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2003 in British television

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This is a list of British television-related events from 2003.

Events

[edit]

January

[edit]
  • 1 January – The Studio closes after nearly two years on the air.[1]
  • 2 January – BBC One airs Dot's Story, an EastEnders spin-off. It tells the story of Dot Branning's experiences as a wartime evacuee.[2]
  • 3 January – CITV celebrates its twentieth birthday with the CITV Birthday Bash.[3]
  • 4 January – ITV1 airs the first live edition of Blind Date, on which presenter Cilla Black announces she is quitting the show after 18 years. She later tells ITV bosses the programme should be shelved because of falling ratings which have dropped from 17 million at its peak to 4 million.[4]
  • 6 January – Scottish and Grampian adopt the ITV celebrity idents package, introduced on 28 October 2002, albeit with their own logos attached and with idents featuring a lot more Scottish personalities alongside those of ITV1.
  • 11 January
    • Girls Aloud singer and former Popstars: The Rivals contestant Cheryl Tweedy is involved in an altercation with a nightclub toilet attendant, Sophie Amogbokpa, in The Drink nightclub in Guildford. She is subsequently charged with racially aggravated assault after allegedly calling Amogbokpa a "jigaboo"[5] and assault occasioning actual bodily harm.[6]
    • Debut of Channel 4's The Salon, a fly-on-the-wall series documenting events in a purpose-built beauty salon in London.[7] The series airs for three months, before returning for a second run in October. It finishes in March 2004.
    • Steven Spielberg's science-fiction miniseries Taken debuts on BBC Two.[8]
  • 13 January
    • ITV1 soap Crossroads is relaunched under the stewardship of producer Yvon Grace and with a decidedly camp feel. However, Grace is criticised by fans for her ambivalence towards unresolved storylines from the 2001–2002 run.[9]
    • Tracy Shaw makes her final appearance on Coronation Street as her character Maxine Peacock is brutally murdered by serial killer Richard Hillman.
  • 15 January – Launch of Ftn and UK Bright Ideas.
  • 28 January – Los Angeles-based police drama Boomtown debuts on Five.
  • 31 January – The Campaign Week website reports that TBWA have used characters from the 1970s children's television show Hector's House for an ad campaign relaunching Virgin One bank account as The One account. The campaign has been created on behalf of the Royal Bank of Scotland which bought the name from Virgin and AMP in July 2001.[10]

February

[edit]
  • 1 February
    • Postman Pat returns to CBeebies with a new series 6 years after the last series aired. The first episode is titled Postman Pat and the Greendale Rocket: in the episode, The children set off on a school outing to the old Greendale Station and are very excited when they discover Greendale's old forgotten steam train, the Greendale Rocket. Everyone volunteers to get the Station refurbished and back to operational condition. Pat and Ted try to get the engine working again with a new friend Ajay and his Family.
    • BBC News airs coverage of The Space Shuttle Columbia Explosion
  • 3 February – The Martin Bashir documentary Living with Michael Jackson is broadcast on ITV1.[11] The revelations of Jackson's controversial personal life in the programme is one of the many factors that leads to his trial for child molestation.[12] Launch of Channel U.
  • 4 February – Channel 4 News airs an interview conducted by veteran politician Tony Benn with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.[13]
  • 6 February – Prime Minister Tony Blair appears on BBC Two's Newsnight with Jeremy Paxman and a live audience where he is questioned about the Iraq crisis. Blair is also taken aback when Paxman asks him about his Christian faith and whether he and US President George W. Bush have prayed together.[14][15]
  • 8 February – Phil Mitchell is to leave EastEnders later that year as Steve McFadden takes a break from the show.[16]
  • 9 February – After a long delay, BBC Choice is replaced by BBC Three. The opening night is simulcast on BBC Two.[17]
  • 9–10 February – ITV1 screens the controversial two-part drama The Second Coming, set around the return to Earth of Jesus Christ in modern-day Manchester.[18][19]
  • 10 February – During an interview on ITV's This Morning, Robin Gibb of the Bee Gees brands Graham Norton as scum after the comedian made a joke about the singer's late brother, Maurice on his Channel 4 chat show, V Graham Norton the day after his death.[20]
  • 12 February – In the weeks leading up to the Iraq War, the BBC screens a series of programmes examining the case for and against war. The centrepiece of this is Iraq Day: The Case For and Against War, a 90-minute programme on BBC One on that day. Presented by Peter Snow, the programme analyses the possible implications of a war in the Middle East and attempts to gauge public opinion on the subject with a viewers poll.[21]
  • 20 February – The 2003 BRIT Awards are held at London's Earls Court. Two of the acts, Ms. Dynamite and Coldplay, use their awards acceptance speeches to criticise plans for US-led military action in Iraq.[22]
  • 22 February – After an absence of six years, After Dark returns to television.[23]
  • 24 February
  • 26 February
    • BBC Two airs a special edition of TOTP2 featuring live performances from US rock band the Red Hot Chili Peppers.[27]
    • ITV police drama series The Bill introduces a new theme tune and new opening titles.

