2017 in British television
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This is a list of events taking place in 2017 relating to Television in the United Kingdom.
Events
January
Date | Event |
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1 | BBC One launches a new set of idents, replacing the circle idents that have been shown before programmes for a decade. The new idents feature the photography of Martin Parr, who has attempted to capture portraits of modern Britain.[1] |
Sherlock returns to BBC One for a fourth series. Overnight viewing figures indicate the first episode was watched by an average audience of 8.1 million, making it the second most watched programme of the 2016–17 festive period; The New Year's Eve fireworks had a viewership of 11.6 million.[2] | |
4 | Fawlty Towers is voted the best British sitcom of all time British sitcom in a survey of comedians, comedy writers and actors.[3] |
5 | Channel 4 announce they are to show the Monaco Grand Prix and Singapore Grand Prix live for the first time in five years and the United States Grand Prix live for the first time in a decade on free-to-air TV, as they announce their picks for 2017. As part of the C4F1 coverage, also the British Grand Prix and Abu Dhabi Grand Prix as contracted.[4] |
6 | The manufacturers of the Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway board game apologise after several of the quiz questions were found to have incorrect answers.[5] |
7 | The BBC airs the first Saturday evening National Lottery Draw to be shown via BBC iPlayer only, the Corporation having taken the decision to stop broadcasting the draw live on BBC One after agreeing a new deal with Lottery operator Camelot Group.[6] |
BBC Two airs the documentary David Bowie: The Last Five Years on the eve of what would have been the singer's 70th birthday.[7] | |
Let It Shine makes its debut on BBC One, while The Voice debuts on ITV. Overnight viewing figures indicate that an average audience of 6.3 million tuned in for Let It Shine, narrowly beating the 5.9 million who watched The Voice.[8] | |
10 | Former deputy governor of the Bank of England David Clementi is named as BBC chairman, heading the board of directors that will replace the BBC Trust.[9] |
11 | BBC Director-General Tony Hall unveils plans to revamp BBC iPlayer in order to make it the premier online television service by 2020.[10] |
12 | BBC One announces the launch of The Big Painting Challenge, a boot-camp style series that will see amateur artists compete for the title of Britain's best amateur artist. The prime-time Sunday evening show, which will begin in February, will be presented by will be hosted by Mariella Frostrup and the Rev Richard Coles.[11] |
BBC Two has commissioned Terry Pratchett: Back in Black, a documentary about the fantasy author Terry Pratchett which takes a humorous look at his life story.[12] | |
13 | Sky says it has pulled an episode of its series Urban Myths about Michael Jackson following a complaint from his daughter. Paris Jackson had said that she was "incredibly offended" by the portrayal of her father in the programme due to be aired by Sky Arts.[13] |
Richard Ayoade will present a new series of The Crystal Maze when it returns to Channel 4 later this year, the broadcaster announces. Stephen Merchant presented a one off edition of the game show last year.[14] | |
Channel 5 weather presenter Sian Welby will join Heart Radio to present the weekday evening show from 16 January.[15] | |
14 | The Russian version of "The Final Problem", the last in the current series of Sherlock, is illegally uploaded to the internet prior to its transmission on 15 January.[16] The BBC launches an investigation into the leak.[17] Overnight viewing figures suggest the show episode was watched by an audience of 5.9 million.[18] |
15 | The BBC announce plans to adapt the John le Carré novel The Spy Who Came in from the Cold for television.[19] |
18 | The BBC Trust rules that a BBC News at Six report from November 2015 discussing Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn's view on the shoot-to-kill policy in Northern Ireland was impartial and inaccurate.[20] |
Channel 4 announces that Wife Swap will return for a one-off Brexit special.[21] | |
19 | It is reported that Bill Emmott, a former board member of Ofcom, is seeking a judicial review into a decision by Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport Karen Bradley to dismiss him from his post without compensation after he expressed support for the European Union.[22] |
ITV announces that it has axed The Xtra Factor from ITV2. Future editions of the programme will appear online only.[23] | |
20 | BBC One and ITV provide live coverage of the inauguration of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States; BBC coverage of the event is presented by BBC World's Katty Kay, with ITV's coverage presented by Tom Bradby.[24] |
Angus Deayton is confirmed as the new host of Creme de la Creme, a Great British Bake Off spin-off series that will continue to air on the BBC.[25] | |
24 | BBC Two announce plans for Geri's Nineties: The Decade That Made Me, a series in which former Spice Girl Geri Horner will look back at the 1990s.[26] |
25 | At the 22nd National Television Awards, Ant & Dec are presented with the Television Presenter Award for the sixteenth consecutive year.[27] |
27 | BBC Two airs Eurovision: You Decide from London's Hammersmith Apollo, where former X Factor contestant Lucie Jones is chosen to represent the United Kingdom in the 2017 Eurovision Song Contest with the song "Never Give Up on You".[28] |
30 | Peter Capaldi announces his intention to leave Doctor Who at the end of the year.[29] |
31 | Dermot O'Leary and Emma Willis are chosen to host the 2017 Brit Awards after Michael Bublé pulled out because his son is receiving treatment for cancer.[30] |
BBC Two airs the 1971 film 10 Rillington Place following the death of Sir John Hurt, who plays the role of Timothy Evans.[31] |
February
Date | Event |
---|---|
1 | It is announced that Nick Jenkins and Sarah Willingham will leave Dragons' Den when the current series ends on 26 February.[32] |
2 | Kris Marshall announces he is leaving the role of DI Humphrey Goodman in BBC One's Death in Paradise at the end of the current series. His place will be taken by Ardal O'Hanlon who will appear as a new detective.[33] |
Construction workers accidentally dig up and damage Blue Peter's Millennium Time Capsule while carrying out work at London's O2 Arena. The O2 has said it will work with the Blue Peter team to repair or replace the capsule, buried before the Millennium and due to be opened in 2050.[34] | |
3 | US human rights campaigner Kenneth Roth apologises to Newsnight presenter Emily Maitlis after mistakenly accusing her of running an alleged CIA torture site. Roth had tweeted a picture of Maitlis instead of Gina Haspel, named as CIA deputy director by US president Donald Trump.[35] |
With The Jump set to return to Channel 4 for a fourth series from 5 February, it is reported that the 2017 series has claimed its first casualty, with model Vogue Williams having to pull out because of a knee injury.[36] | |
EastEnders fans express their disappointment on social media upon learning the evening's episode has been cancelled in favour of the BBC One documentary Spy in the Wild.[37] | |
