Picture shows: Frank Windsor as DS John Watt and Stratford John as DCI Barlow with James Ellis and Jeremy Kemp in the background. This still was taken on location in 1961 to publicise episode 2, 'The Limping Rabbit' TX 9 January 1962.
The first episode of Z Cars – broadcast on 2 January 1962 – brought a new type of police drama to British screens. It showed modern police in squad cars – Ford Zephyrs – dealing with the problems of the fictional Lancashire town of Newtown and with their own lives. Influenced by the kitchen sink dramas of the time, it quickly revealed the police were as human as everyone else. The show was created by Troy Kennedy Martin and proved an immediate hit, with viewing figures soon hitting 14 million.
The drama began with a new crime patrol unit put together in response to the murder of a policeman – differentiating it from the cosy world of Dixon of Dock Green and bobbies on the beat. DCI Barlow (Stratford John) recruited DS John Watt (Frank Windsor) to head up the new motorised unit. Together they recruited PCs Smith (Brian Blessed), Weir (Joseph Brady), Lynch (James Ellis) and Steele (Jeremy Kemp) to the two car unit - call sign Z for Zulu. Filmed sequences frequently took the programme out of the studio and served to reinforce the realism.
Z Cars’ popularity was reflected in the pop charts in April 1962, when the theme tune reached number two. The show ran until 1978 and spawned spin-offs Softly, Softly and Softly Softly Task Force. Today it is taken for granted that any police drama will show the tangled lives of the officers, even as they fight crime.
January anniversaries
- 
              The Six Wives of Henry VIII1 January 1970
- 
              The Brains Trust1 January 1941
- 
              The Archers1 January 1951
- 
              Z Cars2 January 1962
- 
              Trumpton3 January 1967
- 
              Open University3 January 1971
- 
              Camberwick Green3 January 1966
- 
              Final edition of The Listener published3 January 1991
- 
              Gardeners' World5 January 1968
- 
              A Question of Sport5 January 1970
- 
              Forces Programme7 January 1940
- 
              Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit10 January 1990
- 
              First in-vision television weather forecaster11 January 1954
- 
              The League of Gentlemen11 January 1999
- 
              Goodness Gracious Me12 January 1998
- 
              Listen with Mother16 January 1950
- 
              Life On Earth16 January 1979
- 
              First episode of ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Breakfast Time17 January 1983
- 
              Blankety Blank18 January 1979
- 
              The Week's Good Cause24 January 1926
- 
              Under Milk Wood25 January 1954
- 
              Television Dancing Club27 January 1948
- 
              Desert Island Discs29 January 1942
- 
              Newsnight30 January 1980
- 
              The State Funeral of Sir Winston Churchill30 January 1965
- 
              Alas Smith and Jones31 January 1984