March

[edit]
  • 3 March – Five airs Take Two: The Footage You Were Never Meant to See, the "rebuttal video" issued in response to the Martin Bashir documentary Living with Michael Jackson. Having previously been aired on Sky One, this airing of the programme is watched by 2.4 million viewers, enjoying a 9.8% audience share.[28]
  • 5 March – BBC One airs Mandela: The Living Legend, a two-part documentary series whose film crew had six months of unprecedented access to Nelson Mandela.[29] The second part airs on 12 March.[30]
  • 7 March
    • Singer George Michael makes his first appearance on BBC One's Top of the Pops in 17 years, with a cover of Don McLean's protest song The Grave, but runs into conflict with the show's producers for an anti-war, anti-Blair T-shirt worn by some members of his band.[31]
    • EastEnders announces the casting of a new family, the Ferreiras who will be the first Asian family to join the soap for a decade. They will move to Albert Square in the Summer.[32]
  • 8 March – Debut of ITV1's Reborn in the USA, a reality show in which ten British pop acts of the 1980s and 1990s tour the United States in the hope of reviving their careers. Those participating in the series include Sonia Evans, Leee John, Michelle Gayle and Tony Hadley. The show has already prompted controversy after Mark Shaw of Then Jericho decided to quit the series shortly before it went on air.[33]
  • 9 March
    • Teletext's often surreal and acerbic games magazine, Digitiser is published for the final time after ten years on air. The magazine is replaced the following day by GameCentral which features less of the humour favoured by its predecessor.
    • The 1982 American horror slasher film Friday the 13th Part III makes its UK television debut on ITV1 as part of the channel's Sunday night lineup.
  • 10 March – Channel 4 is reprimanded by the Independent Television Commission for showing a documentary in which a Chinese artist appeared to eat a stillborn baby which the watchdog felt demonstrated a "lack of respect for human dignity". Graham Norton is also criticised for his joke about the late Maurice Gibb.[34]
  • 11 March – The BBC ends the deal with Sky Digital under which BBC channels are carried exclusively by Sky, meaning that satellite viewers will be able to watch BBC content without a viewing card. The changes will take effect from 30 May.[35]
  • 12 March
    • ITV announce that Cat Deeley will take over as presenter of the junior version of Stars in Their Eyes because regular host Matthew Kelly will be busy touring as part of a stage production when the series is scheduled to be recorded.[36]
    • The climax to the Richard Hillman plot in Coronation Street is aired in which the serial killer attempts to kill himself and his wife Gail Platt and her children by driving their people carrier into the local canal. The conclusion marks the exit of the actor Brian Capron, who played Richard, from the soap.
  • 14 March – Highlights of BBC One's 2003 Comic Relief fundraiser include Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, the Red Nose Special and Rowan Atkinson and Lenny Henry in the spoof documentary Lying to Michael Jackson.[37]
  • 19 March
    • Procter & Gamble announces it is ending its Daz Doorstep Challenge advertising campaign after ten years, feeling it is "old fashioned". It will be replaced with the soap-opera style campaign Cleaner Close.[38][39]
    • BBC Three airs American Psycho, Mary Harron's black comedy based on the novel of the same name by Brett Easton Ellis.[40]
  • 20 March
    • As the 2003 invasion of Iraq begins, many broadcasters adjust their regular schedules to provide up to date coverage of unfolding events. BBC One's news programmes are all slightly extended in length in addition to blanket coverage on BBC News 24 across each day. ITV moves its main evening bulletin forward by an hour to 9pm, anchored by Trevor McDonald live from nearby Kuwait, and abandons its usual overnight schedule to provide a through the night simulcast of the ITV News Channel during the war.
    • George McGhee is appointed as Controller of BBC Programme Acquisition and will take up the position from early April.[41]
  • 22 March – ITN journalist Terry Lloyd is killed while covering the events of the Iraq War after he and his team of two cameramen and an interpreter are caught in a crossfire during fighting near the Shatt Al Basra Bridge in Basra.[42] between US and Iraqi forces. His body and that of his Lebanese interpreter, Hussein Osman, are recovered and it is later discovered they were both shot by United States forces.[43]
  • 23 March – The Truth, the season nine finale of The X-Files and the last episode in the series original run, makes its terrestrial television debut on BBC Two.[44]
  • 26 March – BBC defence correspondent Paul Adams criticises BBC News coverage of the Iraq war in a memo to bosses, describing the coverage as painting an untruthful picture.[45]
  • 28 March – Debut of Extraordinary People on Five, each programme follows the lives of people with a rare medical condition and/or an unusual ability, many of these people do activities previously thought impossible for people in their condition.
  • 30 March – Channel 4 News reporter Gaby Rado is found dead in Iraq, having apparently fallen from the roof of the Abu Sanaa hotel in the northern city of Sulaymaniyah. His death is believed to be unconnected to the ongoing military campaign in that country.[46]
  • 31 March