4 | Sir Bradley Wiggins reveals that he has suffered a foot injury while training for the fourth series of The Jump, becoming the second participant to be injured during training for this year's series. However, Wiggins says he will continue as a contestant.[38] |
7 | Debut of The Moorside, a BBC One drama starring Sheridan Smith and telling the story of the Shannon Matthews case. The first episode is received positively by critics.[39] |
Channel 5 announces that it will air a revamped and updated version of Blind Date.[40] | |
8 | Rolf Harris is cleared of three sex offence charges at Southwark Crown Court. |
9 | BBC Wales pulls a promotional trailer for the Six Nations rugby match between Wales v England to be held on 11 February after criticism that it was anti-English.[41] |
10 | BBC Four acquires its first Canadian drama, the six part Cardinal, a detective series based on Giles Blunt's 2002 novel Forty Words for Sorrow. The series will air later in the year.[42] |
13 | Sir Bradley Wiggins is forced to quit The Jump after sustaining what is described as a small leg fracture during snowcross training.[43] |
15 | It has been announced that Rolf Harris will face a retrial on 15 May over three alleged sex offence charges and one new charge of indecent assault.[44] |
17 | The BBC confirms that Danny Dyer will take a short break from his EastEnders role following a report in The Sun that bosses were concerned about his health.[45] |
19 | The TV adaptation of Len Deighton's novel SS-GB, a series imagining an alternate history in which Nazi Germany won World War II, debuts on BBC One. The first episode attracts a number of complaints from viewers unable to hear the dialogue, which is blamed on actors mumbling. The BBC says it will look at the sound quality before the next episode is transmitted.[46] |
Piers Morgan announces he will not present the Royal Television Society (RTS) Programme awards following a campaign to remove him. A petition asserting it was "not acceptable" for Morgan to present the awards ceremony attracted some 200 signatures after the RTS confirmed him as host on 16 February.[47] | |
27 | Sky News relaunches its 10 pm bulletin with a new-look set and a focus on content from the Sky News team of specialists and broadcast from the new glass box studio at the heart of Sky's campus in Osterley, west London. |
The Nightly Show is broadcast on ITV at 10 pm and runs for eight weeks and ITV News at Ten is moved to a temporary timeslot of 10.30 pm. |
March
Date | Event |
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1 | The television licence will increase from £145.50 to £147 on 1 April, it is announced – the first time the annual licence has increased since 2010.[48] |
4 | The BBC launches an investigation after a group of five intruders gained access to a studio at Broadcasting House during a live broadcast of the BBC News channel the previous evening. The individuals were not seen on air and left of their own accord.[49] |
16 | Ofcom confirms it has received one complaint about a child grooming storyline in Coronation Street involving the character Bethany Platt (Lucy Fallon), although the plot has generally won praise from children's charities.[50] |
Channel 4 confirms Sandi Toksvig, Prue Leith and Noel Fielding will join Paul Hollywood when The Great British Bake Off returns later this year.[51] | |
22 | The BBC and ITV interrupt their schedules to provide news coverage following a terrorist attack in London referred as 22/3. |
23 | Opening the first edition of BBC One's current affairs programme This Week to air in the wake of the Westminster attack, presenter Andrew Neil launches a scathing attack against those who commit acts of terrorism, describing them as "jumped up jihadis", and saying that Britain will never be "cowed" or "defeated" by them.[52] |
Channel 5 airs the documentary The Last Days of George Michael, prompting Michael's former bandmate, Andrew Ridgley to criticise the programme as "sensationalist and mucky". Channel 5 defends its decision to broadcast the film, citing a "legitimate public interest in the circumstances surrounding his death".[53] | |
27 | BBC One airs Question Time: Britain After Brexit, a special edition of Question Time from Birmingham ahead of government preparations to trigger Article 50, the process of withdrawal from the European Union.[54] |
30 | Comedian Sue Perkins will stand in for Graham Norton as presenter of the 2017 British Academy Television Awards because Norton will be in Kiev in his role as presenter of the BBC's coverage of the 2017 Eurovision Song Contest.[55] |
Channel 5 celebrates its 20th anniversary.[56][57] | |
31 | The tenth series of Doctor Who, which begins on 15 April, will feature the first openly gay companion, Bill Potts (played by Pearl Mackie).[58] |
The BBC Three documentary film Reggie Yates's Hidden Australia is criticised by the BBC Trust for "[seriously breaching] its editorial guidelines" after some of its footage was found to be misleading. The film, made by Sunday Pictures, portrayed extreme drinking among the Aboriginal community at a party, which was in fact footage of several events held on different days, including scenes from a wake.[59] |
April
Date | Event |
---|---|
2 | Mo Adeniran wins the sixth series of The Voice UK. The series final is briefly interrupted when the stage is invaded by an individual carrying a piece of paper which he attempts to show to the cameras.[60] |
BBC announces it has renewed its contract for exclusive contract to broadcast the Glastonbury Festival until 2022.[61] | |
7 | John Middleton makes his final appearance as Emmerdale character Ashley Thomas after 21 years with the show. The character dies after being diagnosed with incurable pneumonia.[62] |
10 | BBC period drama Call the Midwife will get its first black character, West Indian nurse Lucille, when it returns for a seventh series in 2018. BBC News reports casting is currently under way for the role.[63] |
Maxine Mawhinney presents her final BBC News bulletin on BBC News Channel alongside Simon McCoy after 21 years with BBC News.[64] | |
11 | Peter Kay's Car Share returns to BBC One for a second series. The opening episode sparks renewed interest in the 2001 compilation album Now That's What I Call Music! 48 after tracks from it are featured in the show. As a result of the series, Now 48 enters the album charts for the first time in several years.[65] |
15 | Doctor Who returns to BBC One for its tenth series.[66] |
17 | The finale of the final series of Broadchurch airs on ITV. Overnight audience figures indicate the episode was seen by an average of 8.7 million viewers (peaking at 9.3 million), the series' highest-ever viewership.[67] |
18 | The BBC announces a season of programming on both radio and television to mark the 50th anniversary of 1967 Sexual Offences Act. The season, Gay Britannia, will examine the history of gay Britain and celebrate the LGBTQ community.[68] |
19 | Crystal Palace chairman Steve Parish and former banker Jenny Campbell will join the next series of Dragons' Den, replacing Nick Jenkins and Sarah Willingham.[69] |
