-
Alan Yentob
Alan Yentob (born 11 March 1947) is a British television executive, given the nickname Botney (Yentob spelled backwards) by the magazine Private Eye. He was born into a Jewish family of Iraqi descent in London, and was educated at the independent The King's School, Ely and Leeds University. After initially joining the BBC as a trainee in the BBC World Service in 1968, he has spent his entire professional career with the Corporation. Yentob has two children, Isabella and Jacob.
http://wn.com/Alan_Yentob -
Andrew Lloyd Webber
Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber, Baron Lloyd-Webber (born 22 March 1948) is an English composer of musical theatre. He started composing at the age of six, and published his first piece at the age of nine.
http://wn.com/Andrew_Lloyd_Webber -
Annie Leibovitz
Anna-Lou "Annie" Leibovitz (; born October 2, 1949) is an American portrait photographer.
http://wn.com/Annie_Leibovitz -
BBC Trust
The BBC Trust is the governing body of the British Broadcasting Corporation. It is operationally independent of BBC management and external bodies, and aims to act in the best interests of licence fee payers.
http://wn.com/BBC_Trust -
Bill Cotton
Sir William Frederick "Bill" Cotton, CBE (23 April 1928 – 11 August 2008) was a British television producer and executive, and the son of big-band leader Billy Cotton.
http://wn.com/Bill_Cotton -
Bryan Cowgill
Bryan Cowgill (27 May 1927 – 14 July 2008) was a senior British television executive. He was Head of Sport for BBC Television from 1963–1973, Controller of BBC One from 1973–1977, and Managing Director of Thames TV from 1977-1985.
http://wn.com/Bryan_Cowgill -
Cecil McGivern
Cecil McGivern CBE (22 May 1907, Newcastle, England – 30 January 1963, Buckinghamshire, England) was a British broadcasting executive, who initially worked for BBC Radio before transferring to BBC Television in the late 1940s.
http://wn.com/Cecil_McGivern -
Danny Cohen
Danny Cohen (Born 1974) is the Controller of BBC Three, the BBC's television channel for young audiences.
http://wn.com/Danny_Cohen -
Davina McCall
Davina Lucy Pascale McCall (born 16 October 1967) is a British television presenter and actress, most notable for her work on Channel 4's Big Brother reality television series.
http://wn.com/Davina_McCall -
Donald Baverstock
Donald Baverstock (January 18, 1924 – March 17, 1995) was a British television producer and executive, born in Cardiff, Wales. He initially worked for BBC Television in their Talks Department, where he was the Editor of the topical magazine programme Highlight and then co-devised and edited its more ambitious and better-remembered successor Tonight, which began in 1957.
http://wn.com/Donald_Baverstock -
Gerald Cock
Gerald Cock (1887 – 10 November 1973) was a British broadcasting executive, who initially worked for BBC Radio, before being made the Corporation’s very first Director of Television, in effect the very first Controller of the television channel initially known as the BBC Television Service but later renamed BBC1.
http://wn.com/Gerald_Cock -
Jay Hunt (BBC)
Jay Hunt (born Jacqueline Hunt in Sydney, Australia), is the present Controller of BBC One.
http://wn.com/Jay_Hunt_(BBC) -
John Logie Baird
John Logie Baird (13 August 1888 – 14 June 1946) was a Scottish engineer and inventor of the world's first practical, publicly demonstrated television system which was also the world's first fully electronic colour television tube. Although Baird's electromechanical system was eventually displaced by purely electronic systems (such as those of Philo Farnsworth), his early successes demonstrating working television broadcasts and his colour and cinema television work earn him a prominent place in television's invention.
http://wn.com/John_Logie_Baird -
Kenneth Adam
:For the film set designer and former fighter pilot, see Ken Adam
http://wn.com/Kenneth_Adam -
Lorraine Heggessey
Lorraine Heggessey (born November 16, 1956) is a British television producer and executive, currently the Chief Executive of the production company Talkback Thames. Prior to this, she was the first ever woman to be Controller of BBC One, the primary television channel of the British Broadcasting Corporation.
http://wn.com/Lorraine_Heggessey -
Maurice Gorham
Maurice Gorham (1902 – 9 August 1975) was an Irish journalist and broadcasting executive. After being educated in England at Stonyhurst College, Lancashire and later Balliol College, Oxford, he began working as a journalist on the London local newspaper Westminster Guardian and Weekly Westminster after he graduated in 1923.
http://wn.com/Maurice_Gorham -
Michael Peacock
Michael Peacock (born 1929) was a British television executive, who from 1963 until the spring of 1965 was the first ever Controller of BBC Two, the Corporation's second television channel.
http://wn.com/Michael_Peacock -
Norman Collins
Norman Collins born 3 October 1907, died 1982, was a British writer, and later a radio and television executive, who became one of the major figures behind the establishment of the Independent Television (ITV) network in the UK. This was the first organisation to break the BBC’s broadcasting monopoly when it began transmitting in 1955.
