New British Broadcasting Station

It also monitored the BBC, and broadcast propaganda by native English speakers, being where some British collaborators worked.

[1][unreliable source] Although the NBBS never typically descended into rudeness or coarse language, being largely unerringly polite until the end, the content of the broadcasts was not as pleasant as the delivery.

There were ninety minutes daily, and the station concluded broadcast with God Save the King; it was an intentional parody of the BBC Home Service.

[8] The station ran topics such as a belief of international Jewish finance and continental Freemasonry were pursuing a policy of world domination, by wars and revolution.

[citation needed] Once the war had finished, anyone that was found to have willingly broadcast for the NBBS faced prosecution under the Defence Regulations and lengthy prison sentences.