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Colin McIntyre (Read 5345 times)
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Colin McIntyre
May 18th, 2012, 4:55pm
 
Colin McIntyre, who was the first Editor of Ceefax, has died.

He had a long BBC career, joining the External Services as a sub in the early '50s.  He became UN correspondent in 1956, covering the Hungary and Suez crises. Later, he was Chief Publicity Officer for BBC TV (1965-70) and Promotions Executive, Presentation (1971-73).

He joined Ceefax prior to launch in 1974.  The BBC website says that even in those early days, he envisaged developments that later came to pass on the Internet.

Ceefax was the start of a "video revolution", he said - when people would be able to "talk back" to computers, whether booking a holiday or ordering the weekly groceries.

He lived just long enough to see the closure of Ceefax and also to mark his 60th wedding anniversary.
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Re: Colin McIntyre
Reply #1 - May 18th, 2012, 5:12pm
 
This is from here..

"When Ceefax started 30 years ago it was operated by one man - Colin McIntyre - who typed out a 24-page magazine on his own. It was only updated when he was on shift during the week and not in the evenings or at weekends."  
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Re: Colin McIntyre
Reply #2 - May 18th, 2012, 10:44pm
 
A tribute to Colin McIntyre from the BBC News web-site may be found here.

"The founding editor of the BBC's Ceefax service - the world's first teletext service - has died at the age of 85
Colin McIntyre, who worked for the BBC for 30 years, died in hospital on Thursday after a short illness.

When Ceefax was launched in 1974, he updated all 24 news pages on his own, feeding punch tape into machines.

When he retired in 1982, Ceefax had a 20-strong team. It went on to attract 22 million viewers a week and inspired teletext services around Europe."

"He was a renowned journalist at the BBC and became one of the youngest chief-sub editors in the newsroom when he was promoted to that role in 1955.

He later trained as a TV producer and served as a correspondent at the UN during the Suez and Hungary crises before becoming the BBC's chief publicity officer for seven years and programme promotions executive between 1972 and his appointment as Ceefax editor in 1974."  
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Re: Colin McIntyre
Reply #3 - May 30th, 2012, 5:17pm
 
This is from "The Daily Telegraph"..

Colin McIntyre

As the newly-appointed first editor of the Ceefax service, McIntyre had the country’s only Ceefax-enabled television set at his home. In Ceefax’s early days he worked regular office hours, which meant that the service was not updated in the evenings or at weekends. For the first seven years, the audience take-up rate was slow, because of the expense of the decoders needed to broadcast Ceefax on to television sets, but soon the service expanded year by year.

Colin Ian McIntyre was born on January 27 1927 in Buenos Aires, where his father ran a cotton factory, and educated at St George’s College in nearby Quilmes. In 1945, when he was 17, Colin joined the British Army and was commissioned in the Black Watch, serving as a platoon officer and company commander with the Lovat Scouts in Greece and as a captain and staff officer with 6th Airborne Division in Palestine.

He also became one of the Oasis poets, Second World War servicemen who wrote poetry about their experiences between 1939 and 1945. In the 1950s he joined the TA and became a major and Quartermaster General in 47 (London) Infantry Brigade.

A keen sportsman both in the Army and at university, he managed to represent the United States at rugby against Bermuda in 1949, while the following year playing for Bermuda against the USA. While studying at Harvard in 1950, he and a Cambridge graduate were the first to cross the United States on Corgi parachutists’ minibikes, travelling from San Francisco to Washington DC by way of New Orleans.

McIntyre joined the BBC as a staff journalist in 1952, remaining with the corporation for 30 years. Starting in the newsroom of the BBC’s External Services, he became one of the youngest chief sub-editors there in 1955.

He later trained as a television producer and served as a correspondent at the United Nations during the Suez and Hungary crises before becoming the BBC’s chief publicity officer for seven years and programme promotions executive between 1972 and his appointment as Ceefax editor in 1974.

In 1982, aged 55, he took early retirement to write books, while acting as a teletext consultant in Europe, Australia and New Zealand. His Monuments of War: How to Read a War Memorial appeared in 1990. He was a member of the Circle of Wine Writers and publicity officer for the Western Front Association.

His death came four weeks after the Ceefax service was switched off in London. It will end transmissions altogether in October when the digital switchover is completed.

Colin McIntyre is survived by his American wife, Field, with whom he had recently celebrated 60 years of marriage, their three daughters and a son.

Colin McIntyre, born January 27 1927, died May 17 2012
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