2005 in British television

Events

January

February

  • 3 February – An audience member on the evening's edition of Question Time uses the show's final question to propose to his girlfriend, who says yes. It is the first time a marriage proposal has occurred on the programme in its 25-year history.[15]
  • 8 February – Teachers' TV, run by the Department for Education and Skills, launches on Sky Digital (channel 686) and Freeview.[16][17]
  • 9 February – The Africa-based BBC journalist and producer Kate Peyton is killed in a shooting incident in Mogadishu, Somalia while reporting on that country's nascent peace process.[18]
  • 16 February – The first series of the UK version of The Apprentice debuts on BBC Two.[19][20]
  • 18 February – Adele Silva will reprise her role as Emmerdale temptress Kelly Windsor five years after leaving the series, it is reported.[21]
  • 19 February – EastEnders celebrates its 20th anniversary on the air, airing a special episode in which Dirty Den Watts is killed by his new wife Chrissie. 14.34 million watch the episode (shown on 18 February).[22] It is the UK's second highest rated programme of 2005 (the first was an episode of Coronation Street three days later).[23]
  • 21 February – MasterChef relaunches as MasterChef Goes Large.
  • 22 February – Eamonn Holmes announces he will step down from his role as a GMTV presenter after twelve years.[24]
  • 23 February – UKTV Style Gardens, a channel dedicated to gardening programmes, launches.
  • 24 February – ITV airs another episode of its police drama The Bill to feature a storyline in which characters are killed off in a fire at Sun Hill police station. Computer generated imagery was used because producing a real explosion and fireball ripping through the station corridors was not possible.[25]
  • 26 February – Sound TV, known pre-launch as The Great British Television Channel, launches on Sky Digital (588). It closed in the Autumn.

March

  • 3 March – Irish Taoiseach Bertie Ahern opens RTÉ's new studios in London, based at Millbank opposite the Houses of Parliament.[26]
  • 4 March – Channel 4 signs a £1m deal with Appletiser to sponsor repeat episodes of Friends during 2005.[27]
  • 5 March – Cat Deeley presents her final edition of CD:UK, after 6 years.[28]
  • 10 March – BBC One airs an edition of Question Time from Changhai, China, as part of the BBC's China Week.[29]
  • 11 March – BBC One airs the tenth Comic Relief fundraiser. Highlights include a crossover between Antiques Roadshow and The Vicar of Dibley, as well as specials of Little Britain and Blind Date.[30]
  • 17 March – ITV signs up Jerry Springer to present a daytime talk show to replace Trisha.[31][32]
  • 19 March – Ahead of the return of Doctor Who later in the month, BBC Two airs a "Doctor Who Night", with three programmes celebrating the series. The Story of Doctor Who features cast and crew, including Tom Baker, Peter Davison, Colin Baker and Sylvester McCoy discussing the original series. Some Things You Need to Know About Doctor Who provides a bitesize guide to the programme. Finally John Humphrys presents a Doctor Who special of Mastermind in which fans answer questions about the series.[33]
  • 20 March –
    • BBC Director General Mark Thompson announces BBC staff of 27,000 will be cut by 3,780.[34]
    • Actress Kim Medcalf, who plays Sam Mitchell in EastEnders speaks to the Sunday Mirror about her decision to leave the series, and her plans to focus on stage acting. Her final scenes will be filmed in May and her final onscreen appearance will be in November.[35]
  • 23 March – Five announce plans to move its Trisha Goddard show to a morning slot from April to rival ITV's forthcoming The Springer Show.[36]
  • 26 March –
    • Nine years after its last new episode and sixteen years since its last regular run, Doctor Who returns to BBC One for a new series, the twenty-seventh in total since 1963. Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper star. An average 10.81 million viewers, over 40% of the watching audience, tune in, winning its timeslot and making it No. 3 BBC show and No. 7 across all channels for the week. The premiere episode of the revival, "Rose", went on to become the UK's seventh highest rated programme of 2005.
    • Gordon Hendricks, performing as Elvis Presley wins the sixteenth and final series of Stars in Their Eyes. He is the second Elvis impersonator to win the contest. Stars in Their Eyes continued until the following year, with a final junior series and a number of celebrity specials.
  • 30 March –
    • As a test trial, the small Welsh towns of Ferryside and Llansteffan have their analogue television signals switched off.[37] The trial proved a success and the digital switchover fully began two and a half years later in Cumbria.
    • Only days after his having debuted as the Ninth Doctor, the BBC announces that Christopher Eccleston will be leaving Doctor Who after only one season.[38]

April

May

June

July

August

  • 1 August – BBC Broadcast, formerly Broadcasting & Presentation, and responsible for the playout and branding of all BBC Channels, is sold to Creative Broadcast Services, owned by the Macquarie Capital Alliance Group and Macquarie Bank. It is renamed Red Bee Media on 31 October.
  • 2 August – Five announces its soap, Family Affairs will be axed at the end of the year.[63]
  • 4 August – BBC One airs Sinatra: Dark Star, a documentary investigating rumours of Frank Sinatra's links to organised crime.[64]
  • 12 August – Anthony Hutton wins series six of Big Brother.[65]
  • 17 August – ITV announces plans to launch a children's channel to rival CBBC.[66]

