2000 in British television

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List of years in British television (table)
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This is a list of British television related events from 2000.

Events[edit]

January[edit]

February[edit]

  • 1 February
  • 3 February – Joe Absolom makes his final EastEnders appearance in a dramatic storyline that sees his character, Matthew Rose get his revenge against Steve Owen after Rose was wrongly convicted of the manslaughter of Owen's girlfriend.[26]
  • 5 February – An episode of Casualty in which the character Amy Howard (played by Rebecca Wheatley) is persuaded to attend a singing audition. The song she performs, Stay with Me Baby is subsequently released as a single by Wheatley who had been a singer prior to her acting career.[27]
  • 7 February – Director-General of the BBC Greg Dyke launches his "Cut the Crap" initiative, a drive to cut red tape at the BBC. Staff are issued with yellow cards bearing the phrase "Cut the crap, make it happen" which they are encouraged to brandish at meetings if they feel inertia is getting in the way of creativity.[28]
  • 10 February – Coronation Street confirms that Jane Danson who plays Leanne Battersby will leave the soap later in the year.[29]
  • 11 February – Debut of Reach for the Moon on ITV, starring Lynda Bellingham.
  • 12 February – BBC One airs When Changing Rooms Met Ground Force, a crossover edition of its two popular design and makeover shows, Changing Rooms and Ground Force.[30]
  • 13 February – BBC Two airs Gimme Some Truth, a documentary featuring footage of John Lennon as he recorded his 1971 album Imagine.[31]
  • 15 February – BBC One airs a one-off quiz, A Question of EastEnders to celebrate the soap's 15th anniversary.[32]
  • 18 February – Kevin Pallister leaves Emmerdale as Graham Clark.
  • 19 February – EastEnders celebrates its 15th anniversary on BBC One.[33]
  • 23 February – The first episode of the children's drama Hero to Zero is broadcast on BBC One.[34]
  • 24 February – The Guardian reports that Australian soap Home and Away will move from ITV to Channel 5 after the latter paid £40 million for the broadcast rights. It is the first time the channel has poached a programme from its rival.[35][36]
  • 27 February – BBC One airs the first episode of Monarch of the Glen.[37]
  • 28 February – Having decided not to adopt the 1999 ITV generic look, Scottish and Grampian launch a new on-screen logo.[38]

March[edit]

  • 1 March – Carlton Select closes, with Carlton's two other channels, Carlton Cinema and Carlton Food Network expanding their broadcasting hours in the wake Carlton Select's demise.[39]
  • 2 March – The axe falls on some EastEnders characters, including Ricky Butcher.
  • 4 March – ITV broadcasts The Brit Awards 2000, hosted by Davina McCall.
  • 5 March – Former Take That singer Gary Barlow makes his acting debut in the 150th episode of Heartbeat, playing a hitchhiker named Mike Shannon.[40]
  • 7 March – Coronation Street confirms that television presenter Naomi Russell will join the series to play factory worker Bobbi Lewis.[41]
  • 11 March – ITV broadcasts The Lookalikes Agency.
  • 12 March – ITV airs the drama Hero of the Hour, starring Ross Kemp.
  • 13 March – Debut of The Blind Date, a two-part ITV drama starring Zara Turner.
  • 15 March – ITV will scrap its afternoon showing of Home and Away from 27 March after losing the soap to Channel 5, but it will continue to air in the early evening slot.[42]
  • 16 March – The Britt Allcroft Company best known for producing the first five series of Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends acquires the rights to the long-running children's arts and crafts programme Art Attack and other works from The Media Merchants company run by the host of the series Neil Buchanan and Tim Edmunds.
  • 17 March – To mark the re-release of Stanley Kubrick's 1971 film A Clockwork Orange, FilmFour airs Return of A Clockwork Orange, a documentary discussing the controversy surrounding the film. It is also shown the following day on Channel 4.[43]
  • 19 March – Debut of Seeing Red, an ITV drama based on the book of the same name by Coral Atkins and starring Sarah Lancashire and Richard Dillane.[44]
  • 21 March – Channel 5 broadcasts the network premiere of Metro, starring Eddie Murphy.
  • 22 March – The House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee issues a report calling on ITV to restore News at Ten after finding that the broadcaster has seen a drop in ratings since the programme was dropped in 1999.[45]
  • 24 March – Paul Loughran leaves Emmerdale after six years when his character Butch Dingle dies in a bus crash.[46]
  • 26 March – Debut of Doctors, BBC One's new daily serial set in a doctors' surgery. The first episode is broadcast at 6:35pm on a Sunday evening, before continuing on weekdays at 12:30pm.[47]
  • 27 March – The BBC announces plans to establish an annual bursary at a college in Falmouth for students wishing to train in broadcast journalism as a "living tribute" to TV presenter Jill Dando.[48]
  • 28 March
    • In its annual report, the Independent Television Commission praises Channel 5 for reducing the amount of "tacky" sex shows included in its scheduling, while 5 News and the channel's films and factual programming are also praised. However, the watchdog criticises the amount of low budget programming shown, particularly in the early hours of the morning. The ITC also has warm words for Channel 4, in particular for the "freshness and innovation" of its programming.[49]
    • BBC Two's Spring and Summer season will see actor John Alford, jailed in 1999 for drug offences, make his return to television as a taxi passenger in a ten-minute short titled Talk Radio, it is reported. Other highlights include the comedy Coupling and Rhona, the first British sitcom about a lesbian.[50]
  • 29 March – The Broadcasting Standards Commission reprimands EastEnders for episodes screened in December 1999 that featured characters attending a stag and hen weekend in Amsterdam which showed drinking, drug taking and sexual innuendo. An episode of Goodness Gracious Me aired in February is also criticised for a sketch in which mango chutney was spread on communion bread, something that several viewers felt was disrespectful to the Eucharist.[51]
  • 30 March – UK Arena is renamed UK Drama.