April

[edit]
  • 5 April – BBC Two launches The Big Read, a nationwide search for Britain's favourite book. The project is designed to encourage the nation to read, while people will be asked to vote for their favourite novel.[48][49]
  • 7 April
  • 8 April – Teenage singer Charlotte Church will guest present an edition of Have I Got News for You when the programme returns for a new series, the BBC confirms. At 17, she will become the youngest person to present the show. Other guest presenters in the forthcoming series which begins on 25 April, will include Martin Clunes and William Hague.[53][54]
  • 10 April – Channel 5's Milkshake! debuts hit Australian kids series Hi-5 that proved to be a huge success. Naomi Wilkinson spoke to presenter Nathan Foley to ask the viewers questions.
  • 14 April
  • 20 April – Sky One airs the 300th episode of The Simpsons.[55]
  • 21 April – Channel 4 airs the 1000th episode of Hollyoaks.[56]
  • 26 April – Former Spandau Ballet singer Tony Hadley wins ITV1's Reborn in the USA.[57]
  • 27 April – After more than 23 years on the air, the final edition of soap opera Take the High Road is broadcast by STV.
  • 29 April – The BBC rejects viewer complaints that its documentary, The Virgin Mary which was aired shortly before Christmas 2002 had tried to undermine religious beliefs. Complaints about a gay kiss in Casualty that aired in January are also rejected.[58]