http://wn.com/Norman_Collins -
Peter Fincham
Peter Fincham (born 26 July 1956) is a British television producer and executive, currently the Director of Television for the ITV network. He was also formerly the Controller of BBC One, the primary television channel of the British Broadcasting Corporation, until his resignation on 5 October 2007, following criticism over the handling of the A Year with the Queen debacle.
http://wn.com/Peter_Fincham -
Petula Clark
Petula Clark, CBE (born 15 November 1932) is an English singer, actress, and composer whose career has spanned seven decades.
http://wn.com/Petula_Clark -
Robin Hood
Robin Hood is a heroic outlaw in English folklore. A highly skilled archer and swordsman, he is known for "robbing from the rich and giving to the poor," assisted by a group of fellow outlaws known as his "Merry Men." Traditionally Robin Hood and his men are depicted wearing Lincoln green clothes. The origin of the legend is claimed by some to have stemmed from actual outlaws, or from ballads or tales of outlaws.
http://wn.com/Robin_Hood -
Roly Keating
Roland "Roly" Keating (born 5 August 1961) is the current Director of Archive Content for the BBC.
http://wn.com/Roly_Keating -
Stuart Hood
Stuart Hood (born 17 December 1915) is a Scottish novelist, translator and a former British television producer and Controller of the BBC's most popular television network, BBC One. He was born in Edzell, Angus, Scotland.
http://wn.com/Stuart_Hood -
Zai Bennett
http://wn.com/Zai_Bennett
-
Set in Alexandra Park, Alexandra Palace was built in an area between Hornsey, Muswell Hill and Wood Green in North London, England, in 1873 as a public centre of recreation, education and entertainment and as North London's counterpart to the Crystal Palace in South London.
http://wn.com/Alexandra_Palace -
Birmingham ( , locally ) is a city and metropolitan borough in the West Midlands county of England. It is the most populous British city outside London with a population of 1,028,700 (2009 estimate), and lies at the heart of the West Midlands conurbation, the United Kingdom's second most populous Urban Area with a population of 2,284,093 (2001 census). Birmingham's metropolitan area, which includes surrounding towns to which it is closely tied through commuting, is also the United Kingdom's second most populous with a population of 3,683,000.
http://wn.com/Birmingham -
Blue Peter is a long-running BBC television programme for children. It is shown on CBBC, both in its BBC One programming block and on the CBBC Channel.
http://wn.com/Blue_Peter -
http://wn.com/breakfast_television -
Brookmans Park is a village, located in the civil parish of North Mymms, in Hertfordshire, southeast England. It is well known for its varied and interesting local history, including an ancient historic estate that used to exist within its boundaries, its BBC transmitter station, and excellent local amenities. The village website, [http://www.brookmans.com/ The Brookmans Park Newsletter] has more than 20 complete history books (and 40 in-depth features), as well as a half-hour video about the history of the area. Brookmans Park railway station is on the East Coast Mainline, operated by First Capital Connect.
http://wn.com/Brookmans_Park -
Croatia (, ; ), officially the Republic of Croatia (Croatian: Republika Hrvatska ), is a country in Central Europe and Southeastern Europe at the crossroads of the Pannonian Plain, the Balkans, and the Adriatic Sea. Its capital and largest city is Zagreb. Croatia borders Slovenia to the north, Hungary to the northeast, Bosnia and Herzegovina to the southeast, Serbia to the east, and Montenegro to the southeast.
http://wn.com/Croatia -
Long Acre is a street in central London, England. Starting from St. Martin's Lane it runs from west to east just north of Covent Garden piazza, one block north of Floral Street. The street was completed in the early 17th century. It was once known for its coach-makers, and later for its car dealers. On the corner of Mercer Street it is still possible to read the inscription "Armstrong Siddeley Connaught Coachworks".
http://wn.com/Long_Acre_(street) -
Northern Ireland (, Ulster Scots: Norlin Airlann) is one of the four countries of the United Kingdom. Situated in the north-east of the island of Ireland, it shares a border with the Republic of Ireland to the south and west. At the time of the 2001 UK Census, its population was 1,685,000, constituting about 30% of the island's total population and about 3% of the population of the United Kingdom.
http://wn.com/Northern_Ireland -
Ireland (, , , ), described as the Republic of Ireland (), is a state in northwest Europe with a population of almost 4.5 million people. It is a parliamentary democratic constitutional republic occupying approximately five-sixths of the island of Ireland, which was partitioned into two jurisdictions in 1921. It is bordered to the northeast by Northern Ireland, which is a part of the United Kingdom, and is otherwise surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean, the Irish Sea to the east, St George's Channel to the southeast, and the Celtic Sea to the south.
http://wn.com/Republic_of_Ireland -
Scotland (Scottish Gaelic: Alba) is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. Occupying the northern third of the island of Great Britain, it shares a border with England to the south and is bounded by the North Sea to the east, the Atlantic Ocean to the north and west, and the North Channel and Irish Sea to the southwest. In addition to the mainland, Scotland includes over 790 islands including the Northern Isles and the Hebrides.