April[edit]

  • 3 April – BSkyB airs the first interactive TV advert for the cooking sauce Chicken Tonight. Viewers are offered the option of pushing the Red Button to visit Sky's interactive TV service Open where they can order a money-off voucher and a recipe book and to browse through recipes.[52]
  • 12 April – ITV broadcasts the second Pride of Britain Awards which attracts an audience of 10.2 million. The figures prove to be a surprise for the broadcaster and are higher than those achieved by the 2000 BRIT Awards which had 8.8 million viewers and the BAFTA Awards that aired on Sky One which had a viewership of 100,000.[53]
  • 14 April – Former MI5 Officer David Shayler who fled from the UK after passing secret documents to the Mail on Sunday, appears as a guest on Have I Got News for You. Because he faces arrest if he returns to the UK, his contribution is recorded via satellite from a studio in France which affected the timing of the comedy on that edition.[54][55]
  • 17 April
    • A former researcher on The Vanessa Show wins libel damages against The Mirror newspaper after it published an article in February 1999 claiming she knew many of the guests she had hired for the show were fakes.[56]
    • The shopping channel Ideal World is launched.
  • 20 April – After twelve years as Ricky Butcher, Sid Owen makes his final appearance in EastEnders where his character is seen leaving for Europe in a lorry.[57]
  • 28 April – Channel 4 confirms that Liza Tarbuck will leave The Big Breakfast to return to acting after the presenter broke the news on the programme's website. She will leave in August at the end of her year-long contract.[58]
  • 30 April – Guinness's 1999 Surfer advertisement is voted No. 1 in a poll of the top 100 greatest television adverts of all time in a show for Channel 4.[59]

May[edit]

June[edit]