May

[edit]
  • 1 May – The Heroes Channel and The Games Channel both launch on VTV Cable.
  • 2 May – The BBC announces that the character of Den Watts (Leslie Grantham) will return to EastEnders later this year, 14 years after departing in an episode where the character was believed to have died as a result of being shot. They also announce that the 2000 Olympic Games would be re shown.[59]
  • 10 May
  • 11 May – The Observer reports that the BBC is to cut back on the number of self-promotional trailers following complaints from viewers and rival broadcasters. The newspaper also reports that the broadcasting of an ad for the BBC's digital service which featured the character of Fizz from the Tweenies pulling off her face to reveal June Brown as Dot Cotton from EastEnders had to be put back to a later time slot because some viewers complained it was giving their children nightmares.[63]
  • 12 May – Former cricketer Phil Tufnell wins the second series of I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!.[64]
  • 13 May
    • Docudrama The Day Britain Stopped airs on BBC Two. It is based on a fictional disaster on 19 December 2003, in which a train strike is the first in a chain of events that lead to a meltdown of the country's transport system ending with a plane collision.
    • A teaser trailer for that year's Rugby World Cup is shown on ITV1, The tournament would start on 10 October.
  • 14 May
    • Five have acquired the UK terrestrial television rights to the American supernatural drama Angel after Channel 4 dropped the programme from its schedule. The series makes its debut on Five on 2 June.
    • BBC Two re airs the 2000 Olympic Games.
  • 15 May – Kevin Kennedy is to leave Coronation Street in the Autumn after playing Curly Watts for 20 years, it is reported. The character will be involved in a dramatic storyline about police brutality and the door will be left open for him to return at a later date.[65]
  • 17 May – Following a public vote to find the UK's favourite book, the BBC's The Big Read reveals the top 100 in a special programme on BBC Two while BBC One airs the 2003 FA Cup Final.[66][67]
  • 18 May – Five airs the network television premiere of Brian Levant's 2000 prehistoric comedy prequel film The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas, starring Mark Addy, Stephen Baldwin, Kristen Johnston, Jane Krakowski, Thomas Gibson, Alan Cumming and Joan Collins.
  • 19 May – Bollywood actor Dalip Tahil who will play the head of the Ferreira family in EastEnders, speaks out against criticism from British Asian actors who said the part should have gone to a UK-based actor.[68]
  • 20 May
    • Steve Anderson, ITV's controller of news, announces plans to move News at Ten because the programme is losing out on viewers in the 10pm slot where it goes head-to-head with the BBC Ten O'Clock News.[69]
    • During what is meant to be a commercial break, Friendly TV accidentally broadcasts a conversation between members of its News Hound team who make allegations about aspects of Nicole Kidman's private life.[70]
  • 21 May – Five announce a new chat show which it hopes will rival ITV1's This Morning. The Terry and Gaby Show, presented by Terry Wogan and Gaby Roslin will debut on 2 June.[71]
  • 22 May – Prompted by their manager, four members of the pop group S Club storm out of an interview on BBC Three's Liquid News when presenter Claudia Winkleman asks them about their earnings.[72]
  • 23 May – ITV1, Channel 4, Five and the other channels aired an advert of Barclays with Samuel L. Jackson taking on "Money Moving Smoothly" and features a close-up shot of Rachel Stevens' legs walking on the pavement.
  • 24 May – Jemini, the UK's entry for the 2003 Eurovision Song Contest receives Britain's worst Eurovision result after failing to attract a single point.[73] The contest is won by Turkey's Sertab Erener with Everyway That I Can.
  • 29 May – Toons & Tunes is rebranded as POP.
  • 30 May – ITV1 broadcasts the final episode of Crossroads after the series was axed due to declining ratings. The finale sees hotel boss Angel Sampson, played by Jane Asher, waking up to find she is a supermarket checkout girl and that her tenure as boss of the Crossroads Hotel was all a dream.[74]
  • 31 May
    • Laura Jenkins, performing as Connie Francis wins the second junior series of Stars in Their Eyes.[75]
    • Cilla Black presents the final edition of Blind Date, having announced her intention to quit the long-running game show in January.[76] A change in the show's format was one of the factors in her decision to leave the show.[77]

June

[edit]
  • 3 June – The Ferreiras make their EastEnders debut, becoming the first Asian family to join the soap since 1993 when Sanjay and Gita Kapoor arrived on screen.[78]
  • 4 June – It is reported that former Bucks Fizz singer Cheryl Baker suffered a fractured ankle in a skydiving accident the previous weekend while filming a new series, Drop the Celebrity for ITV1.[79]
  • 5 June – ITV1 airs the final episode of Night and Day.[80]
  • 9 June – The Muslim Council of Britain has complained about a recent episode of Spooks that featured a mosque at which people are taught to be suicide bombers after Birmingham's Central Mosque was defaced following the episode's transmission. The BBC says it has received no evidence that the incident is linked to the programme.[81]
  • 10 June – Bruce Forsyth is confirmed as the host of the final episode of the latest series of Have I Got News for You. Since adopting its guest presenter format late last year, the series has enjoyed a ratings boost, meaning the BBC has put plans to find a permanent replacement for Angus Deayton on hold.[82] The episode presented by Forsyth famously includes him playing a game of Play Your Iraqi Cards Right, a twist on the format of the game show presented by him, but using a pack of Iraqi playing cards instead of a traditional deck.[83]
  • 11 June
    • The shopping channel Price-drop.tv is launched.
    • Channel 4 announces that its long-running soap Brookside will end in November.[84]
  • 12 June
    • A storyline involving the Coronation Street character Todd Grimshaw who rejected a place at Oxford University because his girlfriend said she would not follow him there, is criticised by the Sutton Trust, an organisation that encourages children from poorer backgrounds to apply to top universities. The Trust says it is disappointed as the storyline sends out the wrong message to children watching the soap. The issue also highlights the small number of soap characters who attend university.[85]
    • Sky1 airs the final episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.[86] BBC Two airs the episode on 18 December.[87]
  • 17 June – BBC Two airs a special edition of TOTP2 dedicated to the record producer Mickie Most who died on 30 May.[88]
  • 19 June – Actress Laura Sadler who plays Sandy Harper in Holby City, dies in hospital after she fell from a block of flats in west London a few days earlier. She sustained extensive head injuries as a result of the fall and had not regained consciousness.[89] A subsequent inquest held at West London Coroner's Court records a verdict of accidental death.[90]
  • 20 June – The final edition of Play Your Cards Right is broadcast on ITV with Bruce Forsyth as presenter which in turn also marks the end of the final series of the game show to air on ITV. It has returned for one-off specials, presented by Ant & Dec on 15 October 2005 and Vernon Kay on 26 May 2007 as part of the series Gameshow Marathon.[91]
  • 22 June – ITV1 announces that it has axed the long-running Saturday night game show Blind Date.[92]
  • 25 June
    • Channel 4 Director of Television Tim Gardam announces he will step down from the job after five years, departing at the end of the year.[93]
    • A viewer complaint about an edition of Channel 4's V Graham Norton in which Dustin Hoffman told a joke which included a taboo word is upheld by the Broadcasting Standards Commission. ITV's Tonight is also censured after airing an interview with a pregnant teenager which was perceived to have been of an exploitative nature because her predicament had largely come about because of a lack of knowledge.[94]
  • 28 June
  • 29 June – ITV1's holiday series Wish You Were Here...? airs for the last time.
  • June – Grampian Television's Aberdeen headquarters move to new smaller studios in the city's Tullos area.