20 | The BBC confirms David Dimbleby will present its coverage of the 2017 general election on 8 June. Dimbleby, who will be fronting his tenth general election coverage, had said before the 2015 general election that 2015 would be the last time he would present election coverage. Also it's announced that Huw Edwards will present the day time coverage on 9 June[70] |
25 | Katty Kay and Christian Fraser announce on air that the programme 100 Days will be extended. It will be renamed 100 Days + starting on Monday 1 May. This is partly due to the snap 2017 general election on 8 June. It also means World News Today, which fills the slot on Friday and weekends, would be saved for now, despite being axed a month earlier.[71] |
27 | Crystal Palace chairman Steve Parish quits the Dragons' Den line up before filming begins for the next series; he is replaced by Vitabiotics chairman Tej Lalvani.[72] |
Online food delivery service Just Eat signs a £10 million-a-year deal to sponsor The X Factor, one of the largest sponsorships for a weekly British television show.[73] | |
28 | Joseph Valente, winner of the 2015 series of The Apprentice is ending his business relationship with Lord Sugar, it is announced. Although Valente will take full control of his ImpraGas business, the two have parted amicably.[74] |
30 | The Loose Women presenters launch their Body Stories campaign, featuring a billboard image of them all posing in swimwear with the slogan "Look but don't retouch". The campaign is aimed at addressing issues relating to body image.[75][76] |
May
Date | Event |
---|---|
3 | It has been announced that Adam Crozier is to step down as ITV chief executive after seven years.[77] |
5 | BBC Four airs the documentary Classic Albums: Carly Simon – No Secrets in which Carly Simon sings the words of a fourth verse she penned for her 1972 hit "You're So Vain" for the first time. However, the documentary does not shed any light on the song's subject.[78] |
9 | Shirley Ballas will join the panel of judges on Strictly Come Dancing when it returns to BBC One later in the year, it is confirmed. She replaces Len Goodman, who stepped down at the end of the last series.[79] |
12 | Junior doctor Saliha Mahmood-Ahmed wins the 2017 series of MasterChef.[80] |
EastEnders unveils plans to introduce a new family–the Taylors, who will arrive in Albert Square in summer 2017. Executive Producer Sean O'Connor describes the family as "noisy and brash", "[lacking] cash" but "[having] love and warmth in spades".[81] | |
13 | Portugal's Salvador Sobral wins the 2017 Eurovision Song Contest with the love ballad "Amar pelos dois". It is the first time Portugal have won the competition. The UK's entry, Lucie Jones comes fifteenth with her song "Never Give Up on You".[82] |
15 | ITV airs the concluding episode of its four part drama, Little Boy Blue, a series dealing with the 2007 murder of Rhys Jones. The programme attracts criticism from the former Assistant Chief Constable of Merseyside, Patricia Gallan, who says some of its content "should not be taken as fact". Gallan herself is portrayed in the series by Sara Powell.[83] |
16 | McDonald's says it will withdraw an advertising campaign featuring a boy who struggles to identify with his dead father until he visits the fast food restaurant. The commercial first aired on 12 May, and received hundreds of complaints from parents who said their children had been upset by its content, as well as drawing criticism from a bereavement charity for exploiting childhood grief. The ad was scheduled to run for seven weeks, but its last airdate will be on 17 May.[84] |
David Tennant and Billie Piper will reunite to play the Tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler for a series of audio dramas, it is announced.[85] | |
22 | Ofcom decides not to launch an investigation into a rape scene that appeared in an episode of Emmerdale aired on 24 April, despite the content generating 101 viewer complaints.[86] |
Comedian Vic Reeves will make a cameo appearance in Coronation Street as a television producer, it is announced.[87] | |
25 | The week's edition of BBC One's Question Time, scheduled to take place in Belfast, is instead moved to Salford in the wake of the 2017 Manchester Arena bombing. Panellists for the programme are Home Secretary Amber Rudd, Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham, anti-extremism campaigner Sara Khan, head of the Police and Crime Commissioners Association Nazir Afzal, and peace campaigner Colin Parry.[88] |
The BBC announces the BBC Store, a facility allowing viewers to buy and download BBC content, will close in November, two years after its launch.[89] | |
Fred Talbot is found guilty at Lanark Sheriff Court of a string of sex offences against schoolboys during boating and camping trips in the 1970s and 1980s. He is sentenced on 15 June.[90] | |
31 | ITV announces plans to reschedule the eleventh series final of Britain's Got Talent so as not to clash with the One Love Manchester concert, Ariana Grande's benefit concert for the victims of the Manchester bombing, which will air on BBC One on 4 June. Britain's Got Talent, originally scheduled to air on that evening, will now air a day earlier. The British Soap Awards, due to air on 3 June, will air on 6 June instead.[91] |
June
Date | Event |
---|---|
2 | Jay Hunt will step down from her role as Chief Creative Officer at Channel 4 in September, it is announced.[92] |
3 | BBC Two airs Sgt Pepper's Musical Revolution with Howard Goodall, a documentary presented by Howard Goodall celebrating the 50th anniversary of the release of The Beatles album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.[93] |
Canadian detective series Cardinal makes its British television debut on BBC Four.[93] | |
Tokio Myers wins the eleventh series of Britain's Got Talent.[94] | |
4 | BBC One postpones a Question Time leaders debate due to air at 5.55 pm to make way for a BBC News special following the previous evening's terrorist attack in London. The programme, set to feature Scottish National Party leader Nicola Sturgeon and Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron taking questions in Edinburgh, is rescheduled for 5 June. However, two further pre-recorded debates with the leaders of UKIP and the Green Party, and Plaid Cymru, due to air later the same evening are not rescheduled. Planned editions of The Andrew Marr Show and the Sunday Politics are cancelled in the wake of the attack.[95][96] |
The One Love Manchester concert airs live on BBC One and BBC Radio, starring Ariana Grande. Overnight viewing figures indicate it had a peak audience of 22.6 million, making it the most watched television event of 2017 to date.[97] | |
8–9 | The BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Sky News provide coverage of the results of the 2017 general election, which sees the Conservatives lose their majority, but remain the party with the largest number of seats in the House of Commons. |
9 | ITV announce plans for a drama about the Hatton Garden safe deposit burglary starring Timothy Spall.[98] |
13 | BBC Two airs the documentary Jo Cox: Death of An MP to coincide with the first anniversary of her murder.[99] |
14 | The BBC denies reports that a scene from Planet Earth II showing a baby iguana being chased by racer snakes was faked.[100] |
