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SF Short Story - Panel Game

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ArranBrown | 22:26 Fri 10th Dec 2010 | Arts & Literature
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Can anybody remind me who the author of the above story is? It was written in the 1950s but is remarkably prescient w.r.t. 'reality' TV. Scenario - television is used to control the masses. Each social class watches their designated channel, and all the time. Advertisements are personalised. Mysterious stranger visits home of ordinary (Green Star) couple - talks subversion to wife, who admits, 'I hate the telly.' It then appears that she has been 'had', as the interview was being broadcast on the White Star (intellectual' channel, which had a habit of making its viewers the subject of the programmes, in this case a panel game. But the mysterious stranger really is trying to foment a revolt against 'Great Mother Telly', and unseen by the cameras he has handed our heroine (Martha?) a device to jam the television signals, which she attaches to her husband's personal transport.
The story begins begins something like, 'Snow fell, courtesy of ...' and then comes a manufacturer's name. It ends along the lines of, 'Poor Rick - but he would never know. Quickly she fitted the anti-telly suppressor to Rick's helic.'

It is a funny SF story but extremely relevant to today's culture, which deserves to be more widely known. I would like to get a copy of it.
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It's on here somewhere but I can't search an individual page on my iPhone
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Thank you, Count - now I know it's by Brian Aldiss that will help me track down a copy, I hope.

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