September

  • 3 September – After several revamps and presenting changes, BBC One airs the final edition of its children's entertainment series The Saturday Show.[67]
  • 7 September – The BBC and ITV announce plans to launch Freesat, a Free-to-air satellite television series to rival Sky.[68]
  • 8 September – Faze TV, a British digital channel aimed at gay men, cancels its launch after failing to secure sufficient funding to deliver "sufficient quality."[69]
  • 11 September – BBC One launches Sunday AM, a Sunday morning current affairs programme presented by Andrew Marr.[70]
  • 12 September – In an interview with The Guardian, the BBC Director of News and Current Affairs Helen Boaden defends the broadcaster's decision to stick with initial reports of a power surge on the London Underground on the morning of 7 July until actual events could be corroborated, saying it was the right thing to do. "Some of our competitors talked immediately of 90 dead. They talked about three bus bombs. That was off a range of various wire services and it was complete speculation and we wouldn't go with that. We would be careful – we would try to check things out."[71]
  • 19 September – The most famous children's classic television character Muffin the Mule (who has disappeared from TV screens for a very long time) is back with a brand new 2D animated series on BBC Two.
  • 20 September – BBC One airs Derailed, a docudrama dealing with the 1999 Ladbroke Grove rail crash.[72]
  • 22 September – ITV airs a second live episode of The Bill to mark the broadcaster's 50th year on air.
  • 23 September – It is announced that Des Lynam will succeed Richard Whiteley as presenter of Channel 4's Countdown, with his first episode airing on 31 October.[73]
  • 26 September – The BBC is censured by Ofcom for its coverage of the London bombings on 7 July. Of particular concern to them was an incident in which footage of a man being carried by stretcher into the Royal London Hospital was shown as a BBC News 24 presenter commentated "Let's just take a look at some of the pictures coming from the Royal London." Ofcom concludes that "the pictures were used generically and the commentary did not reflect the seriousness of the images being transmitted". Channel 4 News is also criticised for not "fully reflecting the enormity of the images being reflected", although it had not breached the Ofcom regulations as the images were not used casually. ITV News is not criticised, however, because it provided a "clear narrative context [with] sensitive accompanying reporting".[74]
  • 26–27 September – No Direction Home, Martin Scorsese's documentary on Bob Dylan, receives its broadcast premiere on BBC Two in the UK, under the Arena banner.[75][76]
  • 30 September – CBBC identity relaunched, with its second marketing campaign since the launch of the CBBC Channel.
  • September – ITV celebrates its 50th anniversary with a collection of special programmes, under the name ITV 50.

October

  • 3 October – BBC Four airs Our Hidden Lives, a dramatisation of the novel of the same name by Simon Garfield that explores the lives of four people on 8 May 1945 as World War II comes to an end. The film stars Richard Briers, Sarah Parish, Ian McDiarmid and Lesley Sharp, and is the centrepiece of the BBC's Lost Decades season.[77]
  • 8 October – BBC One airs the 500th episode of Casualty.[78]
  • 10 October – More4, a digital channel from Channel 4 offering factual content, launches.[79]
  • 24 October – Sky News moves to new studios, with a new schedule and on-air look.[80]
  • 25 October – The relaunched Doctor Who is the major winner at the annual National Television Awards in the UK, taking the Most Popular Drama award, with its stars Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper winning Most Popular Actor and Most Popular actress.
  • 27 October – 16 December–Bleak House, a 15-episode adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel of the same name designed to capture a soap opera-style audience by using Dickens's original serial structure in half-hour episodes, is broadcast on BBC One.
  • 28 October – Sheffield based rock band Arctic Monkeys make their first appearance on BBC Two's Later...with Jools Holland.[81]
  • 31 October –
    • Sky3 is launched on British digital terrestrial and satellite platforms. On the same day Sky Mix is rebranded as Sky Two, and Sky Travel ceases transmission on Freeview.
    • The first episode of Countdown hosted by Des Lynam airs,[82] as does the first episode of Deal Or No Deal, reviving Noel Edmonds's TV career on Channel 4.[83]