http://wn.com/Scotland -
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (commonly known as the United Kingdom, the UK, or Britain) is a country and sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe. It is an island nation, spanning an archipelago including Great Britain, the northeastern part of the island of Ireland, and many smaller islands. Northern Ireland is the only part of the UK with a land border with another sovereign state, sharing it with the Republic of Ireland. Apart from this land border, the UK is surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean, the North Sea, the English Channel and the Irish Sea. Great Britain is linked to continental Europe by the Channel Tunnel.
http://wn.com/United_Kingdom -
Wales ( ; pronounced ) is a country that is part of the United Kingdom, bordered by England to its east and the Atlantic Ocean and Irish Sea to its west. It has an estimated population of three million and is officially bilingual with the Welsh and English languages having equal status. The Welsh language is an important element of Welsh culture. Its decline has reversed over recent years, with Welsh speakers estimated to be around 20% of the population of Wales.
http://wn.com/Wales -
White City is a place in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, to the north of Shepherd's Bush. Today, White City is home to the BBC Television Centre and BBC White City, and Loftus Road stadium, the home of football club Queens Park Rangers FC.
http://wn.com/White_City_London
- 1991
- 2010 FIFA World Cup
- 405-line
- 576i
- Alan Yentob
- Alexandra Palace
- Andrew Lloyd Webber
- Annie Leibovitz
- Astra 2D
- Athletics (sport)
- audio description
- BARB
- Bargain Hunt
- BBC
- BBC Breakfast
- BBC Four
- BBC HD
- BBC iPlayer
- BBC London News
- BBC News
- BBC News at One
- BBC News at Six
- BBC News at Ten
- BBC One Scotland
- BBC Online
- BBC Parliament
- BBC Proms
- BBC Scotland
- BBC Three
- BBC Trust
- BBC Two
- BBC2
- Belgacom TV
- Big Brother (UK)
- Bill Cotton
- Birmingham
- Blue Peter
- breakfast television
- Broadcasting House
- Brookmans Park
- Bryan Cowgill
- Cablecom
- Casualty (TV series)
- CBBC
- CBBC Channel
- CBeebies
- Cecil McGivern
- Channel 4
- Channel 5 (UK)
- chat show
- Christian
- Crimewatch
- Croatia
- Danny Cohen
- Davina (talk show)
- Davina McCall
- Doctor Who
- Donald Baverstock
- E4 (channel)
- Eastenders
- film
- Football League
- Football League Cup
- Formula 1
- Freesat
- Freeview (UK)
- Gavin & Stacey
- Gavin and Stacey
- Gerald Cock
- Going Live!
- Grand National
- HBO
- Holby City
- Hustle (TV series)
- image resolution
- Imagine (TV series)
- ITV
- ITV1
- Jasmine Bligh
- Jay Hunt (BBC)
- John Logie Baird
- Kenneth Adam
- laserdisc
- Late Kick Off
- Lime Grove Studios
- Little Britain
- Little Britain USA
- Live & Kicking
- Live at the Apollo
- London Marathon
- Long Acre (street)
- Lorraine Heggessey
- Luther (TV series)
- Martin J. O'Connor
- Match of the Day
- Maurice Gorham
- medium wave
- Merlin (TV series)
- Michael Grade
- Michael Jackson (TV)
- Michael Peacock
- Mickey Mouse
- monopoly
- Naxoo
- Neighbours
- newsreels
- NICAM
- Norman Collins
- Northern Ireland
- Numericable
- Olympic Games
- Omnibus (broadcast)
- Outnumbered
- Over the Rainbow
- PAL
- Panorama (TV series)
- Paul Fox (TV)
- Peter Fincham
- Petula Clark
- Portland Place
- Premier League
- QI
- radar
- RCA
- Republic of Ireland
- Rerun
- River City
- Robin Hood
- Roly Keating
- Rugby League
- Rugby Union
- Scotland
- SDTV
- simulcast
- Sky (UK & Ireland)
- Snooker
- Songs of Praise
- Spooks
- Sportscene
- stereo
- Stuart Hood
- subtitles
- Swisscom
- TalkTalk TV
- television channel
- television licence
- television station
- The Apprentice (UK)
- The One Show
- Top of the Pops
- Torchwood
- Total Wipeout
- transmitter
- UK Today
- United Kingdom
- UPC Ireland
- UPC Netherlands
- VHF
- Virgin Media
- Wales
- Watch with Mother
- Watchdog (TV series)
- White City, London
- World War II
- Zai Bennett
- Ziggo
BBC FOUR
- BBC Four
Select channel:
Language: english
Location: UK
All Channels
My Favorite Channels
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 4:05
- Published: 27 Sep 2006
- Uploaded: 29 Nov 2011
- Author: outrightunlawful
size: 5.0Kb
size: 4.9Kb
size: 4.2Kb
-
Iran files complaint over purported US drone
