Coordinates | 40°42′15.0″N73°55′4.0″N |
---|---|
name | Sky1 |
logofile | Sky1 logo 2011.svg |
logosize | 250px |
launch | 26 April 1982 |
share | 1.0% |
share as of | July 2011 |
share source | BARB |
owner | British Sky Broadcasting |
picture format | 576i (16:9 and 4:3) (SDTV),1080i (HDTV) |
former names | Satellite Television (1982–1984),Sky Channel (1984–1989),Sky One (1989–2008) |
slogan | Blockbuster entertainment |
country | United Kingdom, Ireland |
sister names | Challenge,Pick TV,Sky2,Sky Arts,Sky Atlantic,Sky Living,Sky Livingit,Sky Living Loves,Sky Movies,Sky Movies Box Office,Sky News,Sky Sports,Sky Sports News |
sat serv 1 | Sky |
sat chan 1 | Channel 106,Channel 106 (HD Customers) Channel 170 (Standard definition channel for HD Customers) |
cable serv 1 | Virgin Media |
cable chan 1 | Channel 121,Channel 122 (HD) |
cable serv 2 | UPC Ireland |
cable chan 2 | Channel 114 |
cable serv 3 | Smallworld Cable |
cable chan 3 | Channel 106 |
adsl serv 1 | TalkTalk TV |
adsl chan 1 | Channel 35 |
online serv 1 | Sky Go |
online chan 1 | Watch live |
web | sky.com/sky1 }} |
The channel first launched on 26 April 1982 as Satellite Television, and is the fourth-oldest TV channel in the United Kingdom, behind BBC One (2 November 1936), ITV (22 September 1955) and BBC Two (20 April 1964). S4C and Channel 4 begin over 6 months later on the 1 and 2 November 1982 respectively.
In the United Kingdom the channel is available on digital satellite via Sky on channel 106 as well as through digital cable via Virgin Media and as well as through IPTV via Sky Go and TalkTalk TV. In Ireland the channel is available on Sky Ireland on channel 106, UPC Ireland on channel 114 and Magnet Networks.
Sky1 listings include some very popular broadcasts—many imported from North America—including 24, The X-Files, Stargate (SG1, SGA & SGU), Caprica, Battlestar Galactica, Bones, Lost, Fringe, Prison Break, House, The Simpsons, and Lie to Me.
However, at first the station struggled financially, due to disappointing ratings in the countries in which it was officially available, which in turn lead to insufficient advertising revenue and increasing difficulty of covering the high transmission costs, and by the second half of 1983, the station's ex-ITV management realised that they "could not capture Europe on the budget of Border Television", and put up the majority of the station's shares (approximately 65%, subsequently increased to 82%) for sale. It would be Rupert Murdoch, who described cable and satellite television as being "the most important single advance since Caxton invented the printing press" and saw it as the ideal way into making his definitive breakthrough into the world's television industry, that would buy the shares (through his News International conglomerate) for the symbolic price of £1 plus outstanding debts. Eventually, Murdoch would buy the remaining shares of the company, taking full control.
Murdoch and the new management he put in charge of the channel changed the channel's programming mix greatly, and in January 1984 renamed the channel Sky Channel. The channel among other things incorporated a big amount of American imports to its schedules, and also increased the quantity produced of home grown programmes, including Sky Trax which covered European music, and children's programmes like Fun Factory and The DJ Kat Show, many of which came not only from Sky's own studios in Central London (having already abandoned the Molinare facilities by then), but also included programmes produced in the Netherlands by John de Mol's production company. Also, the new management adopted a more aggressive policy to reach an increasing number of cable households throughout Europe. Shortly after the channel's relaunch, the first cable system in the United Kingdom to incorporate it was Swindon Cable. In Ireland, Sky Channel started to become widely available among cable systems in around 1987.
Murdoch's changes made the channel the most successful of the early cable and satellite stations that launched in Europe in that period, and it gained very good ratings in those countries with a high penetration of cable television, such as the Benelux and Nordic countries. In Britain (where cable television, although already having a notable number of subscribers, had not yet developed as much as in Central and Northern Europe), market research gave it 13% audience share in cable homes, surpassing both BBC2 and Channel 4 in those homes, with its children's programming (the station's then most successful field) increasing to a share of 22.4% (similar to the programmes seen on both Children's BBC and Children's ITV). However Sky 1 Popularity has fallen and the current viewing shares are below 1%. Some of Sky's special programmes, mainly WWF wrestling specials, managed to surpass both BBC1 and ITV among cable audiences. Even still, the channel continued to be a loss-making enterprise, losing £10 million in 1987. In contrast to the station's founders, Murdoch had pockets deep enough to sustain the operation even though it still failed to gain a profit despite its success.