  • 2 June – Johnny Vaughan confirms he will step down as co-presenter of The Big Breakfast in early 2001.[75]
  • 4 June
    • 13-year-old Coronation Street character Sarah Platt (played by Tina O'Brien) gives birth to a baby daughter called Bethany, a storyline which intensifies a national public and media frenzy surrounding the topic of teenage pregnancy.[76]
    • Marjorie Lang wins the 2000 series of MasterChef.
  • 6 June – Channel 5 airs the one-off game show Naked Jungle as part of its Naturism Week. The show features presenter Keith Chegwin and contestants completing a number of puzzle-type tasks in a jungle environment.[77] The programme sparks a debate about nudity on television and is mentioned in the House of Commons where Culture Secretary Chris Smith questions the quality of British television content.[78]
  • 8 June – After 11 years, Home and Away is shown on ITV for the final time.[79] It returns on Channel 5 on 16 July 2001.[80] The show's year-long absence occurs because of a clause in ITV's contract preventing it from being broadcast for at least a year after its ITV run ends.[79]
  • 10 June - The ITV Morning News is rebranded to match the rest of the ITV News bulletins, having retained the 1995 look for another year.
  • 10 June–2 July – Euro 2000 is held jointly by Belgium and the Netherlands.
  • 14 June - Sky Sports retains the rights to broadcast live FA Premiership football until 2004. The £1.1 billion deal allows the broadcaster to show 66 matches per season and an additional 40 matches per season on a new pay-per-view service in partnership with cable platform NTL. On the same day, ITV secures the rights to league highlights for the same three year period.[81]
  • 15 June
    • Patsy Palmer makes her post-EastEnders debut in one-off detective drama McCready and Daughter, while former Coronation Street actress Sarah Lancashire stars in the legal sitcom Chambers.[82]
    • BBC Two airs a special edition of TOTP2 dedicated to ABBA.[83]
    • The BBC secures a three year deal for free-to-air rights to The FA Cup and England international matches beginning from the 2001–02 season.[84]
  • 16 June – ONdigital outbids BSkyB for rights to the Nationwide Football League and the Worthington Cup from the 2001–02 season. The three-season deal is worth £315 million, more than five times the amount of the existing contract with BSkyB.[85]
  • 20 June – A failure at a substation in Shepherd's Bush causes a power cut at BBC Television Centre and leads to major disruption to BBC television and radio services.[86]
  • 28 June – The Broadcasting Standards Commission upholds twelve viewer complaints about the London Weekend Television documentary Aircraft Emergencies which showed slow motion footage of air crashes against the backdrop of dramatic music. The Commission felt the programme was too voyeuristic and would have added to the distress of those involved in the incidents.[87]
  • 29 June – It is announced that Lisa Riley will leave her role as Emmerdale's Mandy Dingle in the Autumn.[88]

July[edit]

  • 1 July – C-Day in the United Kingdom. From that day, most commercial broadcasters begin broadcasting adverts, promotions, and idents in 16:9 widescreen ratio.[89]
  • 3 July – ITV announce that Emmerdale will air five nights a week from the Autumn.[90]
  • 6 July – The first episode of the new police procedural drama Burnside is broadcast on ITV.
  • 11 July – Eric Richard who plays the long-serving Sergeant Bob Cryer in The Bill is to leave the series, it is reported.[91]
  • 14 July – The reality show Big Brother debuts in the UK on Channel 4.[92]
  • 17 July – ITV launches a £500,000 advertising campaign fronted by Jerry Springer which was aimed at repositioning ITV2 as a general entertainment channel. When it launched in December 1998, the channel had promoted itself as a younger alternative to ITV.[93]
  • 20 July – The Independent Television Commission says it will issue a "legally binding" directive to ITV to move its 11pm news bulletin forward an hour if it does not restore News at Ten. The ITC have been concerned about the 11pm bulletin's low ratings.[94]
  • 22 July – The ten part popular culture series I Love the '70s debuts on BBC Two with I Love 1970[95] where each edition was dedicated to a different year of the decade, the series concludes on 23 September with I Love 1979.[96]
  • 27 July – ITV says it will apply for a High Court judicial review into the ITC's decision to order it to move its 11pm news bulletin.[97]
  • 28 July – BBC One introduces its daytime soap Doctors into the evening schedule with the first of seven weekly episodes planned to air in the Friday 7pm slot.[98] The episodes are shown in that slot up to Friday 1 September,[99] with the final episode of the run airing at 7:00pm on Thursday 7 September.[100]

August[edit]

September[edit]