July

[edit]
  • 2 July – Lawyers representing Michael Barrymore who was dropped by London Weekend Television in September 2002 confirm he will take legal action against the broadcaster for an unpaid salary. He has largely been absent from television since news concerning the death of a man during a party at his property broke in 2001, although a series of My Kind of Music aired in February 2002.[97]
  • 4 July – The mid-afternoon regional news bulletin is moved from BBC Two to BBC One.
  • 7 July – Mastermind returns to television for its first full series since 1997 with John Humphrys taking over the role of quizmaster.[98][99]
  • 8 July – The Independent Television Commission rejects complaints from the relatives of a victim of Dr. Harold Shipman that ITV's 2002 film about the serial killer was factually inaccurate. The Commission finds that although artistic licence was taken in some scenes, these had been "sympathetically presented" and were therefore not detrimental to the victim's family.[100]
  • 9 July – ITV1 drops two recently launched programmes from its primetime schedule because of poor ratings. The game show Judgement Day and comedy series Fortysomething, starring Hugh Laurie will air elsewhere in the schedule.[101]
  • 16 July – BBC One airs the final edition of Tomorrow's World.[102] It will be fifteen years later in 2018 before a new edition of the programme is broadcast.[103]
  • 17 July
    • The Communications Act 2003 receives Royal Assent.[104]
    • In its final annual report, the Broadcasting Standards Commission reveals that an episode of the BBC spy drama Spooks in which a character's head is pushed into a vat of boiling oil was the most complained about television programme during the past year.[105]
    • Trevor Hyett steps down as editor of Five's The Terry and Gaby Show to work on other projects. His post will be taken over by the show's producer, James Winter. The programme has struggled in the ratings since its launch, but Five which has commissioned 200 editions of the series, says it will not cancel the show.[106]
  • 18 July – Sky News reporter James Forlong resigns following allegations a story shown in March involving the Iraq conflict was faked.[107]
  • 20 July – The BBC confirms that Dr David Kelly, found dead from a suspected suicide two days ago, was the main source for a controversial report that sparked a deep rift with the government.[108]
  • 25 July
  • 28 July – Tabloid television station L!VE TV is relaunched on Sky Digital.[111]

August

[edit]
  • 8 August – The BBC regains the broadcasting rights to show Premier League Football highlights from ITV after signing a three-year deal with them. The deal will take effect from the start of the 2004–05 season.[112]
  • 10 August – Channel 4 airs the British terrestrial television premiere of Straw Dogs.[113]
  • 18 August – In an interview with Radio Times, presenter Noel Edmonds says that he is partly responsible for the decline in the standards of British television after his BBC One show, Noel's House Party, went downhill after budget cuts.[114]
  • 21 August – ITV announces that its Saturday morning children's entertainment series SMTV Live will end after five years because of falling ratings and will be replaced by a new series in early 2004.[115]
  • 27 August – The BBC defends its decision to spend £10 million on the broadcast rights for the first Harry Potter film Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, saying that its rivals were unprepared to invest in family viewing at Christmas. The film is part of a ten film package agreed with Warner Bros.[116]
  • 28 August – ITV ceases transmission of the New Zealand soap opera Shortland Street, due to the regional afternoon slot which the show occupied becoming networked.
  • 29 August
    • Research by Human Capital indicate that Saturday night television is now the least watched evening of television in the UK, with Monday nights being the most popular.[117]
    • That day marked the 20th anniversary of the first episode of the long-running game show Blockbusters.