Al Jazeera
-
Defense Authorization Act Will Destroy The Bill Of Rights
WorldNews.com
-
Euro crisis summit: The night Europe changed
BBC News
-
Russians stage mass protests against Putin, polls
The Star
-
Israeli airstrikes hit Gaza civilians
Sydney Morning Herald
- 1080i
- 1991
- 2010 FIFA World Cup
- 405-line
- 576i
- Alan Yentob
- Alexandra Palace
- Andrew Lloyd Webber
- Annie Leibovitz
- Astra 2D
- Athletics (sport)
- audio description
- BARB
- Bargain Hunt
- BBC
- BBC Breakfast
- BBC Four
- BBC HD
- BBC iPlayer
- BBC London News
- BBC News
- BBC News at One
- BBC News at Six
- BBC News at Ten
- BBC One Scotland
- BBC Online
- BBC Parliament
- BBC Proms
- BBC Scotland
- BBC Three
- BBC Trust
- BBC Two
- BBC2
- Belgacom TV
- Big Brother (UK)
- Bill Cotton
- Birmingham
- Blue Peter
- breakfast television
- Broadcasting House
- Brookmans Park
- Bryan Cowgill
- Cablecom
- Casualty (TV series)
- CBBC
- CBBC Channel
- CBeebies
- Cecil McGivern
- Channel 4
- Channel 5 (UK)
- chat show
- Christian
- Crimewatch
- Croatia
- Danny Cohen
- Davina (talk show)
- Davina McCall
- Doctor Who
- Donald Baverstock
- E4 (channel)
size: 0.6Kb
size: 0.6Kb
size: 2.1Kb
size: 6.7Kb
size: 1.6Kb
size: 2.0Kb
size: 15.8Kb
Coordinates | 49°42′2″N20°25′36″N |
---|---|
name | BBC One |
logosize | 250px |
logofile | BBC One logo.svg |
logoalt | In large rounded sans-serif font, the lower-case word "one" is written in white on a red background. To the left in smaller letters, the letters "BBC" in solid white squares is written; the tops of the two words are aligned |
logocaption | The BBC One logo since 2006 |
launch | 2 November 1936 |
picture format | 576i (PAL)576i 16:9 (SDTV)1080i (HDTV) |
share | 21.0% |
share as of | June 2011 |
share source | BARB |
owner | BBC |
country | United Kingdom |
former names | BBC Television Service(2 November 1936 – 8 October 1960) BBC tv(8 October 1960 – 20 April 1964) BBC1(20 April 1964 – 3 October 1997) |
web | |
sister names | BBC TwoBBC ThreeBBC FourBBC NewsBBC ParliamentBBC HD |
terr serv 1 | Analogue |
terr chan 1 | Normally tuned to 1 (To be phased out nationwide by 2012) |
terr serv 2 | Freeview |
terr chan 2 | Channel 1Channel 50 (HD)(Currently being rolled out) |
sat serv 1 | Freesat |
sat chan 1 | Channel 101Channel 108 (HD)Channels 950–967 (regional variations) |
sat serv 2 | Sky |
sat chan 2 | Channel 101Channel 143 (HD)Channels 971–988 (regional variations) |
sat serv 3 | Sky (IRL) |
sat chan 3 | Channel 141 |
sat serv 4 | Astra 2D |
sat chan 4 | 10773H 22000 5/610847V 23000 8/9 (HD) |
cable serv 1 | Virgin Media |
cable chan 1 | Channel 101Channel 108 (HD) |
cable serv 2 | UPC Ireland |
cable chan 2 | Channel 108Channel 140 (HD) |
cable serv 3 | UPC Netherlands |
cable chan 3 | Channel 50 |
cable serv 4 | Ziggo (Netherlands) |
cable chan 4 | Channel 50 |
cable serv 5 | Numericable (Belgium) |
cable serv 6 | Naxoo (Switzerland) |
cable chan 6 | Channel 213 |
cable serv 7 | Cablecom (Switzerland) |
cable chan 7 | Channel 155 |
adsl serv 1 | TalkTalk TV |
adsl chan 1 | Channel 1 |
adsl serv 2 | Belgacom TV(Brussels) |
adsl chan 2 | Channel 67 |
adsl serv 3 | Belgacom TV(Flanders) |
adsl chan 3 | Channel 23 |
adsl serv 4 | Belgacom TV(Wallonia) |
adsl chan 4 | Channel 213 |
adsl serv 5 | Bluewin TV(Switzerland) |
online serv 1 | BBC Online |
online chan 1 | Watch live (UK only) |
online serv 2 | BBC iPlayer |
online chan 2 | Watch live (UK only) }} |
BBC One is the flagship television channel of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in the United Kingdom. It was launched on 2 November 1936 as the BBC Television Service, and was the world's first regular television service with a high level of image resolution. It was later renamed BBC tv until the launch of sister channel BBC Two in 1964, whereupon it was known as BBC1, with the current spelling adopted in 1997. The channel has an annual budget of £1.2 billion. Along with the BBC's other domestic television stations, and many European broadcasters (and some in Asia), it is funded principally by the television licence fee, and therefore shows uninterrupted programming with no commercial advertising at any time. It is currently the most watched television channel in the United Kingdom, ahead of its traditional rival for ratings leadership, ITV1.