  • 1–2 September – Sky One hosts a special weekend dedicated to celebrating the tenth anniversary of The Simpsons in the UK.
  • 3 September – Channel 4 airs the network television premiere of Elizabeth, Shekhar Kapur's 1998 biographical period drama with Australian actress Catherine Blanchett as the title role of Queen Elizabeth, as well as British stars include Geoffrey Rush, Christopher Eccleston, Joseph Fiennes, Richard Attenborough and John Gielgud in his last feature film appearance.
  • 5 September – The BBC has given its permission for Teletubbies to be used in promotional material for a controversial windfarm in Wales in order to help win over critics.[116]
  • 7 September – Gretchen Franklin makes her final EastEnders appearance as Ethel Skinner. The character is involved in a controversial euthanasia storyline after asking her friend Dot Cotton (June Brown) to help her end her life because she has terminal cancer.[117][118]
  • 11 September
    • Granada Media plc agrees to acquire 45% of Irish commercial broadcaster TV3 from the channel's original consortium as part of a deal giving TV3 the right to simulcast programming with ITV.[119]
    • BBC One airs Episode 2000 of EastEnders.
  • 12 September
    • As the fuel protests begin to affect motorists and businesses, Sky News introduces its news ticker and regular updates to keep viewers informed of events concerning the developing crisis. BBC News and ITV News begin regular updates the following day. Through the duration of the crisis, the rolling news channels see an increase in viewers, while audiences for bulletins on BBC One and ITV increase by as much as 50 percent, their highest since the Kosovo War.[120]
    • Debut of Jailbreak, a reality show described as Channel 5's answer to Big Brother, in which contestants can win £100,000 by escaping from a mock prison. The three-week show, presented by Craig Charles, Ruth England and Charlie Stayt is criticised by prisoners' groups.[121] Roberta Woodhouse, Hannah Davies and Laura Hawkins become the first contestants to escape on 23 September.[122]
  • 13 September – Peter Salmon, current Controller of BBC One is appointed the broadcaster's new Director of Sport.[123]
  • 14 September – Lorraine Heggessey is appointed Controller of BBC One, becoming the first woman to hold the post. She will take over from present Controller, Peter Salmon on 1 November.[124]
  • 15 September
    • The first series of Big Brother is won by Craig Phillips. He announces that he will be giving his £70,000 prize to his friend Joanne Harris who has Down syndrome to pay for her heart and lung transplant.[125]
    • After eleven years on the air, the final edition of Breakfast News is broadcast on BBC One.
  • 15 September–1 October – The BBC broadcasts the 2000 Olympic Games with live coverage on BBC One from late evening until the following lunchtime. BBC Two provides alternative live mid-morning coverage during the first week.
  • 18 September
    • Launch of The Community Channel, a free-to-air television channel wholly owned by Media Trust and supported by major broadcasters including the BBC.[126]
    • The Independent Television Commission rejects viewer complaints about Channel 5's Naked Jungle in which contestants and presenter Keith Chegwin were seen naked because it was aired after the watershed and did not breach decency regulations.[127]
  • 20 September – BBC Two airs a special 1970s edition of TOTP2.[128]
  • 21 September – ITV announces the return of News at Ten which will air on at least three nights a week from the New Year. The decision comes a week before a judicial review into the ITC's order for the bulletin to be restored was to be heard.[129]
  • 23 September – The final edition of the Summer Saturday morning children's magazine show Fully Booked is broadcast. This brings to an end of an almost 20 year run of BBC1 Summer only Saturday morning children's magazine shows.
  • 27 September – BBC Two airs a special edition of TOTP2 featuring the hits of John Lennon and presented by Yoko Ono.[130]
  • 30 September – BBC One airs a special gala concert paying tribute to Jill Dando, featuring some of her favourite artists. The concert was arranged to raise funds for the Jill Dando Institute, a crime science unit planned in her memory.[131][132]
  • September–October – Jacky Rowland, the BBC News Foreign Correspondent in Yugoslavia is expelled from that country in the wake of the presidential election that saw Vojislav Koštunica defeat Slobodan Milošević for alleged biased reporting. However, it later emerged Rowland did not leave Yugoslavia, but stayed in hiding as events surrounding the overthrow of Slobodan Milošević unfolded before emerging to report on its conclusion.[133][134]

October[edit]

