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It was broadcast in Color although if you still had a black and white TV in 1966 to 1968, it was of course in black and white.
Black and white are colors, but technically both can be the absence of color, or the total combination of colors. B&W television used shades of gray (although that might also qualify as a color). The term "color TV" means a "full spectrum of colors" rather than simply grays.
Neither black or white are actually colours. They aren't primary colours and you can't mix other colours to make them. So it's just a black and white TV. It becomes a colour TV when it, um, has colours.
black and white
You couldn't! The first bit of the film was done when there was only black and white tv and the second when color came out.
Lots
Black is not a color it is the absents of light so different shades of the white would give you grays.
Black and white television were broadcast in this manner due to that fact that television sets could not display color versions. By the mid 1970s most television sets were color models and therefore black and white shows were discontinued.
1972
because TV could not be made in color that is why
the Ariel or the plug not in properly
Black And White! The word means "one color".