-23 -
Episode 33 - Episode 33
Release Date: 1966-06-06 -
Episode 34 - Vietnam: Journal of a War
Release Date: 1966-06-13The war in Vietnam grows more agonising. The South Vietnamese, at war with the Viet Cong and with each other, are themselves the victims of a war in which more civilians than soldiers have been killed. Are the Americans winning the war to keep Vietnam free from Communism? Can they win it, where perhaps it matters most, in the minds of the Vietnamese? Michael Charlton and a Panorama unit have travelled for six weeks m South Vietnam to prepare this special report on a country at war
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Episode 35 - Episode 35
Release Date: 1966-06-20 -
Episode 36 - Episode 36
Release Date: 1966-06-27 -
Episode 37 - California: Year 2000
Release Date: 1966-07-04…broadcast postponed…
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Episode 38 - California: Year 2000
Release Date: 1966-08-18Nowhere in the world is technology more advanced than in California. As a result, ideas about education, about work, about leisure are in a ferment. Nowhere is the future so close. Will ours be like this? From California, John Morgan looks ahead to Year 2000.