  • 1 October
  • 2 October
    • Q TV a television music channel based on Q Magazine, is launched.[140]
    • ITV soap Emmerdale begins airing five nights a week.
    • The first edition of the BBC's revamped breakfast news programme Breakfast is broadcast. The new programme is carried on both BBC One and BBC News 24. Previously, they had aired their own breakfast programme Breakfast 24.
  • 3 October – The BBC confirms it will move its Nine O'Clock News to 10pm from 16 October to compete with ITV's relaunch of News at Ten. The announcement causes surprise as it had been expected the changes would take effect from October 2001.[141] Politicians from all major political parties criticise the BBC's decision, fearing it will affect news quality.[142]
  • 4 October
    • Prince Charles joins several television personalities, including Gaby Roslin and Des Lynam to promote Loud Tie Day, a campaign to raise awareness of bowel cancer.[143]
    • Comedy sketches involving abortion, dead babies and people with disabilities that appeared in episodes of Channel 4's Jam are criticised by the Broadcasting Standards Commission because they went "beyond acceptable boundaries in their treatment of issues of particular sensitivity which required greater respect for the vulnerability of those depicted".[144]
  • 5 October – The launch of bid-up.tv, later bid.tv.
  • 7 October
  • 9 October
  • 11 October – Coronation Street airs its first hour long late night episode in which a siege occurs at the Freshco supermarket. Its broadcast at 10pm features frequent swearing and violence.
  • 13 October – The flagship BBC One news programme the Nine O'Clock News ends after a run of 30 years after the BBC earlier announced that it was to move the bulletin to 10pm. The BBC News at Ten is launched on Monday 16 October. The change attracts criticism from both the National Consumer Council and the Culture Secretary Chris Smith. The BBC Nine O'Clock News also moves to its dedicated channel on the same day. ITV later announces its intention to reinstate News at Ten from January 2001.[151]
  • 16 October
  • 17 October – BBC One airs the network television premiere of Men in Black, starring Will Smith, Tommy Lee Jones, Linda Fiorentino, Vincent D'Onofrio and Rip Torn.
  • 20 October – Have I Got News for You returns for a new series, moving from BBC Two to BBC One.[152]
  • 21 October
    • Parkinson returns to BBC One for a new series as part of its Saturday night schedule, having previously aired on Fridays since its relaunch in 1998.[153]
    • Helicopter pilot Duncan Bickley loses £218,000 on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? after incorrectly answering the £500,000 question. Having reached £250,000 his winnings dropped back to £32,000 after he gave the wrong answer to a question about the name of the aircraft in which Amy Johnson flew solo to Australia in 1930.[154]
  • 26 October – 15-year-old Sonia Jackson, a character in EastEnders played by Natalie Cassidy, unexpectedly gives birth to a baby girl called Chloe which comes four months after ITV's Coronation Street ran a similar teenage pregnancy storyline.[155][156][157]
  • 28 October
  • 30 October
  • 31 October – The Weakest Link makes its BBC One debut as part of the channel's evening schedule.[161] Billed as the Champions' League, the series sees winning contestants from BBC Two's daytime version of the quiz return to compete for a £20,000 prize, double the amount offered by the daytime show.[162]

November[edit]

  • 2 November
  • 6–10 November – Channel 4 celebrates 18 years of Brookside with a run of five episodes over four nights in which viewers learn details of the demise of Susannah Morrisey (played by Karen Drury) through a series of flashbacks.[165]
  • 10 November – Channel 5 have commissioned a six-part run of Late Night with Jerry Springer, a new late-night chat show that will begin airing weekly from 22 November. Guests on the series will include Steven Berkoff, Louise Redknapp, Billie Piper, Dani Behr, Marc Almond and Fay Ripley.[166]
  • 13 November – BBC News reports that Russian state broadcaster RTR has bought the popular children's series Teletubbies, a programme unlike anything it has aired before.[167]
  • 15 November – ITV airs The Remorseful Day, the final episode of the Inspector Morse series.[168]
  • 16 November – Tony Blair's Chief of Communications Alastair Campbell tells political journalists that US-style televised election debates are virtually inevitable and that inter-party talks are under way to establish ground rules for such a debate, as long as the "chemistry" is right.[169]
  • 17 November
    • BBC One airs the 2000 Children in Need telethon. By the following day, it has raised £12m for charity, surpassing the 1999 total of £11.2m.[170]
    • FilmFour airs Gough Lewis's controversial 1999 documentary Sex: The Annabel Chong Story.[171]
  • 20 November – Judith Keppel becomes the first contestant to win £1 million on ITV's Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. On the same evening, the final episode of the long-running sitcom One Foot in the Grave is shown on BBC One in the same timeslot. It is later speculated that Keppel's win was fixed so that ITV would draw ratings away from BBC One. However, the ITC clears Celador and ITV of the allegations.[172]
  • 23 November
    • The BBC and ITV announce plans for two one-hour televised leaders debates during the run-up to the next General Election. Subject to the leaders of Britain's three main political parties agreeing to participate, a debate would be held by each broadcaster and chaired by David and Jonathan Dimbleby respectively.[173] However, after Prime Minister Tony Blair declines to take part in January 2001,[174] three separate question and answer sessions involving a single leader are held by each network during the 2001 election campaign.[175][176]
    • Amanda Barrie who plays Alma Halliwell in Coronation Street announces her intention to leave the soap in Summer 2001.[177]
  • 28 November – Filming has begun on the new series of Crossroads, BBC News reports. The revived soap would begin airing on ITV in March 2001.[178]
  • November – UK Play is renamed Play UK.

