2000 Today, the marathon 28-hour live broadcast to celebrate the dawn of the new millennium ends at 13:30.[1][2]
Launch of Castaway 2000 on BBC One, a reality television show billed as a bold experiment for the new millennium. Thirty-six men, women and children from the British public are placed on Taransay, a remote Scottish island in the Outer Hebrides for a year and must build a sustainable self-sufficient community.[3] The programme ends on New Year's Day 2001.[4]
Provisional viewing figures suggest BBC One's millennium coverage was watched by 12.8 million viewers as the New Year was welcomed in at midnight, more than twice the usual audience for New Year television. ITV's coverage was seen by 4.1 million.[6]
The long-running BBC children's programme Blue Peter reunites two former presenting teams to dig up the time capsules they buried for the year 2000 in 1971 and 1984.
A brand new stop motion animated series for preschoolers Yoho Ahoy receives its very first screening on BBC One.
17 January – BBC Two begins a four-part adaptation of Gormenghast, Mervyn Peake's series of fantasy novels.[12] The series, starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers is launched with a massive publicity campaign, but is panned by critics, and loses 40% of its viewership by the third episode. Figures indicate that the first episode is watched by 4.2 million, a healthy audience for a BBC Two programme, but that by the third episode, aired on 31 January, this has fallen to 2.5 million.[13]
18 January –
ITV sports commentator Steve Smith is reprimanded by the Independent Television Commission for calling a French rugby player a "stroppy little frog" after he threw the ball at an opponent during a World Cup match between France and Fiji in October 1999.[14]
Retired Naval Officer Peter Lee becomes the biggest winner to date on ITV's Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? after winning £500,000. He is also the first person to have the opportunity to answer the £1 million question, which concerns the location of Durham County Cricket Club, but takes the money after being unsure of the answer.[15][16]
23 January – Helen Flanagan takes over the role of Coronation Street character Rosie Webster from Emma Collinge, who had played Rosie since she was ten days old. Collinge left the series to devote more time to gymnastics.[19]
Channel 4's The 11 O'Clock Show is criticised by the Broadcasting Standards Commission for including a reference to murdered television presenter Jill Dando which would have caused "widespread public offence". Channel 4 says that the item, aired on 26 October 1999, was meant to be a criticism of the high cost of the murder investigation and the ratings war between BBC One and ITV.[22]
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.[25]
5 February – 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.[26]
7 February – BBC Director-GeneralGreg 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.[27]
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 cross over edition of its two popular design and makeover shows, Changing Rooms and Ground Force.[29]
13 February – BBC Two airs Gimme Some Truth, a documentary featuring footage of John Lennon as he recorded his 1971 album Imagine.[30]
15 February – BBC One airs a one-off quiz, A Question of EastEnders to celebrate the soap's 15th anniversary.[31]
18 February – Kevin Pallister leaves Emmerdale as Graham Clark.
23 February – The very first episode of the children's drama Hero to Zero has its screening on BBC One.[33]
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.[34][35]
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.[41]
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.[42]
26 March – Debut of Doctors, BBC One's new daily serial set in a doctors' surgery. The first episode is broadcasts at 6.35pm on a Sunday evening, before continuing on weekdays at 12.30pm.[46]
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.[47]
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 as warm words for Channel 4, in particular for the "freshness and innovation" of its programming.[48]
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.[49]
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.[50]
3 April – BSkyB airs the first interactive TV commercial, an advert for the cooking sauce Chicken Tonight. Viewers are offered the option of clicking the Red Button to visit Sky's interactive TV service Open, where they can order a money-off voucher and a recipe book, and browse through recipes.[51]
12 April – ITV screens the secondPride 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 and had a viewership of 100,000.[52]
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.[53][54]
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.[55]
20 April – After twelve years as EastEnders'Ricky Butcher, Sid Owen makes his final appearance in the soap, where his character is seen departing for Europe in a lorry.[56]
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.[57]
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 poll for Channel 4.[58]
May
1 May –
ITV's Day of Promise, a series of special programmes throughout the day hosted by Eammon Holmes, Carol Vorderman and Danielle Nicholls. The day is part of a 12-month campaign in which people around Britain are asked to make a simple pledge to do something positive for the first year of the new millennium.[59] Among the programmes aired today are the first celebrity edition of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?.[60]
Formal broadcasting of pay-per-view (PPV) service ONrequest begins.