15 | Fred Talbot is jailed for four years for historical sex offences against boys he took on school trips to Scotland between 1978 and 1981.[101] |
Antibiotics are voted Britain's greatest invention following a live television special, Britain's Greatest Invention on BBC Two.[102] | |
On the eve of the first anniversary of the murder of Labour MP Jo Cox, Channel 4's late night talk show The Last Leg airs a joint video recorded by four former British Prime Ministers–John Major, Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron–in which they pay tribute to Cox and urge people to celebrate her life.[103] | |
17 | Billy Connolly, Julie Walters and June Whitfield are among those from the world of entertainment to be awarded in the 2017 Birthday Honours, with Connolly receiving a Knighthood, and Walters and Whitfield receiving Damehoods.[104] |
Following the Grenfell Tower fire in London, BBC Two pulls the documentary Venice Biennale: Sink or Swim as it features artist Khadija Saye, who is believed to be among those to have perished in the blaze.[105] The opening edition of BBC One's singing contest Pitch Battle is also replaced by a different edition after the blaze, a decision taken due to song lyrics.[106][107] | |
The debut edition of BBC One's Pitch Battle is seen by an average audience of 2 million viewers, while Channel 5's relaunched Blind Date is watched by 1.5 million. The second edition of ITV's The Voice Kids draws in an average 2.5 million. However, ratings are down on their usual average, something which broadcasters attribute to a heat wave being experienced by the UK.[106] | |
19 | Ofcom says it will not investigate an edition of Britain's Got Talent in which Amanda Holden wore a topless dress as it "would not have exceeded most viewers' expectations". The regulator received 650 complaints about the edition of the programme aired on 1 June, and 683 complaints across the series about Holden's choice of outfits.[108] |
20 | The start of the BBC News at Ten is temporarily delayed by a "technical systems crash" that occurred seconds before the programme was due to go on air.[109][110] |
22 | In what is believed to be the first such incident of its type on Question Time, a member of the audience is told to leave the programme by presenter David Dimbleby for repeatedly heckling the panel.[111] |
Antiques Roadshow experts believe a Faberge ornament recently valued one the programme could be one of its most significant finds, with a value of £1million.[112] | |
23 | It is announced that Sean O'Connor will leave EastEnders after just a year in the role of executive producer. He will temporarily be replaced by former executive producer John Yorke.[113] |
24 | John Simm reprises his role as The Master for the Doctor Who episode "World Enough and Time".[114] |
29 | Culture Secretary Karen Bradley refers Rupert Murdoch's bid to take full control of Sky UK to the Competition Commission after an Ofcom report into the matter concluded that the deal could give the Murdoch family "increased influence" over the UK's news agenda.[115] |
July
Date | Event |
---|---|
1 | The tenth series of Doctor Who concludes with an extended hour-long episode, "The Doctor Falls".[114] The episode sees David Bradley portraying William Hartnell's First Doctor, a role he first played in the 2013 television biopic An Adventure in Space and Time.[116] |
3 | Ofcom has launched an investigation into a Coronation Street storyline involving child grooming after scenes were shown before the 9.00pm watershed. Five complaints were received about the scenes, involving the character Bethany Platt (played by Lucy Fallon) when they appeared in an omnibus edition of the soap shown on ITV2 on the morning of Saturday 3 June.[117] |
4 | Plans are announced to reinvent the BBC for a new generation, including spending an extra £34 million on children's programming.[118] |
A BBC survey indicates that at least a third of Premier League football fans regularly view matches online through unofficial streaming services.[119] | |
6 | The final edition of Question Time before the summer break is interrupted by two digital alerts from presenter David Dimbleby's mobile phone, set to remind him it is bedtime.[120] |
Coronation Street bosses are warning fans to be aware of an online scam offering to recruit extras.[121] | |
12 | BBC One Wales airs Sir Gareth Edwards at 70, a birthday tribute to Welsh rugby union player Gareth Edwards. The programme is presented by Gabby Logan in front of a celebrity audience.[122] The programme is aired nationally on BBC Two on 1 August.[123] |
13 | As the government considers whether Channel 4 should relocate from London, television producer Phil Redmond launches a bid to move the broadcaster to Liverpool.[124] |
14 | The BBC unveils plans to launch a bursary scheme aimed at nurturing new female comedy talent from the North, and named in honour of the late Caroline Aherne. The launch takes place at the 2017 Salford Sitcom Showcase on 27 July.[125] |
A BBC One trailer reveals that the identity of the actor to play the Thirteenth Doctor in Doctor Who will be announced on the channel following the 2017 Wimbledon Men's Singles Final on 16 July.[126] | |
16 | Jodie Whittaker is announced as the Thirteenth Doctor, and the first woman to regularly play the role.[127] The trailer revealing the identity of the next Doctor is watched by an estimated 4.6 million viewers. The announcement that a woman will take up the role is broadly welcomed, with those offering their support including Prime Minister Theresa May, who is described as being "pleased" by the news.[128] The news is greeted with mixed reception from two actors who previously portrayed the role; expressing a preference for a male Doctor, Peter Davison says he feels "a bit sad" the character may no longer be "a role model for boys", comments that are dismissed as "rubbish" by his successor, Colin Baker.[129] |
19 | As part of the terms of its renewed Royal Charter, the BBC publishes the earnings of celebrities on salaries over £150,000 in its annual report for 2016/17. The figures reveal that two-thirds of these are male, with Chris Evans the top earner.[130] The revelations spark a row about the gender pay gap, and suggestions from politicians that male stars could be forced to take a pay cut.[131][132] |
21 | ITV announces the death of Pudsey, the dog who, as part of Ashleigh and Pudsey, won the 2012 series of Britain's Got Talent.[133] |
23 | Around forty of the BBC's high-profile female personalities have signed an open letter to Director-General Tony Hall urging him to "correct [the] disparity" over gender pay.[134] |
Mel and Sue will present a revived version of The Generation Game, which has been commissioned for an initial run of four editions, it is confirmed.[135] | |
Singer Katherine Jenkins makes her television presenting debut as one of the main presenters of Songs of Praise.[136] | |
24 | The first trailer for the Doctor Who Christmas special, titled "Twice Upon a Time" is released online. The one-minute footage shows Peter Capaldi's final outing as The Doctor.[137] |
The BBC announces a new music festival for 2018, which it is hoped will fill the gap left by Glastonbury, which is taking a year off. The Biggest Weekend will run from 25 to 28 May, and take place at four venues, one in each of the Home Countries. Coverage will be shown on BBC radio and television.[138] | |