December[edit]

  • 1 December – The BBC apologises to ITV for suggesting it rigged Judith Keppel's win on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? as part of a ratings battle.[179]
  • 2 December – Nicola Kirsch wins the twelfth series of Stars in Their Eyes, performing as Maria Callas.[180]
  • 8 December
  • 9 December – Westlife's single My Love wins the 2000 Record of the Year, giving the Irish boyband their second win in a row.[186]
  • 10 December – Steve Redgrave is named as this year's BBC Sports Personality of the Year.[187]
  • 11 December
    • BBC One airs a BBC News special, Prince William in Chile, showing footage of Prince William's charity expedition to Chilean Patagonia with Raleigh International. The prince was interviewed and filmed during the ten-week trip, with an interview released to the media on 10 December.[188]
    • The Independent Television Commission criticises Channel 4's early evening scheduling of US TV series Angel, a drama about a reformed vampire which it says includes scenes "reminiscent of a late-night horror film". The channel aired edited episodes of the series in the early evening, but some viewers had complained it was inappropriate for children, while others had complained about the scenes being cut. The ITC felt that three of the edited episodes had still contained unsuitable matter for family viewing. The series has since been moved to a later time slot where it can be aired uncut.[189]
  • 12 December – Culture Secretary Chris Smith announces plans for the creation of the Office of Communications (Ofcom), a watchdog that would oversee the regulation of the UK broadcasting and telecommunications industries and take over responsibility from several current bodies, including the Broadcasting Standards Commission and Office of Telecommunications.[190]
  • 17 December – Can We Fix It?, the theme tune to the CBBC series Bob the Builder, tops the UK Singles Chart, becoming this year's Christmas number one.[191]
  • 18 December – The British Film Institute publishes its list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes of the 20th century. Compiled by a poll of industry professionals, Fawlty Towers tops the list, followed by Cathy Come Home and Doctor Who.
  • 21 December – Channel 5's 12-part series X-Rated which includes reviews of pornographic films is criticised as unacceptable by the Independent Television Commission after it showed clips of an R18 film that can only be bought from specialist suppliers.[192]
  • 22 December – A contestant in the grand final of Series 29 of the Channel 4 quiz show Fifteen to One who cannot be identified for legal reasons, is edited out of the episode. The contestant, standing at position 4, is eliminated in the first round, having answered two questions incorrectly. The two questions are cut from the sequence, while the camera jumps from positions 3 to 5. From Round 2, the show continues as normal.
  • 24 December – Channel Four shows the 1999 version of A Christmas Carol starring Patrick Stewart, Richard E. Grant and Dominic West.
  • 25 December – BBC One airs the UK television premiere of Titanic, with overnight figures giving it an audience of 9.9 million. ITV has seven of the top ten most watched programmes of the day. Other popular Christmas Day shows include Coronation Street (ITV, 13.7m), EastEnders (BBC One, 12.1m) and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (ITV, 11.1m).[193]
  • 27 December
    • BBC One airs a celebrity edition of Robot Wars, participants include Vic Reeves, Chris Eubank and boy band Five.[194]
    • ITV airs Sinatra: Good Guy Bad Guy, a programme investigating Frank Sinatra's alleged links to the Mafia. The film was made without the permission of the Sinatra family and includes friends and colleagues discussing the late singer, some talking about him for the first time.[195]

Debuts[edit]

BBC[edit]

ITV (Including ITV and ITV2)[edit]

Channel 4[edit]

Channel 5[edit]

S4C[edit]

Play UK[edit]

Sky One[edit]

Disney Channel UK[edit]

Nickelodeon UK[edit]

Nick Jr. UK[edit]

Cartoon Network UK[edit]

Fox Kids UK[edit]

Discovery Kids[edit]

  • Unknown – Hi-5 (1999–2011, 2017–present)

Channels[edit]

New channels[edit]

Date Channel
1 February Discovery Kids
Discovery Wings
March Tara TV
30 March UK Drama
17 April Ideal World
27 May Boomerang
1 July TCM UK
1 August ITN News Channel
18 September Community Channel
29 September Playhouse Disney
Toon Disney
2 October Q
5 October bid-up.tv

Pay Defunct channels[edit]

Date Channel
2000 ONTV (CableTel (UK) ltd) (Pay TV (UK))

Defunct channels[edit]

Date Channel
31 January Carlton Kids
1 February Carlton World
1 March Carlton Select
30 March UK Arena
1 July TNT UK