4 May – Coronation Street confirms that Charles Lawson, who plays the soap's Jim McDonald, is to be written out of the series when his contract ends in October.[61]
Four senior television figures—Alastair Burnet, David Nicholas, Geoffrey Cox and Nigel Ryan—have written to the Independent Television Commission accusing ITV of ruining its reputation by replacing News at Ten with "weak series, entertainment trivia and mildly pornographic programmes", it is reported.[62]
18 May – The Independent Television Commission (ITC) rejects proposals by ITV to improve promotion of its news bulletins and increase spending on evening programming. The broadcaster's nightly news bulletin has suffered a drop in ratings since News at Ten was axed last year.[63]
22 May – Following a hearing at Inner London Crown Court, former Changing Rooms designer Liz Wagstaff is sentenced to twelve months imprisonment for deceiving friends and colleagues out of £54,000 by claiming she needed the money for specialist cancer treatment.[66]
24 May – BBC Two airs a special edition of TOTP2 featuring performances from Bon Jovi.[67]
May – The licence to run Channel 5's teletext service is awarded to Teletext Ltd, and is valid for ten years from 1 July 2002.[69]
June
2 June – Johnny Vaughan confirms he will step down as co-presenter of The Big Breakfast in early 2001.[70]
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.[71]
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.[72] The programme sparks a debate about nudity on television, and is mentioned in the House of Commons, where Culture SecretaryChris Smith questions the quality of British television content.[73]
8 June – After 11 years Home and Away is shown on ITV for the last time.[74] It returns on Channel Five on 16 July 2001.[75] 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.[74]
10 June – 2 July – Euro 2000 is held jointly by Belgium and the Netherlands.
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 legal sitcom Chambers.[76]
BBC Two airs a special edition of TOTP2 dedicated to ABBA.[77]
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.[78]
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.[79]
1 July – C-Day in the United Kingdom. From today, most commercial broadcasters begin broadcasting commercials, promotions, and idents in 16:9widescreen ratio.[81]
3 July – ITV announce that Emmerdale will air five nights a week from the autumn.[82]
6 July – First episode of a new police procedural drama Burnside was broadcast on ITV.
14 July – The television reality show Big Brother debuts in the UK.[84]
17 July – ITV launches a £500,000 advertising campaign fronted by Jerry Springer and aimed at repositioning ITV2 as a general entertainment channel. When launched in December 1998 the channel had promoted itself as a younger alternative to ITV[85]
20 July – The Independent Television Commission says it will issue a "legally binding" directive to ITV to move its 11.00pm news bulletin forward an hour if it does not restore News at Ten. The ITC have been concerned about the 11.00pm bulletin's low ratings.[86]
22 July – The ten part popular culture series I Love the '70s debuts on BBC Two, with I Love 1970.[87] With each edition dedicated to a different year of the decade, the series concludes on 23 September with I Love 1979.[88]
27 July – ITV says it will apply for a High Court judicial review into the ITC's decision to order it to move its 11.00pm news bulletin.[89]
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 7.00pm slot.[90] The episodes are shown in that slot up to Friday 1 September,[91] with the final episode of the run airing at 7.00pm on Thursday 7 September.[92]
4 August – Liza Tarbuck presents her final edition of The Big Breakfast.[94] Later the same day it is confirmed Denise van Outen will return to the show to co-host with Johnny Vaughan from 11 September until he leaves in early 2001.[95]
26 August – Ian Wright presents the pilot of This is My Moment, a singing talent show made by Granada Television. Members of the public were invited to call a premium rate phone line to audition for the show, 60 of who were chosen to perform in front of a panel at Granada Studios. Of those, five were then selected to appear on the show. The public are encouraged to vote for their favourite act, with the number of calls determining the overall prize money.[102]
ITV announce plans to resurrect Crossroads with an updated format in 2001. The channel will also launch a London-based soap to rival EastEnders, which is provisionally titled Trafalgar Road.[105]
September
1–2 September – Sky One hosts a special weekend dedicated to celebrating the 10th Anniversary of The Simpsons in the UK.[106]
5 September – The BBC has given its permission for the Teletubbies to be used in promotional material for a controversial windfarm in Wales in order to help win over critics.[107]
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.[110]
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.[111]
Debut of Jailbreak, a reality television 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.[112] Roberta Woodhouse, Hannah Davies and Laura Hawkins become the first contestants to escape on 23 September.[113]
After eleven years on 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.
