E4 (channel)

E4
E4 logo
Launched 18 January 2001
Owned by Channel 4 Television Corporation
Picture format 16:9 576i SDTV
1080i HDTV
Audience share 1.2%
0.6% (+1)
(August 2011, BARB)
Country United Kingdom
Sister channel(s) Channel 4,
Film4,
More4,
4Music,
Kerrang!,
Kiss,
Magic,
Q,
Smash Hits!,
The Box
Timeshift service E4 +1
Website www.e4.com
Availability
Terrestrial
Freeview Channel 28
Channel 29 (+1)
Satellite
Freesat Channel 122
Channel 123 (+1)
Sky Channel 136
Channel 137 (+1)
Channel 136 (HD Customers)
Sky Ireland Channel 136
Channel 137 (+1)
Channel 215 (HD)
Astra 2D 10729V 22000 5/6
Cable
Virgin Media Channel 144
Channel 145 (HD)
Channel 146 (+1)
UPC Ireland Channel 112
Channel 113 (+1)
Smallworld Cable Channel 139
Channel 140 (+1)
Cablecom (Switzerland) Channel 164 (CH-D)
IPTV
TalkTalk TV Channel 14
Internet television
TVCatchup Watch live (UK only)
Watch live (+1) (UK only)

E4 is a channel on British digital television, launched as a pay-TV companion to Channel 4 on 18 January 2001. The "E" stands for entertainment, and the channel is mainly aimed at the lucrative 15–35 age group. Programming includes US imports such as The O.C., Smallville, Veronica Mars, The Cleveland Show, Glee, The Sopranos, Everwood, What About Brian?, Desperate Housewives, How I Met Your Mother, 90210, Gilmore Girls, One Tree Hill, Scrubs, Rules of Engagement, The Big Bang Theory and formerly Friends. Other programming includes British shows such as Shameless, Hollyoaks, Skins, The Inbetweeners and Misfits. Some of the imports, e.g. Desperate Housewives and Ugly Betty are screened on E4 up to one week ahead of their Channel 4 broadcasts. Its most successful broadcast to date was on 11 October 2010 when an episode of The Inbetweeners pulled in over 3.7 million viewers.[1] E4 uses the voiceover of Peter Dickson to advertise its programmes.

Contents

History

On 16 December 2004 Channel 4 announced that the subscription channel would return to digital terrestrial television. From its launch until the closure of ITV Digital it was available as a bonus subscription channel. It became part of the Top Up TV subscription scheme until 27 May 2005, when the channel became available on Freeview, with the potential to increase advertising revenue by attracting a larger audience.

E4 was also available as part of the basic Sky satellite subscription channel package, due to a long term contract with BSkyB it only became free-to-air in 2008. This change happened on 6 May 2008 and the channel joined Freesat alongside with More4.

In May 2005 E4 introduced "First Look", showing episodes of popular programmes such as Come Dine With Me, Hollyoaks and drama series such as Lost and Invasion in advance of transmission on Channel 4.

In October 2005 More4 was launched to complement Channel 4's digital channels. ER and The West Wing subsequently moved from E4 to More4.

E4 launched a Republic of Ireland service in June 2002 which has become the second most popular non-terrestrial channel in Ireland with 1.1% of the audience; Sky1 is the most popular.[2]

Since 2006 E4 has sponsored the E4 UdderBELLY venue (part of Underbelly) at the Edinburgh Fringe and Brighton Festival. The venue took the form of a giant upside cow in the purple colour of E4's logo.

In July 2007 it was announced Channel 4 would be launching E4 Radio, the first of a network of channels to be broadcast on DAB radio. The station was planned for launch in July 2008 and aimed at a similar demographic to its sister television channel,[3] however this launch date was later delayed. In October 2008 Channel 4 announced it was abandoning its plans for digital radio, and thus scrapping the E4 Radio proposal.

On 14 December 2009, a high-definition simulcast of E4 launched on Sky+ HD channel 215.[4][5] Unlike the standard definition channels from Channel 4, which are free to air, and the free-to-view Channel 4 HD, E4 HD is only available to viewers with Sky's HD Pack subscription. On 1 April 2010, E4 HD was added to Virgin Media.[6]

In October 2011, E4 stopped airing the sitcom Friends, which was one of the channel's most popular programmes. Comedy Central (UK) now own the rights to air Friends in the UK and also in HD. Channel 4 had acquired the rights to air the programme from 1996 - 2011, and with E4 from 2004 - 2011 However, a Friends blog continues to appear on the E4 website. The original Friends run was from 1994 - 2004.

Channel programming

Most watched programmes

The following is a list of the ten most watched shows on E4, based on Live +7 data supplied by BARB up to 15 May 2011.[1] The number of viewers does not include repeats or airings on E4+1.