The channel was named Channel of the Year at the 2007 Broadcast Awards.
The Current Channel Controller for BBC One is Danny Cohen, formerly controller of BBC Three. Cohen replaced Jay Hunt following her departure from the BBC in late 2010 to join Channel 4, taking up her new position in January 2011. BBC Vision chief Jana Bennett took temporary control of BBC One between Hunt's departure and Cohen's appointment. Cohen briefly held controller positions of both BBC One and BBC Three until former ITV digital channels head Zai Bennett was confirmed as new BBC Three controller; Bennett, in turn, was replaced at ITV by Angela Jain, who, like Danny Cohen, is a former channel controller of E4.
History
The early years
Baird Television made Britain's first television broadcast, on 30 September 1929 from its studio in Long Acre, London via the BBC's London transmitter, using the electromechanical system pioneered by John Logie Baird. This system used a vertically-scanned image of 30 lines — just enough resolution for a close-up of one person, and with a bandwidth low enough to use existing radio transmitters. Simultaneous transmission of sound and picture was achieved on 30 March 1930, by using the BBC's new twin transmitter at Brookmans Park. By late 1930, 30 minutes of morning programmes were broadcast Monday to Friday, and 30 minutes at midnight on Tuesdays and Fridays, after BBC radio went off the air. Baird broadcasts via the BBC continued until June 1932.
The BBC began its own regular television programming from the basement of Broadcasting House, London on 22 August 1932. The studio moved to expanded quarters at 16 Portland Place, London in February 1934, and continued broadcasting the 30-line images, carried by telephone line to the medium wave transmitter at Brookmans Park, until 11 September 1935, by which time advances in all-electronic television systems made the electromechanical broadcasts obsolete.
After a series of test transmissions and special broadcasts that began in August, regular BBC television broadcasts officially resumed on 1 October 1936, from a converted wing of Alexandra Palace in London, housing two studios, various scenery stores, make-up areas, dressing rooms, offices, and even the transmitter itself, now broadcasting on the VHF band. BBC television initially used two systems, on alternate weeks: the 240-line Baird intermediate film system and the 405-line Marconi-EMI system, each making the BBC the world's first regular high-definition television service, broadcasting Monday to Saturday from 15:00 to 16:00 and 21:00 to 22:00. The two systems were to run on a trial basis for six months; early television sets supported both resolutions. However, the Baird system, which used a mechanical camera for filmed programming and Farnsworth image dissector cameras for live programming, proved too cumbersome and visually inferior, and was dropped in February 1937.
Initially, the station's range was officially a 25-mile (40 km) radius of the Alexandra Palace transmitter—in practice, however, transmissions could be picked up a good deal further away, and on one occasion in 1938 were picked up by engineers at RCA in New York, who were experimenting with a British television set.
Wartime closure
On 1 September 1939, two days before Britain declared war on Germany, the station was unceremoniously taken off air with little warning. It was feared by the government that the VHF transmissions would act as a beacon to enemy aircraft homing in on London. Also, many of the television service's technical staff and engineers would be needed for the war effort, in particular on the RADAR programme. The last programme aired was a Mickey Mouse cartoon, Mickey's Gala Premiere (1933), which was followed by test transmissions and an announcement of the afternoon schedule, which did not air.According to figures from Britain's Radio Manufacturers Association, 18,999 television sets had been manufactured from 1936 to September 1939, when production was halted by the war.
Postwar
BBC Television returned on 7 June 1946 at 15:00. Jasmine Bligh, one of the original announcers, made the first announcement, saying, 'Good afternoon everybody. How are you? Do you remember me, Jasmine Bligh?'. The Mickey Mouse cartoon of 1939 was repeated 20 minutes later.Postwar broadcast coverage was extended to Birmingham in 1949 with the opening of the Sutton Coldfield transmitting station, and by the mid 1950s most of the country was covered.
Alexandra Palace was the home base of the channel until the early 1950s when the majority of production moved into Lime Grove Studios (closed 1991), then in 1960 to the purpose-built BBC Television Centre at White City, also in London, where the channel is still based.
Television News continued to use Alexandra Palace as its base — by early 1968 it had even converted one of its studios to colour — before moving to purpose-built colour facilities at Television Centre on 20 September 1969.
The BBC held a monopoly on television broadcasting in the United Kingdom until the first ITV station was launched in 1955. The competition quickly forced the channel to change its identity and priorities following a large reduction in its audience figures.