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.[120]
27 September – BBC Two airs a special edition of TOTP2 featuring the hits of John Lennon, and presented by Yoko Ono.[121]
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.[122][123]
ITV soap Emmerdale begins airing five nights a week.
The first edition of the BBC's revamped breakfast news programme BBC Breakfast is broadcast. The new programme is carried on both BBC One and BBC News 24 – previously News 24 had aired its own breakfast programme Breakfast 24.
3 October – The BBC confirms it will move its Nine O'Clock News to 10.00pm from 16 October to complete 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.[131] Politicians from all major political parties criticise the BBC's decision, fearing it will affect news quality.[132]
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".[134]
BBC One airs the Panorama documentary "Who Bombed Omagh?", which names individuals questioned by police over the 1998 Omagh bombing.[136] The programme is praised by Northern Ireland SecretaryPeter Mandelson as "a very powerful and very professional piece of work",[137] but is criticised by Irish TaoiseachBertie Ahern who warns that "bandying around names on television" could hinder attempts to secure convictions, and First MinisterDavid Trimble who says he has "very grave doubts" about it.[137] The programme has also been the subject of legal action by Lawrence Rush, whose wife Elizabeth died in the bombing, and who sought an injunction to block it from being broadcast.[138]
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 10:00 pm. 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.[139]
Parkinson returns to BBC One for a new series as part of the Saturday night schedule, having previously aired on Fridays since its relaunch in 1998.[141]
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.[142]
The League of Gentlemen embark on their first national stage tour, originally planning 14 dates but ending up completing 111.
31 October – The Weakest Link makes its BBC One debut as part of the channel's evening schedule.[149] 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 daily show.[150]
Mother-of-two Kate Heusser becomes UK television's biggest female prize winner after winning £500,000 on ITV's Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?.[152]
6–10 November – Channel 4 celebrates eighteen 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.[153]
13 November – BBC News reports that Russian state broadcaster RTR has bought children's television series Teletubbies, a programme unlike anything it has aired before.[155]
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.[157]
17 November –
BBC One airs the 2000 Children in Need television fundraiser. By the following day it has raised £12m for charity, surpassing the 1999 total of £11.2m.[158]
20 November – Judith Keppel becomes the first contestant to win £1million on the UK version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire?. On the same evening the final episode of 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.[160]
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.[161] However, after Prime Minister Tony Blair declines to take part in January 2001,[162] three separate question and answer sessions involving a single leader are held by each network during the 2001 election campaign.[163][164]
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.[167]
BBC One airs Freddie Mercury: The Untold Story, a documentary in which friends and relatives of Freddie Mercury recall their memories of the Queen frontman.[170]
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.[173]
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.[174]
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.[177]
22 December – A contestant in the grand final of Series 29 of the quiz show Fifteen to One, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, is edited out of the edition. 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.
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).[178]
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.[180]
^Egan, Kate (2008). Trash or Treasure?: Censorship and the Changing Meanings of the Video Nasties (illustrated ed.). Manchester University Press. p. 243. ISBN0-7190-7232-8.
^Young, Graham (27 December 2000). "No stranger this night!". Birmingham Evening Mail. Trinity Mirror. Archived from the original on 29 June 2014. Retrieved 28 May 2014 – via HighBeam Research.