September

[edit]
  • 2 September
    • Laura Sadler's final scenes as Holby City nurse Sandy Harper are screened on the BBC One drama. Her character's exit from the series, devised by her mother and the show's producers, sees her secretly leaving the hospital for Australia after winning the lottery.[118]
    • At Home with the Eubanks debuts on Five.
    • ITV1 airs the British terrestrial television premiere of Mission to Mars.
  • 8 September
  • 13 September – As The Smash Hits Chart Show returns to television which was previously on Five, the weekly 30-minute show made its debut on Channel 4 as part of the T4 strand.
  • 15 September
    • Channel 4 moves its long-running game show Countdown from 4:15pm to 3:15pm, something that leads to questions being asked in Parliament and the launch of petitions to have it rescheduled back to its old slot.[113]
  • 18 September – Peter Amory makes his final appearance as Chris Tate in Emmerdale after 14 years.
  • 19 September – Channel 4 confirms that its breakfast show RI:SE will end in December, it was axed because of low ratings.[119]
  • 21 September – BBC One airs Perfectly Frank, an EastEnders spin-off episode featuring the character Frank Butcher establishing a nightclub in Somerset.[120][121][122]
  • 25 September – The Daily Telegraph newspaper is the first to announce the return of the popular sci-fi drama series Doctor Who after a 14-year break. It would return to television in March 2005.[123]
  • 27 September – EastEnders is aired for the last time on BBC America. The programme was axed because of poor ratings that were losing the channel most of its viewers.[124]
  • 29 September
    • Den Watts makes his return to EastEnders in an episode watched by 16 million viewers.[125]
    • EastEnders also wins best soap at the Inside Soap Awards.

October

[edit]
  • 2 October – ITV is given permission by the Independent Television Commission to move its 10pm news bulletin to 10:30pm. Since returning in 2001, News at Ten has aired on at least three nights a week, but analysts have noted that not having a fixed time for a weekday news bulletin is unsettling for viewers and advertisers. The ITC feels a regular news bulletin at 10:30pm will be in viewers interests.[126]
  • 4 October – Alex Parks wins the second series of Fame Academy.[127]
  • 5 October
    • Coronation Street shows its first gay kiss.[128]
    • Psychological illusionist Derren Brown controversially plays Russian roulette live on Channel 4, though with a slight delay allegedly in case the stunt went wrong. The stunt is later revealed to have been a hoax.[129]
  • 6 October – After BBC America axed EastEnders due to "abysmal ratings", almost 9,000 people have signed a petition calling on the channel to reinstate the show, BBC News reports.[130]
  • 8 October – Delivering the Bafta Annual Lecture, ITV's head of programming, Nigel Pickard says that he is prepared to "bite the bullet" and drop poorly performing programmes and ageing presenters from its schedule, stating that "the days when you can tuck something into a little corner of peak against Panorama and hope it grows an audience" have gone.[131]
  • 10 October
  • 15 October
    • BBC One airs the 2000 horror thriller Cherry Falls, starring Brittany Murphy and Michael Biehn.[133]
    • BBC Two airs the documentary When Michael Portillo Became a Single Mum in which former Defence Secretary Michael Portillo assumes the mantle of Merseyside single mother Jenny Miner for a week.[134][135]
    • Plans are announced for the DVD release of Brookside: Unfinished Business, a film that will continue storylines from Channel 4's Brookside which ends on 4 November. The DVD will be released two weeks later.[136]
    • ITV1 airs the network premiere of the 2000 American romantic musical comedy-drama film Coyote Ugly.
  • 18 October – The UK's top 21 favourite books are revealed by the BBC's The Big Read. Celebrity advocates will put their case for each of the books over the coming weeks before the winner is decided.[137]
  • 20 October – Cheryl Tweedy is found guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm after claiming self-defence during her trial, but cleared of racially aggravated assault.[138] She is sentenced to 120 hours of community service and ordered to pay her victim £500 in compensation, as well as £3,000 prosecution costs.[139]
  • 22 October
    • Longtime broadcaster on the BBC and ITN and latterly news anchor on Sky News, Bob Friend announces his retirement.[140]
    • ITV1 airs the network television premiere of X-Men.
  • 29 October – BBC Two airs a special edition of TOTP2 featuring performances by Sheryl Crow which includes her new single The First Cut Is the Deepest.[141]
  • 30 October
    • ITV1 screens a special live episode of The Bill to mark the show's 20th year on the air.[142]
    • The Broadcasting Standards Commission upholds 30 viewer complaints about comedian Jonathan Ross's use of the F-word during the live broadcast of Red Nose Day 2003. Although the word was used at 10:30pm, after the watershed, the Commission felt it was likely children would still be watching.[143]

