C-Day

For the military use of "C-Day" (or "Candy Day"), see Military designation of days and hours.

C-Day is the name of two television-related events – the first of March 1975, when Australia moved to colour television, and 1 July 2000, the day the UK television industry began accepting only widescreen commercials, an important step in the general move of broadcasting in the UK to the picture format.

Colour Television in Australia

Australia was a little late in introducing Colour television, to choose the correct television system, waiting about 5 years from the time PAL was invented.

It was then forbidden for broadcasters to transmit the chroma burst signal, until the designated day, 1 March 1975.[1] The broadcasters were allowed to experiment with transmitting colour signals in the picture area, and get their transmission up and running while people who had already bought colour TV sets could only watch the shows in black and white monochrome. There were some people who built a circuit to circumvent this, where they would synchronise the chrominance decoding oscillator manually.

Commercials-Day in the UK

C-Day or Commercials-Day, 1 July 2000, was the date at which UK broadcasters (with the exception of MTV UK and VH1 UK ) changed from requiring 4:3 aspect ratio commercials, to requiring 16:9 Full Height commercials supplied to them, shot "14:9 safe" for those channels which in part (i.e. the analogue feeds of Terrestrial broadcasters) or in whole (many cable television and satellite television channels) continued to broadcast a 4:3 frame.[2]

It was originally proposed by ITV in July 1999.[3][4]

ITV and Channel 4 took advantage of C-Day to update their continuity suites to be widescreen capable, broadcasting their idents in widescreen.[5]

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