ITV2 airs the third series finale of Love Island, which is watched by an average 2.43 million viewers, giving the channel its largest audience to date.[139] | |
28 | Channel 4 says that its athletics series The Jump will take a break during 2018, and will not be part of its winter schedule so as not to clash with the Winter Olympics in South Korea.[140] |
Isabelle Warburton wins the eighteenth series of Big Brother.[141] | |
29 | BBC One airs the series 31 finale of Casualty, an episode notable for being the first on British television to be shot in entirely one take using a single camera.[142] |
30 | The Sunday Times removes an online article amid allegations of antisemitism after columnist Kevin Myers suggested in the piece that some female BBC presenters are paid high salaries because they are Jewish. The newspaper also confirms that Myers "will not write again" for them following the comments.[143] Myers subsequently apologises for the remarks, telling Ireland's RTÉ News that he "uttered those words out of respect for the religion".[144] |
The Mail on Sunday reports that Earl Spencer has urged Channel 4 not to broadcast tapes of his sister, Diana, Princess of Wales discussing aspects of her personal life amid concerns it will cause distress to her children.[145] The footage is scheduled to air as part of the documentary Diana: In Her Own Words, due for broadcast in the run up to the 20th anniversary of her death.[146] His concerns are subsequently echoed by Royal commentators and friends of the late princess, including Rosa Monckton, who intends to write to the broadcaster urging them not to show the footage, which she says "doesn't belong in the public domain".[147] |
August
Date | Event |
---|---|
1 | The BBC announces plans for Britain's Best Cook, a new cookery contest series for BBC One, with Claudia Winkleman as presenter and Mary Berry as one of the judges.[148] |
4 | Countryfile presenter Anita Rani wades into the BBC gender pay gap controversy, claiming the issue of equal pay is also about race and class.[149] |
The Sun agrees to pay former EastEnders producer Sean O'Connor "substantial damages" after wrongly reporting that he had been sacked from the programme for bullying cast members.[150] | |
6 | It is reported that former Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson is being treated in hospital for pneumonia after being taken ill while on holiday in Majorca.[151] |
The Channel 4 documentary Diana: In Her Own Words is aired, drawing their largest overnight ratings for over a year. Figures indicate the film, which includes footage of Diana, Princess of Wales discussing aspects of her marriage to Prince Charles, was watched by an average audience of 3.5 million, peaking at 4.1 million.[152] | |
8 | Scriptwriter Nina Raine is to write a version of Jane Austen's novel Pride and Prejudice for ITV that will be darker and more adult themed than previous versions. It is the sixth time the book has been adapted for television.[153] |
Sky's Soccer AM announces that its presenter Helen Chamberlain is to leave the programme after 22 years. She will be replaced by comedian Lloyd Griffith and former footballer Jimmy Bullard.[154] | |
9 | Fitness experts have criticised Geordie Shore starlet Charlotte Crosby for her promotion of a one-week diet plan, which they argue would have questionable results.[155] |
11 | Former Vice President of the United States Al Gore appears as a guest on Channel 4's The Last Leg.[156] |
September
Date | Event |
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October
Date | Event |
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November
Date | Event |
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December
Date | Event |
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Debuts
BBC
Date | Debut | Channel |
---|---|---|
1 January | Thailand: Earth's Tropical Paradise | BBC Two |
2 January | Impossible | BBC One |
CBBC Visits the Wizarding World of Harry Potter and Fantastic Beasts | CBBC | |
3 January | Revolting | BBC Two |
Yellowstone: Wildest Winter to Blazing Summer | ||
4 January | Italy's Invisible Cities | BBC One |
7 January | Let It Shine | |
Taboo | ||
David Bowie: The Last Five Years | BBC Two | |
11 January | Hospital | |
Common Sense | ||
12 January | Spy in the Wild | BBC One |
22 January | Apple Tree Yard | |
23 January | Numberblocks | CBeebies |
100 Days (now 100 Days +) | BBC Four / BBC News Channel | |
26 January | British History's Biggest Fibs with Lucy Worsley | BBC Four |
6 February | SAS: Rogue Warriors | BBC Two |
7 February | The Moorside | BBC One |
8 February | This Country | BBC Three |
Roots | BBC Four | |
13 February | Remotely Funny | CBBC |
19 February | SS-GB | BBC One |
22 February | Incredible Medicine: Dr Weston's Casebook | BBC Two |
24 February | The Secrets of Your Food | |
27 February | Mary Berry Everyday | |
Meet the Lords | ||
28 February | The Replacement[157] | BBC One |
1066: A Year to Conquer England | BBC Two | |
5 March | Clique | BBC Three |
9 March | Just a Couple | |
13 March | Fugitives | BBC One |
My Life: New Boys in Town | CBBC | |
17 March | Wild Ireland: The Edge of the World | BBC Two |
18 March | Happy 100th Birthday Dame Vera Lynn | |
25 March | All Round to Mrs. Brown's | BBC One |
26 March | Turkey with Simon Reeve | BBC Two |
27 March | Holding Back the Years[158] | BBC One |
The Repair Shop | BBC Two | |
Amazing Hotels: Life Beyond the Lobby | ||
28 March | Gravity and Me: The Force that Shapes our Lives | BBC Four |
30 March | Galapagos | BBC One |
31 March | Decline and Fall | |
5 April | Second Chance Summer: Tuscany | BBC Two |
Me and My Dog: The Ultimate Contest | ||
11 April | Our Friend Victoria | BBC One |
12 April | Reported Missing | |
13 April | Bucket | BBC Four |
The World According to Kids | BBC Two | |
21 April | Hospital People | BBC One |
24 April | The Boss | |
1 May | Amsterdam: An Art Lovers' Guide | BBC Four |
3 May | Trust Me, I'm a Vet | BBC Two |
4 May | Can't Cope, Won't Cope[159] | BBC Three |
7 May | Babs | BBC One |
Mexico: Earth's Festival of Life | BBC Two | |
Dara & Ed's Road to Mandalay | ||
Queer Britain | BBC Three | |
8 May | A1: Britain's Longest Road | BBC One |
10 May | King Charles III | BBC Two |
16 May | Three Girls | BBC One |
18 May | Kat & Alfie: Redwater | |
24 May | White Gold | BBC Two |
25 May | Paula[160] | |
28 May | The Life Swap Adventure | |
Paul Hollywood's Big Continental Road Trip | ||
30 May | Broken | BBC One |
The Chillenden Murders | BBC Two | |
1 June | The Great Village Green Crusade | BBC Four |
4 June | One Love Manchester | BBC One |
5 June | The Secret Life of the Hospital Bed | |
Cosby: Fall Of An American Icon | BBC Two | |
8 June | Frankie Boyle's New World Order | |
12 June | The Art of Japanese Life | BBC Four |
Handmade in Japan | ||
13 June | Ryan Gander: The Idea of Japan | |
Jo Cox: Death of an MP | BBC Two | |
15 June | Britain's Greatest Invention | |
17 June | Pitch Battle[161] | BBC One |
19 June | Curious Creatures | BBC Two |
23 June | Tracey Breaks the News | BBC One |
28 June | The Week the Landlords Moved In | |
3 July | The Betrayed Girls | |
11 July | In the Dark | |