The station was renamed BBC1 when BBC2 was launched in April 1964. At midnight on 15 November 1969, simultaneously with ITV and two years after BBC2, the channel officially began 625-line PAL colour programming with a broadcast of a concert by Petula Clark. In the weeks leading up to 15 November, BBC1 had unofficially transmitted the occasional programme in colour to test its system. Stereo audio transmissions, using the NICAM digital stereo sound format began on BBC1 at some point in 1986, as with BBC2, and were gradually phased in across BBC TV output, although it took until August 31 1991 for the service to begin officially. During this time, both commercial analogue broadcasters, ITV and Channel 4 had officially begun stereo transmissions using the BBC-developed NICAM system.
Wide-screen programming was introduced on digital platforms in 1998.
In terms of audience share, the most successful period for BBC1 was under Bryan Cowgill between 1973–1977, when the channel achieved an average audience share of 45 per cent. This period is still regarded by many as a golden age of the BBC's output, with the BBC achieving a very high standard across its entire range of series, serials, plays, light entertainment and documentaries.
Since the launch of multichannel television, BBC One's share of the viewers has declined, although not as fast as ITV's, leading the channel to once again become the most watched in the last decade.
By the 1980s, the channel had launched the first breakfast television programmes and returned to its previous form under the controller of the channel at the time, Michael Grade.
2000s
Joining the channel as Controller in 2005, Peter Fincham oversaw the commissioning of several successful BBC One programmes including Robin Hood (2006–2009), Jane Eyre (2006) and How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?, which was followed by similar shows Any Dream Will Do and I'd Do Anything because of its success. His first full year in charge of the channel saw a year-on-year growth in the audience share, with a rise from 22.2% in August 2005 to 23.6% in August 2006.Fincham also directly initiated the creation of both early evening current affairs and lifestyle programme The One Show (2006–present), now to run all but two weeks of the year, and the prime time chat show Davina (2006), the latter being designed as a vehicle for Big Brother presenter Davina McCall. However, Davina was a critical and ratings disaster, which Fincham subsequently admitted was personally his fault, although he defended the strategy of experimenting with the BBC One schedule. He continued with this experimentation in January 2007, when he moved the current affairs series Panorama from its Sunday night slot back to the prime time Monday evening slot from which it had been removed in 2000, most likely in response to a demand from the Board of Governors of the BBC for the channel to show more current affairs programming in prime time.
Fincham's judgement was again called into question, this time by The Telegraph, for his decision to spend £1.2 million replacing the BBC 'Rhythm & Movement' idents, which had been introduced by his predecessor Lorraine Heggessey several years earlier, with the BBC One 'Circle' idents, a set of eight ten-second films, some of which were shot abroad in locations such as Mexico and Croatia. Fincham later found himself having to publicly defend the £18 million salary that the BBC paid presenter Jonathan Ross in 2006, although Ross's BBC One work — primarily consisting of Friday Night with Jonathan Ross — formed only part of his overall BBC commitment.
In May 2007, Fincham took the decision to drop the Australian soap opera Neighbours from BBC One after 21 years on the channel, when its producers significantly raised the price they wanted the BBC to pay for it in a bidding war. Fincham commented that it was 'a big loss', but that BBC One would not pay 'the best part of £300 m'. Neighbours left the channel in spring 2008 to move to Channel 5.
Fincham was involved in a further controversy in July 2007, when he was accused of misleading BBC One viewers. The incident involved a clip from forthcoming documentary A Year with the Queen which was shown to journalists during a press conference. It apparently showed the Queen storming out of a session with American photographer Annie Leibovitz over a disagreement about what she should wear, but the BBC subsequently admitted that the scenes used in the trailer had been edited out of their correct order, meaning that a false impression was given. Fincham admitted the error, but rejected calls that he should resign from his position as a result. His future was deemed uncertain following critical comments from BBC Trust Chairman Sir Michael Lyons and he resigned on 5 October 2007.
Programming
In 2010, the top five watched programmes, at their peaks, according to BARB were as follows: #Eastenders 16,410,000 #World Cup 2010 England Vs Germany 15,810,000 #Strictly Come Dancing 14,280,000 #Come Fly With Me 12,470,000 #Doctor Who 12,110,000
1 temporarily replaced by Martin J. O'Connor 1979–1980 2 had not worked for the BBC before appointment
8.9% of peak programming (30.8% overall) is repeats, with a peak target of 5% in 2008/2009. Programming on this channel costs an average of £162,900 per hour.
With a mission to provide big programmes for all licence-fee payers, it has the main sport, news, current affairs and documentaries. It has historically broadcast children's programmes (now taken from CBBC and CBeebies). The channel remains one of the principal television channels in the United Kingdom and provides 2,508 annual hours of news and weather, 1,880 hours of factual and learning, 1,036 hours of drama, 672 hours of children's, 670 hours of sport, 654 hours of film, 433 hours of entertainment, 159 hours of current affairs, 92 hours of religion and 82 hours of music and arts.
