Score With The Scaffold was a BBC children's programme, which started in 1970. It starred the pop group The Scaffold. The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is the national publicly funded broadcaster of the United Kingdom. ... 1970 was a common year starting on Thursday. ... The Scaffold were a trio from Liverpool, England consisting of Mike McGear (Michael McCartney, brother of Paul), Roger McGough and John Gorman. ...
It was a quiz programme, although interspersed with various material including musical numbers and sketches. The BBC presumably did not regard it as a great success, since it only ran for two series, and the format was substantially revised between the first and second series. In the first series The Scaffold presented it alone, and they asked questions which the audience were supposed to answer. In the second series they brought in Wendy Padbury as co-presenter, and it was a contest between two groups of children. Wendy Padbury in 1993. ...
Scaffolding, for use with exterior work on multi-floored buildings, that is suspended from the building and can be raised and lowered.
Scaffolding towers, not attached to a wall but freestanding, which support a platform section between them, allowing the platform to be raised and lowered.
Type if scaffolding which utilizes metal sections, which are attached to each other and may be stacked as high as needed for work on a high-rise building but becomes less practical at extremely high levels.
The Scaffold were a trio from Liverpool, England consisting of Mike McGear (Michael McCartney, brother of Paul), Roger McGough and John Gorman.
They transferred to Island Records in the 1970s and released one album, Fresh Liver, before metamorphosing into the expanded line-up of Grimms, with the likes of Neil Innes and Andy Roberts.
They also had a children's television series Score With The Scaffold in 1970 and provided the music to a TV advertising campaign heralding the introduction of decimal currency to the UK in 1971.