The British Garden: Life and Death on Your Lawn | BBC Four | |
17 July | Letterbox | BBC Two |
Nadiya's British Food Adventure | ||
18 July | Addicted Parents: Last Chance to Keep My Children | |
19 July | The Sweet Makers | |
20 July | The Mash Report | |
23 July | Wild Alaska Live | BBC One |
24 July | Wild | |
26 July | Against the Law | BBC Two |
27 July | Prejudice and Pride: The People’s History of LGBTQ Britain | BBC Four |
29 July | Queer as Art | BBC Two |
31 July | Man in an Orange Shirt | |
8 August | Trust Me[162] | BBC One |
19 August | Partners in Rhyme | |
August | Strike | |
30 September | Saturday Mash-Up! | CBBC & BBC Two |
Autumn | Unnamed Katty Kay/Christian Fraser News Show (w/t) | BBC Four & BBC News Channel |
Autumn | Anansi Boys | BBC One |
November | Blue Planet II | |
Unknown | Creeped Out | CBBC |
Bodyguard | BBC One | |
Hard Sun | BBC One | |
Dennis & Gnasher: Unleashed | CBBC | |
Howards End | BBC One | |
The Zoo | CBBC | |
Getting The Builders In | BBC One | |
McMafia[163] |
ITV
Date | Debut | Channel |
---|---|---|
2 January | The Halcyon[164] | ITV |
5 January | Save Money: Good Health | |
6 January | Britain's Best Walks with Julia Bradbury | |
7 January | The Opening Show | ITV4 |
8 January | 2Awesome | ITV2 |
Dance Dance Dance | ITV | |
10 January | Martin Clunes: Islands of Australia | |
13 January | Tina and Bobby | |
30 January | James Martin's French Adventure | |
31 January | Tales from the Coast with Robson Green | |
5 February | Lion Country: Night and Day | |
The Good Karma Hospital | ||
16 February | Mafia Women with Trevor McDonald | |
21 February | Britain's Busiest Motorway | |
24 February | Phillip Schofield's South African Adventure | |
27 February | The Home Game | |
The Nightly Show | ||
28 February | The Secret Chef | |
1 March | Little Big Shots | |
2 March | Harry Hill's Alien Fun Capsule | |
Prime Suspect 1973 | ||
5 March | 5 Gold Rings | |
27 March | Harlots | ITV Encore |
4 April | Save Money: Good Food | ITV |
10 April | Devon and Cornwall Cops[165] | |
17 April | Culinary Genius | |
18 April | Don't Ask Me Ask Britain | |
20 April | Joanna Lumley's Postcards | |
The Detectives: Inside the Major Crimes Team | ||
23 April | Bigheads | |
24 April | Little Boy Blue | |
1 May | Babushka | |
6 May | The Keith & Paddy Picture Show[166] | |
5 June | Lord Lucan: My Husband, the Truth | |
10 June | The Voice Kids | |
11 June | The Loch[167] | |
12 June | Amazing Animal Births | |
Fearless[168] | ||
15 June | The Real Full Monty | |
CelebAbility | ITV2 | |
26 June | David Dickinson's Name Your Price | ITV |
30 June | The Secret World of Posh Pets | |
5 July | Joanna Lumley's India | |
13 July | Eat, Shop, Save | |
27 July | Inside London Fire Brigade | |
11 August | Teach My Pet To Do That | |
14 August | easyJet: Inside the Cockpit | |
17 August | The Brighton Police | |
2 September | Saturday Morning with James Martin | |
September | Robson Green's Coastal Lives | |
Unknown | Love Your Home | |
Bad Move[169] | ||
Life Inside Lockdown[170] | ||
Undercover Prisoner[171] | ||
Cannonball | ||
Codswallop | ITV2 | |
A Very Public Education[172] | ITV | |
When the Going Gets Tough | ITV Encore | |
Innocent[173] | ITV | |
Liar[174] | ||
The Family Chase[175] |
Channel 4
Date | Debut | Channel |
---|---|---|
2 January | First Dates Hotel | Channel 4 |
5 January | Spies | |
8 January | Walking the Americas | |
6 February | The Fake News Show | |
16 February | Inside Dior | More4 |
20 February | The Trouble with Dad | Channel 4 |
22 February | The Royal House of Windsor | |
23 February | Gap Year | E4 |
26 February | Rivers with Jeremy Paxman | Channel 4 |
27 February | Game of Clones | E4 |
2 March | Extremely British Muslims | Channel 4 |
6 March | How'd You Get So Rich? | |
Mutiny | ||
23 March | Three Wives, One Husband | |
12 April | My Online Nightmare | |
19 April | How to Live Mortgage Free with Sarah Beeny | |
Confessions of a Junior Doctor | ||
20 April | Born to Kill | |
30 April | Escape to Costa Rica | |
8 May | Loaded | |
9 May | Elizabeth | |
14 May | Hunted America | All 4 |
21 May | The Trial: A Murder in the Family | Channel 4 |
28 May | The Handmaid's Tale | |
7 June | Ackley Bridge | |
19 June | Vlogglebox | E4 |
22 June | Host the Week | Channel 4 |
3 July | Binky & JP's Baby: Born in Chelsea | E4 |
4 August | The Secret Life of the Holiday Resort | Channel 4 |
August | The State | |
Unknown | Kiss Me First | E4 |
Back | Channel 4 |
Channel 5
Date | Debut | Channel |
---|---|---|
3 January | A New Life in Oz | Channel 5 |
9 January | The Week We Went Wild | |
11 January | Celebrity 100% Hotter | |
12 January | Get Your Tatts Out: Kavos Ink | |
7 February | Secrets of the National Trust | |
Celebrity Carry On Barging | ||
8 February | Climbing the Property Ladder | |
10 February | Cruising with Jane McDonald | |
13 February | Railways That Built Britain with Chris Tarrant | |
16 February | When Kids Kill: Schoolboy Slayer | |
17 March | Tony Robinson: Coast to Coast | |
20 March | Traffic Cops: Under Attack | |
21 March | Yorkshire: A Year in the Wild | |
23 March | The Last Days of George Michael | |
29 March | One Night with My Ex | |
30 March | Rich House, Poor House | |
31 March | Spectacular Spain with Alex Polizzi | |
19 April | Badass Brides | 5Star |
27 April | Baby Ballroom | |
1 May | The Miranda Hart Story | Channel 5 |
8 May | Mind the Age Gap | |
6 June | Our Dream Hotel | |
9 June | Biggest Dog in the World | |
17 June | Before They Were Stars | |
6 July | Circus Kids: Our Secret World | |
Unknown | Minds at War |
Other channels
Date | Debut | Channel |
---|---|---|
2 January | Celebrity Fat Fighters | TLC |
8 January | The Big Spell | Sky 1 |
15 January | Freddie Down Under | |
19 January | Urban Myths | Sky Arts |
17 March | Oasis | Amazon Video |
22 March | Dr Christian Will See You Now | W |
31 March | Carters Get Rich | Sky 1 |
3 April | Just Tattoo of Us | MTV |
5 April | Henry IX | Gold |
13 April | Guerrilla | Sky Atlantic |
14 April | Ronnie's Redneck Road Trip | Dave |
22 April | Micky Flanagan Thinking Aloud | Sky 1 |
5 May | Jamestown | |
15 May | Go 8 Bit: DLC | Dave |
18 May | A Tale of Two Sisters | Yesterday |
15 June | Riviera | Sky Atlantic |
24 June | Ben Phillips Blows Up | Comedy Central |
21 August | Sunny Day | Nickelodeon |
September | Tin Star | Sky Atlantic |
Unknown | Britannia | Sky 1 |
Sick Note | Sky Atlantic |
Channels
New channels
Date | Channel |
---|---|
4 February | ITV Box Office[176] |
15 March | Quest Red[177] |
9 October | Shake! (TV channel) |
Defunct channels
Date | Channel |
---|
Rebranding channels
Date | Old Name | New Name |
---|---|---|
9 February | Tiny Pop +1 | Pop Max |
25 April | Pop Max | Tiny Pop +1 |
Television shows
Changes of network affiliation
Show | Moved from | Moved to |
---|---|---|
The National Lottery Draws | BBC One | BBC iPlayer |
Eurovision: You Decide | BBC Four | BBC Two |
Line of Duty | BBC Two | BBC One |
The Cheltenham Festival | Channel 4 | ITV & ITV4 |
The Grand National | ||
Chester's May Festival | ||
The Epsom Derby | ||
Royal Ascot | ||
Glorious Goodwood | ||
The Ebor Festival | ||
Other Horse Racing Programmes | ||
The Great British Bake Off | BBC One & BBC Two | Channel 4 |
The Great British Bake Off: An Extra Slice | ||
BDO World Darts Championship | ||