News and current affairs
2,508 annual hours of news and weather (293 in peak, 1,049 of BBC News simulcasts) are provided by regular news programmes Breakfast, the News at One, news at Six and the News at Ten (the most-watched UK news programme), each including BBC regional news programmes. All of the three main news bulletins have a lead over their rival programmes on ITV and other terrestrial or cable channels. During the weekend period, three separate bulletins around these three time periods are broadcast and vary in length from 10–25 minutes and are known simply as BBC News. BBC One has also taken overnight simulcasts from the BBC News channel since 1997; the latter in turn simulcasts virtually all of the regular BBC One bulletins.Each year 159 hours of current affairs programmes are broadcast on BBC One, including Panorama and Watchdog. Politics is also covered, with programmes such as Question Time and This Week. Crimewatch, a programme appealing for help in unsolved crimes, is broadcast monthly.
Factual and learning
Whilst nature documentaries such as Planet Earth are the most familiar part of the 1,880 annual BBC One hours of factual and learning, this also includes lifestyle-format daytime programmes and a number of reality television formats and the One Life strand.
Drama
BBC One is the BBC's home of drama, with 1,036 hours each year. There are four half-hour episodes of EastEnders each week(not shown on Wednesdays), with an omnibus episode at the weekend, plus hospital dramas Casualty and Holby City. In recent years the BBC's innovative dramas such as Doctor Who, Spooks, Luther, Hustle, Waterloo Road, Robin Hood, Torchwood, Life on Mars, Ashes to Ashes, and Merlin have defeated ITV in the ratings. In May 2009, BBC One broadcast a mini-series called Moving On. Other popular dramas on BBC One include crime dramas such as New Tricks (TV series), a programme of which even episode repeats have beaten ITV ratings on numerous occasions.
Children's
BBC One has traditionally been the home to children's television, as children's programming such as Blue Peter had been broadcast on the channel prior to the Children's BBC strand, and sections such as Watch with Mother airing previously on the channel. This became more pronounced with the launch of Children's BBC, later to be renamed CBBC. This new strand broadcast primarily on BBC One in the late afternoons with Saturday and Sunday mornings also proving a notable time slot for children's programmes with Saturday morning programming, such as Going Live! and Live & Kicking, each lasting two to three hours being most notable. The launch in 2002 of dedicated digital channels for this content — CBBC and CBeebies — did not affect this provision. The channel broadcasts 672 hours of children's programmes each year, over two hours each day, mostly in the late afternoon on weekdays, as Saturday morning programming was switched to BBC Two in 2006 following a three month trial.
Sport
BBC One broadcasts 765 hours of sport each year. This includes Premier League football highlights on Match of the Day, tennis from Wimbledon, horse racing such as the Grand National, the London Marathon plus other international athletics and swimming events, the Olympic Games, Rugby League, Rugby Union, Snooker tournaments, and more. The BBC shows The Football League Show for Football League highlights and League Cup coverage. Formula 1 motor racing is also shown, Saturday's qualifying and Sunday's main race.On 18 January 2010, the BBC introduced a local Football League highlight show called Late Kick Off. The BBC also shows the League Cup final, and show 10 Football League matches live from the 2009/10 season. The BBC showed the 2010 World Cup. The group stage matches were split with ITV, and the BBC got first pick of matches from the second round.
Film
British and international films are broadcast for 654 hours each year on BBC One. This is mainly late-night fillers with some box office hits at Christmas and holiday periods. Films are sometimes used to fill the Saturday evening slot when no sport or entertainment programmes are due to be aired.
Entertainment
433 hours of entertainment are broadcast by BBC One each year. This includes game shows like National Lottery, Total Wipeout, quiz shows like Have I Got News for You, several events and talent shows such as Strictly Come Dancing and the Eurovision Song Contest, and chat shows such as The Graham Norton Show. Often each year, there are programmes trying to find a star for, usually, an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical. The latest of these shows ended 22 May 2010 and was Over the Rainbow.
Religion
The annual 92 hours of religious programming comprise weekly editions of recorded Songs of Praise, Christian services and other shows from independent production companies. Mentorn Oxford produces Heart and Soul, described as “a new multifaith programme featuring a panel and a studio audience”, followed by Life from the Loft which is made by the Leeds-based company True North. In 2005 BBC One was criticised for reducing the amount of religious programming, previously 101 hours per year.
Comedy
BBC One broadcasts many comedy programmes, often on Friday nights. These include the highly successful Little Britain, no longer in production (though Little Britain USA is syndicated from American network HBO), as well as multi-award winning Gavin and Stacey, which were both transferred from BBC Three. One of the most popular BBC comedy shows was Only Fools and Horses. Current comedies showing on the channel are stand-up comedy show Live at the Apollo, sitcom Outnumbered, and satirical quiz show Have I Got News For You. Saturday evening is also a popular slot for a comedy show such as Michael McIntyre's Comedy Roadshow and The Armstrong and Miller Show.
Music and arts
As the weekly popular music chart programme Top of the Pops was axed (except for the Christmas Day edition), BBC One now broadcasts only 82 hours of music and arts each year. The majority of this is the Alan Yentob fronted Imagine and classical music concerts such as the BBC Proms.