November

[edit]
  • 3 November
    • Andy Page wins the 2003 series of Mastermind.[144]
    • The Independent Television Commission rejects 21 viewer complaints about the first gay kiss to be featured in Coronation Street.[145]
    • Channel 4 soap Hollyoaks begins airing five nights a week.[113]
  • 4 November – Channel 4 airs the final episode of Brookside, ending a run of 21 years.[146] The episode is watched by two million viewers.[147]
  • 6 November – ITV confirms GMTV's Jenni Falconer as the main presenter of its new holiday series, How to Holiday. The programme, a replacement for Wish You Were Here...? will begin in early 2004.[148]
  • 10 November – The short-lived quiz show 19 Keys debuts on Five.
  • 11 November – The BBC current affairs series Panorama, launched in 1953, becomes the first UK television show to reach its 50th anniversary on the air.[149]
  • 12 November
    • The BBC issues a statement in response to a newspaper report that actor Dalip Tahil faces being axed from EastEnders due to not having the correct work permit. The report in the previous Sunday's edition of The People had suggested that after Tahil joined the show from appearing in stage musical Bombay Dreams, neither he nor the BBC obtained proper authorisation from the Home Office to make the switch of employment legal.[150] The BBC says "We are considering any potential problems with a view to resolving them as soon as possible."[150]
    • UK Gold 2 is relaunched as UKG2, a channel aimed at the 16–34 audience demographic.[151]
  • 13 November – The British television premiere of Paul Verhoeven's 2000 science-fiction thriller Hollow Man airs on Five, starring Kevin Bacon and Elisabeth Shue.
  • 14 November – The Office of Fair Trading gives Carlton and Granada the go-ahead to merge after the two companies agreed to adopt a new advertising sales system for ITV and to protect the interests of the smaller companies in the network, including SMG plc and Ulster Television.[152]
  • 15 November – The United Kingdom enters the inaugural Junior Eurovision Song Contest with "My Song for the World" performed by 10-year-old Tom Morley.
  • 16 November
  • 20 November – UTV replaces its network-inspired idents with a series of landscape films of Northern Ireland, in the form of a panorama shot as the camera revolved around a location.[155]
  • 21 November – BBC Three Controller Stuart Murphy confirms that the channel's entertainment news programme Liquid News will end in April 2004.[156]
  • 22 November – ITV's coverage of the Final of the 2003 Rugby World Cup in which England beat Australia 20–17 and won the competition is watched by more than 10 million viewers, a record figure for Saturday morning television.[157] End of year figures produced by BARB place it as the ninth most watched television programme of the year with 12.3 million viewers.[25]
  • 23 November – The 40th anniversary of the first broadcast of Doctor Who, the iconic sci-fi series would return to television in March 2005.
  • 27 November – The BBC unveils a revamped version of its news channel in an attempt to make it appear more dynamic to viewers. Changes include a new studio set and redesigned branding and graphics.[158]
  • 28 November
  • 29 November – Pop Idol judge Pete Waterman is deluged with unwanted phone calls after fellow judge Simon Cowell gives out his mobile phone number during an edition of ITV2's Pop Idol Extra. Cowell says he did it because Waterman revealed his home address on the previous weekend's show.[162]

December

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Debuts

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BBC (One/Two/Three/Four/CBBC/CBeebies/News 24)

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ITV (including ITV1 & ITV2)

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Channel 4

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Five

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Sky

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Cartoon Network UK

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Boomerang UK

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Toonami UK

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Disney Channel UK

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Pop/Pop Plus

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Channels

[edit]

New channels

[edit]
Date Channel
15 January Ftn
UK Bright Ideas
3 February Channel U
9 February BBC Three
1 September Paramount Comedy 2
8 September Toonami
Pop Plus
16 December VH2