The Voice UK | BBC One | ITV |
The Worst Witch | CITV | CBBC |
Blind Date | ITV | Channel 5 |
Don't Tell the Bride | Sky 1 | Channel 4 |
Returning this year after a break of one year or longer
Programme | Date(s) of original removal | Original channel(s) | Date of return | New channel(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
ITV Racing | 5 October 1985 | ITV | 1 January 2017 | ITV & ITV4 |
The Worst Witch | 26 January 2001 27 January 2007 |
CITV | 11 January 2017 | CBBC |
Piers Morgan's Life Stories | 11 December 2015 | ITV | 3 February 2017 | N/A (same channel) |
Blind Date | 31 May 2003 | ITV | 17 June 2017 | Channel 5 |
World News America | 25 March 2011 | BBC News Channel | 2017 | N/A (Same channel) |
The Crystal Maze | 10 August 1995 (Original Series) 16 October 2016 (Stand Up to Cancer Special) |
Channel 4 | 23 June 2017 | N/A (Same channel) |
1920s
Programme | Date |
---|---|
BBC Wimbledon | (1927–present) |
1950s
Programme | Date |
---|---|
Panorama | (1953–present) |
Eurovision Song Contest | (1956–present) |
The Sky at Night | (1957–present) |
Final Score | (1958–present) (part of Grandstand, 1958–2001) |
Blue Peter | (1958–present) |
1960s
Programme | Date |
---|---|
Coronation Street | (1960–present) |
Maigret | (1960–1963, 1992–1993, 2016–present) |
Points of View | (1961–present) |
Songs of Praise | (1961–present) |
University Challenge | (1962–1987, 1994–present) |
Doctor Who | (1963–1989, 1996, 2005–present) |
Horizon | (1964–present) |
Match of the Day | (1964–present) |
Top of the Pops | (1964–present) (only at Christmas 2006–present) |
Gardeners' World | (1968–present) |
A Question of Sport | (1968, 1970–present) |
1970s
Programme | Date |
---|---|
Emmerdale | (1972–present) |
Mastermind (including Celebrity Mastermind) | (1972–1997, 2003–present) |
Newsround | (1972–present) |
Football Focus | (1974–present) |
Pobol y Cwm | (1974–present) |
Porridge | (1974–1977, 2016–present) |
Arena | (1975–present) |
One Man and His Dog | (1976–present) |
Top Gear | (1977–2001, 2002–present) |
Antiques Roadshow | (1979–present) |
Question Time | (1979–present) |
1980s
Programme | Date |
---|---|
Children in Need | (1980–present) |
Danger Mouse | (1981–1992, 2015–present) |
Countdown | (1982–present) |
ITV Breakfast | (1983–present) |
Good Morning Britain | (1983–1992, 2014–present) |
Thomas & Friends | (1984–present) |
EastEnders | (1985–present) |
Watchdog | (1985–present) |
Comic Relief | (1985–present) |
Catchphrase | (1986–2002, 2013–present) |
Casualty | (1986–present) |
Fifteen to One | (1988–2003, 2013–present) |
Red Dwarf | (1988–1999, 2009, 2012–present) |
This Morning | (1988–present) |
Countryfile | (1988–present) |
1990s
Programme | Date |
---|---|
Have I Got News for You | (1990–present) |
The Crystal Maze | (1990–1995, 2016–present) |
MasterChef | (1990–2001, 2005–present) |
ITV News Meridian | (1993–present) |
Junior MasterChef | (1994–1999, 2010–present) |
Room 101 | (1994–2007, 2012–present) |
Hollyoaks | (1995–present) |
Soccer AM | (1995–present) |
Silent Witness | (1996–present) |
Midsomer Murders | (1997–present) |
Robot Wars | (1997–2004, 2016–present) |
Teletubbies | (1997–2001, 2002, 2007–2009, 2012, 2015–present) |
Y Clwb Rygbi | (1997–present) |
Cold Feet | (1998–2003, 2016–present) |
Holby City | (1999–present) |
Loose Women | (1999–present) |
2000s
Programme | Date |
---|---|
2000 | |
Big Brother (including Celebrity Big Brother) | (2000–present) |
Bargain Hunt | (2000–present) |
BBC Breakfast | (2000–present) |
Click | (2000–present) |
Doctors | (2000–present) |
A Place in the Sun | (2000–present) |
The Unforgettable | (2000–2002, 2010–present) |
Unreported World | (2000–present) |
2001 | |
BBC South East Today | (2001–present) |
Rogue Traders | (2001–present) (part of Watchdog 2009–present) |
2002 | |
Animal Park | (2002–2009, 2016–present) |
Escape to the Country | (2002–present) |
Flog It! | (2002–present) |
I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! | (2002–present) |
Inside Out | (2002–present) |
Most Haunted | (2002–2010, 2014–present) |
River City | (2002–present) |
Saturday Kitchen | (2002–present) |
2003 | |
Daily Politics | (2003–present) |
QI | (2003–present) |
This Week | (2003–present) |
Eggheads | (2003–present) |
Extraordinary People | (2003–present) |
Grumpy Old Men | (2003–present) |
Homes Under the Hammer | (2003–present) |
Traffic Cops | (2003–present) |
2004 | |
Doc Martin | (2004–present) |
Match of the Day 2 | (2004–present) |
Strictly Come Dancing | (2004–present) |
The X Factor | (2004–present) |
The Big Fat Quiz of the Year | (2004–present) |
The Culture Show | (2004–present) |
Football First | (2004–present) |
The Gadget Show | (2004–present) |
Live at the Apollo | (2004–present) |
NewsWatch | (2004–present) |
SadlerVision | (2004–present) |
Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two | (2004–present) |
Who Do You Think You Are? | (2004–present) |
2005 | |
8 out of 10 Cats | (2005–present) |
Coach Trip | (2005–2006, 2009–2012, 2013–present) |
The Andrew Marr Show | (2005–present) |
The Adventure Show | (2005–present) |
The Apprentice | (2005–present) |
Dragons' Den | (2005–present) |
The Hotel Inspector | (2005–present) |
The Jeremy Kyle Show | (2005–present) |
Mock the Week | (2005–present) |
Springwatch | (2005–present) |
2006 | |
The Album Chart Show | (2006–present) |
Animal Spies! | (2006–present) |
The Apprentice: You're Fired! | (2006–present) |
Banged Up Abroad | (2006–present) |
Cricket AM | (2006–present) |
Dickinson's Real Deal | (2006–present) |
Don't Get Done, Get Dom | (2006–present) |
Horrid Henry | (2006–present) |
Monkey Life | (2006–present) |
Not Going Out | (2006–present) |
The One Show | (2006–present) |
People & Power | (2006–present) |
Peschardt's People | (2006–present) |
The Secret Millionaire | (2006–2008, 2010–present) |
2007 | |
Britain's Got Talent | (2007–present) |
Would I Lie to You? | (2007–present) |
Benidorm | (2007–present) |
The Big Questions | (2007–present) |
Don't Tell the Bride | (2007–present) |
The Graham Norton Show | (2007–present) |
Heir Hunters | (2007–present) |
Helicopter Heroes | (2007–present) |
Inspector George Gently | (2007–present) |
London Ink | (2007–present) |
Shaun the Sheep | (2007–present) |
Real Rescues | (2007–present) |
The Hot Desk | (2007–present) |
2008 | |
An Là | (2008–present) |
Big & Small | (2008–present) |
Celebrity Juice | (2008–present) |
Chuggington | (2008–present) |
Only Connect | (2008–present) |
Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is | (2008–present) |
Police Interceptors | (2008–present) |
Rubbernecker | (2008–present) |
Seachd Là | (2008–present) |
2009 | |
Pointless | (2009–present) |
The Chase | (2009–present) |
Countrywise | (2009–present) |
Cowboy Trap | (2009–present) |
Four Weddings | (2009–present) |
Piers Morgan's Life Stories | (2009–present) |
Rip Off Britain | (2009–present) |
2010s
Programme | Date |
---|---|
2010 | |
Dinner Date | (2010–present) |
The Great British Bake Off | (2010–present) |
Great British Railway Journeys | (2010–present) |
A League of Their Own | (2010–present) |
Little Crackers | (2010–present) |
Lorraine | (2010–present) |
Luther | (2010–present) |
The Only Way Is Essex | (2010–present) |
Sherlock | (2010–present) |
Sunday Morning Live | (2010–present) |