Daytime
BBC One's daytime line-up was a major factor in it overtaking ITV as the most popular channel in 2000, a position it has held ever since. The morning daytime line-up consists of lifestyle shows, such as Homes Under the Hammer and Bargain Hunt, the afternoons contain drama with daily soap Doctors and classic US drama, such as Diagnosis: Murder. Sometimes a drama such as Land Girls is shown in the afternoons. From 15:05 until 17:05 is the CBeebies/CBBC broadcasting strand, with its own visual identity. Historically, BBC One's most popular daytime programme was Neighbours, with audience figures approaching five million. From 11 February 2008 BBC One dropped Neighbours and the programme is now broadcast on Channel 5. In its place the quiz show The Weakest Link, moved from BBC Two.
Quotas
28% of "qualifying hours" are made by independent production companies (statutory target is 25%). 99% of peak hours programmes are original productions (target 90%), as are 82% of all hours (target 70%).Some of the channel's most popular programmes, such as Match of the Day, Have I Got News for You, QI, The Apprentice, Gavin and Stacey, Torchwood and Little Britain originally started off on other BBC channels, and moved to BBC One because of their popularity.
Productions
For the first fifty years of its existence, with the exception of films and imported programmes from countries such as the United States and Australia, almost all the channel's output was produced by the BBC's in-house production departments. This changed following the Broadcasting Act 1990, which required that 25% of the BBC's television output be out-sourced to independent production companies. By 2004 many popular BBC One shows were made for the channel by independents, but the in-house production departments continue to contribute heavily to the schedule.
Presentation
BBC One's identity has been symbolised by a globe shown on its idents for most of its existence. In 1962 this was represented as a map of the UK shown between programmes, but in 1963 the globe appeared, changing in style and appearance over the next 39 years.
Regional variations
BBC One has individual continuity and opt-outs for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Each variant maintains the BBC One logo with the addition of the country name beneath it.In England, each region has an individual regional news and current affairs programme opt-out as well as a limited amount of continuity. During these opt-outs, the region name is displayed as with the national variations, beneath the main channel logo. UK Today, a news programme, was shown nationally to digital viewers in place of regional programmes when they were unavailable to broadcast on analogue television. The programme was discontinued in 2002 and replaced by a transmission of BBC London News until all BBC regions were made available digitally.
BBC One Scotland has the greatest level of variation from the generic network, owing to BBC Scotland scheduling Scottish programming on the main BBC Scotland channel, rather than on BBC Two. BBC One Scotland variations include the soap opera River City and the football programme Sportscene, the inclusion of which causes network programming to be displaced or replaced.
BBC One Wales was considered a separate channel by the BBC as early as its launch in the mid-1960s, appearing as BBC Wales.
Subtitles service
The BBC announced in May 2008 that it had achieved its aim for all programming to have subtitles for viewers with hearing difficulties. The BBC also offers audio description on some popular BBC One programmes for visually impaired-viewers. The percentage of the BBC's total television output with audio description available is 10%, having been increased from 8% in 2008.
High-definition
BBC One HD, a simulcast of BBC One in high-definition (HD), launched on 3 November 2010 at 19:00. The channel simulcasts a network version of BBC One in High Definition, but with no regional news programmes. The channel carries HD versions of programmes including Holby City, The One Show, Strictly Come Dancing, The Apprentice, The Weakest Link, Doctor Who and QI. EastEnders was also made available in HD as from Christmas Day 2010. All programmes still made in standard-definition are upscaled on the channel and it is intended that by 2012 the vast majority of the channel's output will be in high-definition.
BBC One HD is available on all digital television platforms offering HD channels – Freesat, Freeview HD, Sky (excluding the ROI), UPC Ireland and Virgin Media. It is available in addition to the existing BBC HD channel, which continues to broadcast HD programmes from the BBC's other television channels. The BBC Trust admitted that technical and financial constraints prevent regional variations, which forces the channel off-air during regional news programmes and other regional broadcasts.
The BBC announced on 6 June 2011, that the national variations of BBC One Northern Ireland, BBC One Scotland and BBC One Wales, would launch in 2012.
See also
Notes and references
External links
Category:1936 establishments in the United Kingdom Category:BBC television channels in the United Kingdom Category:English-language television stations Category:Television channels and stations established in 1936 Category:Television channels in the United Kingdom
ar:بي بي سي وان ca:BBC One cs:BBC One cy:BBC One da:BBC One de:BBC One es:BBC One fr:BBC One gd:BBC a h-aon gl:BBC One ko:BBC One hi:बीबीसी वन id:BBC One is:BBC One it:BBC One ms:BBC One nl:BBC One ja:BBC One no:BBC One nn:BBC One pl:BBC One pt:BBC One ru:BBC One simple:BBC One sh:BBC One fi:BBC One sv:BBC One zh:英國廣播公司第一台This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.