Television shows[edit]

Changes of network affiliation[edit]

Shows Moved from Moved to
Telly Addicts BBC One Challenge
Nine O'Clock News BBC News 24
Have I Got News for You BBC Two BBC One
Blockbusters Sky One
King of the Hill (First run rights) Channel 4
V Channel 5 Sci-Fi Channel
Babar Nick Jr. Channel 5
Mega Babies Sky One
Fat Dog Mendoza Cartoon Network
The Powerpuff Girls
Angela Anaconda Channel 4
Fly Tales BBC One
Mona the Vampire Nickelodeon
Rotten Ralph BBC One Nickelodeon
Professor Bubble The Children's Channel Living
Sesame Street Disney Channel Nick Jr.
Theodore Tugboat ITV2 Discovery Kids
Family Guy Sky One Channel 4
Futurama Sky One Channel 4
Franklin Sky One Channel 4

Returning this year after a break of one year or longer[edit]

Continuing television shows[edit]

1920s[edit]

  • BBC Wimbledon (1927–1939, 1946–2019, 2021–present)

1930s[edit]

1950s[edit]

1960s[edit]

1970s[edit]

1980s[edit]

1990s[edit]

Ending this year[edit]

Births[edit]

Deaths[edit]

Date Name Age Cinematic Credibility
13 January Eric Dodson 79 actor (Rumpole of the Bailey, It Ain't Half Hot Mum, Porridge)
28 January Joy Shelton 77 actress
Kenneth Waller 72 actor (Old Mr. Grace in Are You Being Served?)
7 February Stewart Farrar 83 television scriptwriter
7 March Charles Gray 71 actor (An Englishman Abroad, Bergerac)
10 April Peter Jones 79 actor (The Rag Trade, Mr Digby, Darling)
11 April Diana Darvey 54 actress (The Benny Hill Show)
20 April Bill Dean[199] 78 actor (Harry Cross in Brookside)
24 April William Moore 84 actor (Cyril Turpin in Coronation Street)
1 May Nora Swinburne 97 actress (The Forsyte Saga, Fall of Eagles)
3 May Lewis Allen 94 television director
18 May Denis Gifford 72 television scriptwriter
21 May John Gielgud 96 actor
25 May Nicholas Clay 53 actor (Will Shakespeare, The Search for Alexander the Great)
30 May Doris Hare 95 actress (On the Buses)
24 June David Tomlinson 83 actor
27 June David Neal 68 actor
28 June Michael Ripper 87 actor (Butterflies, Freewheelers)
29 June John Abineri 72 actor (Doctor Who, The Moon Stallion)
22 July Eric Christmas 84 actor
27 July Paddy Joyce 77 actor (Coronation Street, EastEnders)
5 August Alec Guinness 86 actor (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Smiley's People)
6 August Sir Robin Day[200] 74 political broadcaster and commentator
13 August Terence Feely 72 television screenwriter (The Gentle Touch)
29 August Shelagh Fraser 79 actress (A Family at War, Star Wars)
6 September Desmond Wilcox[201] 69 documentary maker and television producer
9 September Bill Waddington[202] 84 music hall performer, comedian and actor
17 September Paula Yates[203] 41 television presenter and writer
25 September Tommy Reilly 81 harmonica player, played theme to Dial 999
17 October Ivan Owen 73 voice actor (The Basil Brush Show)
30 October Elizabeth Bradley 78 actress (Maud Grimes in Coronation Street)
4 November Stephanie Lawrence 50 actress
9 November Eric Morley[204] 82 Impresario and creator of the Miss World competition
Hugh Paddick 85 actor (The Benny Hill Show, Blackadder)
20 November Morris Barry 82 television producer
15 December Trevor Adams 54 actor (The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, Fawlty Towers)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "2000 Today". BFI Database. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  2. ^ "Castaways prepare for bleak New Year". BBC News. BBC. 31 December 1999. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  3. ^ "Tearful Castaways head home". BBC News. BBC. 1 January 2001. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  4. ^ "Ali G's festive cheer". BBC News. BBC. 3 December 1999. Retrieved 20 April 2014.
  5. ^ "Millennium TV smashes New Year records". BBC News. BBC. 2 January 2000. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  6. ^ "Mandela's green-fingered makeover". BBC News. BBC. 14 December 1999. Retrieved 19 April 2014.
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External links[edit]