Take Me Out | (2010–present) |
2011 | |
All Over the Place | (2011–present) |
The Amazing World of Gumball | (2011–present) |
Black Mirror | (2011–present) |
Episodes | (2011–2017) |
Four Rooms | (2011–present) |
Hacker Time | (2011–present) |
Horrible Histories: Gory Games | (2011–present) |
Junior Bake Off | (2011–present) |
Made in Chelsea | (2011–present) |
Match of the Day Kickabout | (2011–present) |
Ross Kemp: Extreme World | (2011–2017) |
Sam & Mark's Big Friday Wind-Up | (2011–present) |
Show Me What You're Made Of | (2011–present) |
Sun, Sex and Suspicious Parents | (2011–present) |
Trollied | (2011–present) |
Vera | (2011–present) |
2012 | |
4 O'Clock Club | (2012–present) |
Endeavour | (2012–present) |
Call the Midwife | (2012–present) |
Great Continental Railway Journeys | (2012–present) |
Prisoners' Wives | (2012–present) |
The Syndicate | (2012–present) |
Stella | (2012–present) |
Stand Up To Cancer | (2012–present) |
The Voice UK | (2012–present) |
Naomi's Nightmares of Nature | (2012–present) |
Tipping Point | (2012–2017) |
Paul O'Grady: For the Love of Dogs | (2012–present) |
Last Tango in Halifax | (2012–present) |
Operation Ouch! | (2012–present) |
Claimed and Shamed | (2012–present) |
Wolfblood | (2012–present) |
2013 | |
The Dumping Ground | (2013–present) |
Blandings | (2013–present) |
Dani's Castle | (2013–present) |
Absolute Genius with Dick and Dom | (2013–present) |
Broadchurch | (2013–2017) |
Caught Red Handed | (2013–present) |
Officially Amazing | (2013–present) |
Shetland | (2013–present) |
Big Star's Little Star | (2013–present) |
The Dog Rescuers | (2013–present) |
Still Open All Hours | (2013–present) |
2014 | |
Agatha Raisin | (2014–present) |
Boomers | (2014–present) |
The Dog Ate My Homework | (2014–present) |
The Jump | (2014–present) |
Prey | (2014–present) |
The Great Interior Design Challenge | (2014–present) |
The Great British Bake Off: An Extra Slice | (2014–present) |
Happy Valley | (2014–present) |
Holiday of My Lifetime | (2014, 2016–present) |
Tyger Takes On... | (2014–present) |
Educating Joey Essex | (2014–present) |
In the Club | (2014–present) |
Weekend | (2014–present) |
Chasing Shadows | (2014–present) |
Judge Rinder | (2014–present) |
Grantchester | (2014–present) |
Paul O'Grady's Animal Orphans | (2014–present) |
Weekend Escapes with Warwick Davis | (2014–present) |
Scrambled! | (2014–present) |
W1A | (2014–present) |
Who's Doing the Dishes? | (2014–present) |
2015 | |
The Almost Impossible Gameshow | (2015–present) |
CBBC Official Chart Show | (2015–present) |
Chewing Gum | (2015–present) |
Decimate | (2015–present) |
The Dengineers | (2015–present) |
Doctor Foster | (2015–present) |
Eve | (2015–present) |
The Frankenstein Chronicles | (2015–present) |
The Great Pottery Throw Down | (2015–present) |
Hetty Feather | (2015–present) |
Hive Minds | (2015–present) |
Hoff the Record | (2015–present) |
Hunted | (2015–present) |
In Therapy | (2015–present) |
The John Bishop Show | (2015–present) |
Josh | (2015–present) |
Jeremy Kyle Emergency Room | (2015–present) |
The Kyle Files | (2015–present) |
Michael McIntyre's Big Show | (2015–present) |
Ninja Warrior UK | (2015–present) |
Nightmare Tenants, Slum Landlords | (2015–present) |
No Offence | (2015–present) |
Ordinary Lies | (2015–present) |
Peter Kay's Car Share | (2015–2017) |
Play to the Whistle | (2015–present) |
Poldark | (2015–present) |
Real Stories with Ranvir Singh | (2015–present) |
Rebound | (2015–present) |
Safe House | (2015–present) |
SAS: Who Dares Wins | (2015–present) |
The Saturday Show | (2015–present) |
Scream Street | (2015–present) |
Simply Nigella | (2015–present) |
So Awkward | (2015–present) |
Special Forces: Ultimate Hell Week | (2015–present) |
Taskmaster | (2015–present) |
Thunderbirds Are Go | (2015–present) |
Victoria Derbyshire | (2015–present) |
Wild & Weird | (2015–present) |
1000 Heartbeats | (2015–present) |
10,000 BC | (2015–present) |
2016 | |
The A Word | (2016–present) |
All Over the Workplace | (2016–present) |
Alphabetical | (2016–present) |
Airmageddon | (2016–present) |
Bake Off: Crème de la Crème | (2016–2017) |
Bang on the Money | (2016–present) |
Borderline | (2016–present) |
Cash Trapped | (2016–present) |
Class Dismissed | (2016–present) |
The Code | (2016–present) |
Crashing | (2016–present) |
Crazyhead | (2016–present) |
The Crown | (2016–present) |
The Cruise | (2016–present) |
Dara O Briain's Go 8 Bit | (2016–present) |
Debatable | (2016–present) |
The Durrells | (2016–present) |
Got What It Takes? | (2016–present) |
Insert Name Here | (2016–present) |
The Level | (2016–present) |
Love, Nina | (2016–present) |
Maigret | (2016–present) |
Marcella | (2016–present) |
Masterpiece | (2016–present) |
Mum | (2016–present) |
Naked Attraction | (2016–present) |
New Blood | (2016–present) |
The Night Manager | (2016–present) |
No Such Thing as the News | (2016–present) |
Paranoid | (2016–present) |
Peter Kay's Comedy Shuffle | (2016–present) |
Peston on Sunday | (2016–present) |
Pocket Money Pitch | (2016–present) |
The Premier League Show | (2016–present) |
The Question Jury | (2016–present) |
Spot Bots | (2016–present) |
Stan Lee's Lucky Man | (2016–present) |
Tenable | (2016–present) |
Think Tank | (2016–present) |
This Time Next Year | (2016–present) |
Top Class | (2016–present) |
Unspun with Matt Forde | (2016–present) |
Upstart Crow | (2016–present) |
Victoria | (2016–present) |
The Windsors | (2016–present) |
Witless | (2016–present) |
Zapped | (2016–present) |
Ending this year
Date(s) | Programme | Channel(s) | Debut(s) |
---|---|---|---|
4 January | Pop Quiz | BBC One / Red TV / Vintage TV / BBC Four | 1981 |
7 January | The National Lottery Draws | BBC One | 1994 |
15 January | Thailand: Earth's Tropical Paradise | BBC Two | 2017 |
27 January | Tina and Bobby | ITV | |
3 February | Spy in the Wild | BBC One | |
6 February | Apple Tree Yard | ||
12 February | Uncle | BBC Three / BBC One | 2014 |
14 February | The Moorside | BBC One | 2017 |
20 February | The Halcyon | ITV | |
25 February | Let It Shine | BBC One | |
13 March | Meet the Lords | BBC Two | |
14 March | 1066: A Year to Conquer England | ||
The Replacement | BBC One | ||
19 March | SS-GB | ||
23 March | Little People | Cartoonito / Tiny Pop | 2016 |
29 March | Postman Pat | BBC One / BBC Two / CBeebies / Tiny Pop | 1981 |
9 April | Clique | BBC Three | 2017 |
13 April | Gap Year | E4 | |
17 April | Broadchurch | ITV | 2013 |
2 May | Peter Kay's Car Share | BBC One | 2015 |
9 May | Second Chance Summer: Tuscany | BBC Two | 2017 |
11 May | Born to Kill | Channel 4 | |
14 May | Escape to Costa Rica | ||
15 May | Little Boy Blue | ITV | |
18 May | Three Girls | BBC One | |
25 May | The Trial: A Murder in the Family | Channel 4 | |
30 May | Bake Off: Crème de la Crème | BBC Two | 2016 |
30 June | Mount Pleasant | Sky 1 | 2011 |
13 July | 100 Days/100 Days + | BBC Four / BBC News Channel | 2017 |
15 July | Wife Swap | Channel 4 | 2003 & 2017 |
30 July | Wild Alaska Live | BBC One | 2017 |
1 August | In the Dark | ||
12 August | Ross Kemp: Extreme World | Sky 1 | 2011 |
November | Inspector George Gently | BBC One | 2007 |
TBC | Episodes | BBC Two | 2011 |
Tipping Point | ITV | 2012 |
Deaths
See also
References
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