Defunct channels

[edit]
Date Channel
1 January The Studio
January The Racing Channel
9 February BBC Choice
31 March Carlton Cinema
8 September CNX

Rebranded channels

[edit]
Date Old Name New Name
29 May Toons and Tunes Pop
31 October Sky Movies Premier/Max/Cinema Sky Movies 1, Sky Movies 2, Sky Movies 3, Sky Movies 4, Sky Movies 5, Sky Movies 6, Sky Movies 7, Sky Movies 8, Sky Movies 9, Sky Cinema 1, Sky Cinema 2

Television shows

[edit]

Changes of network affiliation

[edit]
Show Moved from Moved to
Robot Wars BBC Two Five
Beyblade Cartoon Network
Thomas & Friends ITV1
The Flintstones BBC One
What About Mimi? Sky One
Don't Try This at Home ITV1 Challenge
Pippi Longstocking Channel 4
What's New, Scooby-Doo? Boomerang CBBC on BBC One

Returning this year after a break of one year or longer

[edit]
  • 22 February – After Dark returns to British television on BBC Four (last on Channel 4 in 1997)
  • 16 October – Superstars returns to BBC One (1973–1985, 2003–2005)

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]

2000s

[edit]

Ending this year

[edit]

Births

[edit]

Deaths

[edit]
Date Name Age Cinematic Credibility
1 January Cyril Shaps 79 actor (Doctor Who)
8 January Ron Goodwin 77 theme tune composer
9 January Peter Tinniswood[198] 66 radio and TV comedy scriptwriter, and author
13 January Elisabeth Croft[199] 95 actor (Edith Tatum in ATV soap Crossroads)
7 February Stephen Whittaker 55 actor and television director
21 February Barry Bucknell 91 television presenter
11 March Kevin Laffan[200] 80 writer and author (creator of Emmerdale)
15 March Thora Hird[201] 91 actress (Edie Pegden in Last of the Summer Wine)
22 March Terry Lloyd 50 news reporter, killed during Iraq War skirmish
30 March Gaby Rado 48 news reporter, killed during Iraq War
16 April Danny O'Dea 91 actor (Eli Duckett in Last of the Summer Wine)
22 April Berkeley Smith 84 television broadcaster
12 May Jeremy Sandford 72 television scriptwriter
24 May Rachel Kempson 92 actress (Jennie: Lady Randolph Churchill, The Jewel in the Crown)
30 May John Roberts 75 historian and television presenter (The Triumph of the West)
7 June Tony McAuley 63 television producer
15 June Philip Stone 79 actor (Coronation Street, The Rat Catchers, Justice)
19 June Laura Sadler[89] 22 actress (Sandy Harper in Holby City)
1 July George Roper 69 comedian (The Comedians)
9 July Valerie Gearon 69 actress
2 August Don Estelle 70 actor (It Ain't Half Hot Mum)
6 August Larry Taylor 85 actor
10 August Constance Chapman 91 actor
12 August Jackie Hamilton 66 comedian (The Comedians)
24 August Zena Walker 69 actress (The Adventures of Robin Hood)
Kent Walton[202] 86 television sports commentator and presenter
2 September Peter West 83 BBC sports commentator
4 September Ben Aris 66 actor (Hi-de-Hi!, To the Manor Born)
11 September Stuart Golland[203] 58 actor (George Ward in Heartbeat)
23 September Sarah Parkinson[204] 41 producer and writer of radio and television programmes
30 September John Hawkesworth 82 television producer and scriptwriter
10 October Julia Trevelyan Oman 73 television set designer
23 October Tony Capstick[205] 59 comedian and actor
8 November Bob Grant[206] 71 actor (Jack Harper in On the Buses)
11 November Robert Brown 82 actor (The Newcomers)
Don Taylor 67 television director
19 November Gillian Barge 63 actress
20 November Robert Addie 43 actor (Robin of Sherwood)
23 November Patricia Burke 83 actress (The Adventures of Robin Hood)
26 November Gordon Reid 64 actor
22 December Rose Hill[207] 89 actress (Madame Fanny La Fan in 'Allo 'Allo!)
27 December Alan Bates 69 actor (An Englishman Abroad)
29 December Bob Monkhouse[208] 75 comedian and entertainer (The Golden Shot, Celebrity Squares, Family Fortunes, Bob's Full House, The $64,000 Question, The Big Breakfast, Monkhouse's Memory Masters, Wipeout)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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[edit]