Rank Show Episode Number of viewers Date
1 The Inbetweeners 3.05 - Will is Home Alone 3.72 million 11 October 2010
2 The Inbetweeners 3.06 - The Camping Trip 3.70 million 18 October 2010
3 The Inbetweeners 3.04 - The Trip to Warwick 3.62 million 4 October 2010
4 The Inbetweeners 3.03 - Will's Dilemma 3.57 million 27 September 2010
5 The Inbetweeners 3.01 - The Fashion Show 3.46 million 13 September 2010
6 The Inbetweeners 3.02 - The Gig and the Girlfriend 3.34 million 20 September 2010
7 Glee 2.02 - Britney / Brittany 2.63 million 17 January 2011
8 Glee 2.01 - Audition 2.49 million 10 January 2011
9 Friends 9.02 - The One Where Emma Cries 2.46 million 9 January 2003
10 Friends 9.01 - The One Where No One Proposes 2.38 million 9 January 2003

E4 Music

In August 2005, following the close of that year's Big Brother, E4 introduced the E4 Music programming block. The slot initially ran through much of the morning/daytime schedule, though was later reduced to mornings only, with the amount of scripted comedy and drama screened in daytime increased.

Prior to the launch of E4 Music, E4 was off-air during daytime for much of the year, only going on air in daytime for rolling coverage of reality shows such as Big Brother. The introduction of E4 Music led to E4 broadcasting 24/7 all year round. Initially, E4 Music would take a summer break to allow Big Brother coverage to replace it, but in later years Big Brother coverage was reduced, allowing a cut-down E4 Music to run during the summer.

In 2008, the launch of 4Music as a channel led to questions being asked about the future of E4 Music. However, E4 retained its commitment to music content, stating that E4 Music had been commissioned to run until at least the start of Big Brother in 2009.[7]

At 10am on Thursday 4 June 2009, the day before the launch of the 2009 Big Brother series, E4 Music ceased broadcasting.

Big Brother coverage

Whenever the Big Brother reality show was being transmitted E4 devoted much of its schedule to live coverage from inside the Big Brother house; interactive features that gave access to additional camera angles have also been transmitted. The channel also had Big Brother voting options, "Big Brother" spin off shows such as Big Brother Live, Big Brother's Little Brother, Big Brother's Big Mouth, Big Brother's Diary Room Uncut and Big Brother highlights repeats. Big Brother coverage was among the highest-rating programming on the channel, and came at a time when most of the year's American imports have ended.

Promotions

E4 has become somewhat notorious for its strange promotion campaigns, initially narrated by the ‘voice of E4’, Patrick Allen. Since Allen's death in 2006, the similar voice of Peter Dickson has been used. Trailers often make use of dry humour and phrases which, at first, do not appear to make any sense. Past examples include:

Programme trailers sometimes have the narrator repeating things that characters have said, such as, in a trailer for Ugly Betty that includes one character asking Betty "Why are you crying in the bathroom?", the narrator immediately asks "Why is Betty crying in the bathroom?!". And on another occasion he says "Oh No! Kerry Katona must be double booked." commenting on a cameo by Victoria Beckham. Sometimes the narrator appears to interact with the characters of the programme, especially notable in recent trailers for Miss Match and What About Brian.

Films are usually gently ridiculed in their promotion, such as with the voice of E4 telling viewers they "probably will" guess the ending of She's All That, naming actress Kim Cattrall as "That slaggy one from Sex and the City" when advertising Big Trouble in Little China, and re-dubbing a scene from Entrapment where the two characters are running along a rooftop before being caught in a helicopters' search light with "Catherine Zeta-Jones! This is the old man police!". There is also quite heavy use of British words which have generally fallen out of circulation, such as ‘ruddy’ and ‘gaff’.

E4's continuity sends up the channel's Friends-reliant schedule - while in the past, announcements would generally be the same for example "Now it's time to relax with Friends", more recently the announcers have been more inventive with phrases such as "....after an episode of Friends we've shown so many times the tape's gone a bit wobbly" before a Series 1 episode which indeed had a distorted soundtrack. There have only been a handful of days since the creation of E4 when Friends hasn't been shown. It was announced on 10 February 2010 that E4 and Channel 4 would stop airing the programme in autumn 2011.[8]

On one occasion when a playout-error caused part of an episode of Desperate Housewives to be repeated, continuity announcer Dominic O'Shea said, "I know we repeat ourselves a lot on E4 but that was of course a technical fault. Hopefully we'll have it fixed by the time it's repeated on Sunday,"[2] playing on the fact that many of E4's imported American drama programmes are shown at least twice for each episode.

Following the US premiere of Glee the first episode was aired as a sneak peek on 15 December 2009, one month before the actual premiere. Due to the launch of the second series of 90210 and the UK premiere of Glee both premiered with a "double bill" effect, the first two episodes of the second series of 90210 ("To New Beginnings" and "To Sext or Not to Sext") was screened on 5 January 2010, with the first two episodes of Glee ("Pilot" - which was already screened on 15 December 2009 as a sneak-peek and "Showmance") on 11 January 2010. The Cleveland Show and Accidentally on Purpose also premiered like this.

References

Further reading

External links