On 8 June 1988, Murdoch announced at a press conference his plans to expand Sky's service to four channels, thus creating the Sky Television network. Sky Channel alongside the other three channels would move to the Astra satellite system (intended to direct-to-home reception), and the new network would centre its operations more specifically to the UK. (Up to then, Sky had from its initial satellite moved to the ECS-F1 (Eutelsat I-F4) satellite aiming at a pan-European audience).
On 5 February 1989, the Sky Television Network (Sky Channel, Sky News, Sky Movies and Eurosport) was launched, hence the move to the Astra 1A satellite was made effective. At the same time, prime-time broadcasts to European cable operators ended, being replaced by Eurosport, a joint venture between Sky and the European Broadcasting Union, and aimed at a pan-European audience (like Sky Channel had up to then).
Initially, Sky Channel's programming remained much the same (children's programmes, soaps, and US action series), except for a number of new game shows and a few international travel documentaries. Another notable programme that also came with the relaunch was Sky By Day, Sky TV's variation on ITV's more popular This Morning, hosted by ex-Radio One DJ Tony Blackburn (who had moved to commercial radio by then) and ex-Magpie presenter Jenny Hanley. The show had a mix of entertainment, gossip, fashion, etc. Yet it was noticeably low budget and had a small fan base.
On 30 July 1989 the channel was renamed Sky One and confirmed its broadcasting to Britain and Ireland only. But it was not until 1990–91 that it begin to acquire more recent programming, an early success being Moonlighting, which the BBC had previously screened but not repeated. Sky One also picked up some programming (and more importantly, advertisers) from its merger with BSB's Galaxy.
After many years in the clear, on 1 September 1993 Sky One was encrypted as part of the Sky Multichannels subscription package, and could no longer be viewed outside England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland without exporting a box, or receiving it over cable (although it had already been encrypted for a while since its original launch and first went in the clear in around 1987). It continued to be the most-watched satellite channel in Britain and Ireland, a position it held for most of the 1990s, with many first-run US imports such as The Simpsons (which traditionally has been the channel's main selling-point, remaining a satellite exclusive until it finally made its terrestrial television appearance on BBC2 in 1996), Friends, Frasier, Seinfeld, ER and The X-Files, as well as some older programmes such as the various Star Trek series, Hill Street Blues, M*A*S*H*, and Lucille Ball's various comedy series.
The success of the channel lead to the launch on 1 September 1996 of a companion channel, Sky 2, but it was not a success and closed after just a day behind one year, on 31 August 1997. In contrast to the Sky2 that was later relaunched, this channel featured even more first-run programmes, and it broadcast only at night, from 19.00 (7.00 pm) to 06.00 (6.00 am).
In 2000, a dedicated feed of Sky One for Ireland was launched. For most of this Irish feed's existence, the only difference between it and the United Kingdom feed has been differing commercials and programme promotions.
On 9 December 2002, Sky One launched their new logo along with new idents. Sky One again gained a sister channel, Sky One Mix, which was intended as a "catch-up" channel, screening repeats of key Sky One programmes later in the same week.
In June 2003, the channel started broadcasting in 16:9 widescreen. However all TV commercials were broadcast in 4:3 until November 2005, because they were played off the same servers for all Sky channels, many of which were not broadcast in widescreen.
On 21 September 2004, Sky One Mix was subsequently renamed as Sky Mix.
On 31 October 2005, Sky Mix was renamed as Sky Two with the launch of a second sister channel Sky Three.
'Sky One' was rebranded as 'Sky1' on 31 August 2008 at 18:00, with presentational elements featuring blue gem shards as 'solids' to fit the element theme also used by Sky2 and Sky3 (which use 'liquids' and 'gases' respectively in their presentational elements). At launch there were four idents: "Bones", "Whack", "Twister" and "Boxes".
On 1 February 2011, Sky unveiled new presentation for many of it channels – Sky1 being no exception. The idea behind the idents is reflecting everyday life, the sequences are filmed in typical meeting places with people coming together having fun, whilst making up part of the scene is giant mirror-finished '1' icon.
