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Contoh soal psikotes gambar. Imagine the excitement - it's just before 9.30am on Saturday 2nd October 1976. It's almost like Christmas has come early, such is the anticipation. The nation's kids, who hitherto got their kicks at the Saturday morning pictures, settle in front of their television screens and press the button marked 'BBC1'. Those who read their parents' Radio Times know a new show is about to start with Radio 1 Breakfast Show DJ Noel Edmonds at the helm. 28 year old Noel is cool and down with the kids. Tom Baker and Elisabeth Sladen - the Doctor and Sarah Jane from Doctor Who - are to be the first star guests, and you can actually speak to them live by telephone! The TV set warms up and the familiar blue and yellow BBC1 clock flashes up as the seconds count down to the very first edition of Multi-Coloured Swap Shop.

Firstly, let's set the record straight. Swap Shop arrived a short time after TISWAS, which had begun in 1974, albeit in a slightly less anarchic way than it would later become famed for.

Early TISWAS was simply a device for linking programmes on ATV in Birmingham. The show we all know and love with Chris Tarrant and Sally James only really developed once the BBC launched 'the Swappie' (as Billy Connolly called it). Indeed, it wasn't until 1979 that TISWAS was networked. Both programmes owed much to shows like Zokko! (The BBC's somewhat psychedelic attempt to mix cartoons, music and weirdness from 1968, though that was only 25 minutes long).

The new show would be more than a simple linking device - at three hours long, it would be the spine of the morning, with Hanna Barbera cartoons breaking into the organised chaos of the Swaporama, Star Swaps and musical items. Swap Shop's revolutionary interactivity actually came from Z-Shed, a 1975 phone-in 'teenage problem page of the air' hosted by one Noel Edmonds. The BBC were serving children very well on weekday afternoons. The classic serial pulled in a large family audience on early Sunday evenings, and Doctor Who was a cornerstone of family viewing on Saturday evenings. Saturday mornings, however, were a ragbag of old movies and archaic TV shows like Champion The Wonder Horse which was made in 1955, though Champion had been Gene Autry's sidekick as far back as the thirties. If you were lucky, something more current like Mr Benn or the slapstick Here Come The Double Deckers made an occasional appearance. BBC1 really only came to life with Grandstand; something was needed to capture the potential family audience on Saturday morning to lock in viewers before the sports miscellany.

Multi-Coloured Swap Shop was the brainchild of Rosemary Gill, who became its editor. She came up with the swapping motif as the list of things children could swap was practically endless. It is worth noting there had been a previous attempt at swapping on screen: Back in 1959 a show called Swop Shop appeared on Southern TV. Hosted by Leslie Mitchell, it was aimed at an adult audience and went out at 10.30pm. Gill suggested her idea to Edward Barnes, who had recently developed John Craven's Newsround, which despite a seemingly unworkable premise - kids don't watch news - had become very successful. Both worked on Blue Peter and the venerable magazine show's educational values were certainly reflected in the new programme.

Once established, Swap Shop, like Blue Peter, produced a regular book (never annual!). Gill and Barnes agreed Noel Edmonds was an obvious lynchpin for the show with his command of live TV (notably in the recent series Z-Shed) and his young fan base from Radio 1 and Top Of The Pops, and not least his ability to keep going no matter what happened. Barnes suggested bringing in John Craven to add some 'grit', and he had received a letter from a very precocious 19 year old Liverpudlian, Keith Chegwin, who was looking for work. Gill decided to try him out on the OB section of the show. Monica Sims, the head of the BBC Children's Department, green-lit a short test series of six editions for the autumn of 1976.

By the time the Radio Times printed the billing, however, those six editions had become twelve programmes and such was its popularity, after a week off for Christmas, the show returned in January 1977 for a further eight programmes. The series ended at the beginning of March after 20 weeks on air. A template had been set.

Multi-Coloured Swap Shop had been a huge hit despite being produced on a small budget; the show had been quite canny in utilising resources. The apparently random Swaporama - 'Roving Swapman' Keith Chegwin's outside broadcast where most of the swapping really took place, actually borrowed OB Camera crews already on the road for the day's sports coverage, often the OB guys would be diverted from a nearby football stadium or athletics track. Once the series took off, the budget was increased a little and 1978 saw the addition of Maggie Philbin to the presenting team. To say she got on well with the established line-up would be an understatement, especially in the case of Keith Chegwin, whom she subsequently married. A typical show.