Sky have stated that they intend to increase the amount of HD content they show, and hoped that by the end of 2008, two thirds of all prime time shows, and 90% of their own original commissions, would be in HD. There was also a new Sky1 HD logo which was introduced along with the rebrand on 31 August 2008.
On 1 October 2010, Sky1 HD launched on Virgin Media channel 122, with Sky2 moving to channel 123 and Sky3 (now Pick TV) moving to channel 180 on 22 September 2010, to make way for the new channel.
The Virgin Media predecessor Telewest was involved in a similar situation in late 2004 when negotiations for renewed carriage of the Nickelodeon channels broke down. Telewest was unwilling to pay extra to keep the channels and preferred to simply drop them. Other Viacom owned channels remained such as MTV and Paramount Comedy 1. The reaction to this by customers was fairly large and many left the provider to rival Sky, others were retained as Telewest offered them a free upgrade to the Disney Channel for periods of between one and three months, others were reportedly offered upgrades to Sky Movies packages in a desperate attempt to keep them from leaving. The Nickelodeon channels returned to the Telewest platform on 12 February 2005 following successful renegotiations in Nickelodeon's favour.
At the beginning of March 2008 the two companies were reported to have resumed discussions over the dispute. Virgin chief executive Neil Berkett was reported as saying they had "continued interest in securing Sky basics back on our platform". The resumed talks had followed shortly after both Virgin and BSkyB had launched appeals against a recent Competition Appeal Tribunal ruling on BSkyB's 17.9% stake in ITV plc.
On 4 November 2008, a carriage deal between BSkyB and Virgin Media channels was reached and BSkyB's channels were available on Virgin's cable service from 13 November 2008. The Sky basic channels were spread across each tier of Virgin's cable TV service: Sky3 and Sky News were made available in the lowest M tier; Sky Sports News joined the M+ tier; Sky1 and Sky2 were made available in the L tier; and Sky Arts 1, Sky Arts 2, Sky Real Lives and Sky Real Lives 2 joined the XL tier.
Sky1 was also the original home to the United Kingdom's first run showings of episodes of ER and Friends, for seasons 4–6 of both shows (Channel 4 had shown Seasons 1–3 first), giving Sky1 some of the highest ratings for any satellite channel. In 2000, 2.8 million viewers watched an episode of Friends, the highest rated show on any satellite channel. However when Channel 4 launched their own digital sister channel E4 they outbid Sky1 for exclusive first run rights to both shows. However, Sky1 still held the repeat rights for the early seasons of both shows for several years.
Sky1 previously broadcast WWE (formally World Wrestling Federation (WWF)) programming, before moving it all to Sky Sports 3. Sky1 currently broadcasts The WWE Experience, a one-hour round-up of Raw, SmackDown and NXT programming and WWE Superstars.
Sky1 occasionally screens older 20th Century Fox films such as Die Hard as part of its evening schedule, although they are shown with ad breaks, unlike films on premium film channels.
Programmes that have received their United Kingdom premiere screenings on Sky1 include:
It also screens many "reality" shows such as Cruise with Stelios, Road Wars, Shock Treatment, World's Deadliest Gangs, Glenn Martin DDS, World of Pain, Road Raja, Ibiza Uncovered, Cirque de Celebrité and the most recent series Hairspray: The School Musical. It also recently has received success with entertainment science shows Brainiac: Science Abuse and spin-offs, Brainiac: History Abuse and Brainiac's Test Tube Baby and also Mission Implausible. Less successful shows include Harry Enfield's Brand Spanking New Show.
Sky1 have also commissioned a number of game shows including Blockbusters. The most recent game show is from Mark Burnett, Are You Smarter Than a 10-Year Old, based on a United States format. On 30 January 2008, Sky One announced plans to bring back the UK 1990s game show Gladiators which was subsequently cancelled in 2010.
Live continuity announcements air each evening, in 2009 they were voiced by announcers Dave Kelly, Faye Bamford and Philippa Collins. In 2010 three new continuity announcers were hired, Katie Morton, Katie Hudson and Paul Daniels, replacing all the previous announcers. In 2011, two new part time announcers were hired. . During the day pre-recorded announcements air, promoting shows from all the different Sky channels.
Category:BSkyB television channels Category:Television channels and stations established in 1982
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