November

  • 1 November – ITV4, a digital channel aimed at men, is launched in the UK. It is launched on Sky Digital Channel 120 on 7 November.
  • 3 November – A special edition of Question Time featuring David Cameron and David Davisthe two candidates in the forthcoming Conservative Party leadership election.[84]
  • 7–28 November – BBC One broadcasts ShakespeaRe-Told, a series of four adaptations of William Shakespeare's plays based in 21st century Britain. The plays in order are Much Ado About Nothing, Macbeth, The Taming of the Shrew, and A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • 11 November – EastEnders is the first British drama to feature a two-minute silence. This episode later goes on to win the British Soap Award for 'Best Single Episode'.[85]
  • 16 November – Lucy Ratcliffe wins the first cycle of Britain's Next Top Model, securing for herself a modelling contract among other prizes.
  • 18 November –
  • 22 November – Producers of ITV's I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! confirm that contestant Elaine Lordan will not be returning to the show following a stay in hospital. She had twice collapsed on the set of the jungle-based reality show, but had been given a clean bill of health by doctors.[88]
  • 28 November – The actress and I'm a Celebrity contestant Kimberley Davies is taken to hospital with a suspected fractured rib after she is injured in a stunt that goes wrong. Davies had jumped from a helicopter as part of one of the series' "bush tucker trials" when the incident occurred. Responding to criticism that it had not taken the correct safety precautions, ITV says that Davies was given a full safety briefing before she performed the stunt.[89]
  • 29 November – Kimberley Davies withdraws from I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!.[90]

December

  • 2 December – BBC Three's weeknight news bulletin The 7 O'Clock News is broadcast for the final time. It is axed following a report which a report into the BBC's digital output[91] claimed that the show "achieves nothing and attracts tiny audiences".
  • 3 December – ITV1 screens the British terrestrial television premiere of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, the second film in the Harry Potter series. Overnight viewing figures indicate it is watched by an audience of eight million (a 37% audience share). The evening's edition of The X Factor, screened after Chamber of Secrets, is watched by 9.7 million viewers (a 42% audience share), giving ITV1 its best ratings since February 2002.[92]
  • 5 December – Carol Thatcher wins the fifth series of I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!.[93]
  • 7–16 December – Space Cadets is shown on Channel 4, a hoax reality TV show where the contestants believe they are in a space shuttle orbiting Earth, when in fact they are in a set in a disused aircraft hangar in Suffolk.
  • 10 December – Westlife's version of "You Raise Me Up" is voted the 2005 Record of the Year by ITV viewers, the fourth time the Irish boy band have won the title.[94]
  • 11 December – Cricketer Andrew Flintoff is named as this year's BBC Sports Personality of the Year.[95]
  • 15 December – Sir Trevor McDonald makes his final ITN news broadcast after over 25 years. As a tribute, the closing theme tune for the News at Ten Thirty that night is replaced with the News at Ten theme used from 1992 to 1999, McDonald having presented the show during that time.
  • 17 December – Cricketer Darren Gough and dancing partner Lilia Kopylova win the third series of Strictly Come Dancing. Shayne Ward wins the second series of The X Factor on the same evening.[96]
  • 19 December – Rolf Harris unveils his portrait of the Queen at Buckingham Palace.[97][98]
  • 21 December – The BBC is to trial a three-month experiment in which its Saturday morning schedules for BBC One and BBC Two will be swapped. The changes, taking effect from January 2006, are being implemented because of frequent scheduling changes caused by big events and breaking news stories, and will mean children's programming will be absent from BBC One's Saturday morning lineup for the first time since 1976.[99]
  • 23 December – The ITV News Channel closes.[100]
  • 25 December –
  • 29 December – The last edition of Click Online broadcast under its original title before it is renamed Click.
  • 30 December – Five airs the final episode of its soap Family Affairs.[103]

Debuts

BBC One

BBC Two

BBC Four

ITV (1/2/3/4)

Channel 4

More4

  • 10 October – Launch of More4 News on new digital channel More4 (2005—2009).

Five

Cartoon Network UK

Boomerang UK

Playhouse Disney UK

Nickelodeon UK

Jetix UK

Channels

New channels

Date Channel
10 October More4
31 October Sky3
1 November ITV4

Defunct channels

Date Channel
23 December ITV News Channel

Rebranded channels

Date Old Name New Name
31 October Sky Mix Sky2

Television shows

^[e] signifies that this show has a related event in the Events section above.

Changes of network affiliation

Show Moved from Moved to
Trisha ITV Five
Pinky and the Brain BBC One
Family Guy (Terrestrial rights) Channel 4 BBC Two
Top of the Pops BBC One
24 BBC Two Sky1
South Park Sky1 Paramount Comedy 1
WWE SmackDown! Sky1 Sky Sports
WWE Bottom Line
WWE After Burn
WWE Heat
American Dragon: Jake Long Disney Channel ITV1 on CITV

Returning this year after a break of one year or longer

Continuing television shows

1920s

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

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

present)

Ending this year

DateShowChannel(s)Debut(s)
30 January Andy Pandy CBeebies 1950 & 2002
Angelina Ballerina CITV 2002
Up on the Roof CITV on GMTV
Diggin' It 2003
Superstars BBC
Call My Bluff 1965
Cathedral 2005
14 February The Crouches BBC One 2003
25 March The Powerpuff Girls Channel 5 & Cartoon Network 1998
29 May Breakfast with Frost BBC 1993
16 June UK Top 40 CBBC 2002
12 July 50/50 1997
20 July To the Ends of the Earth BBC 2005
24 July Ground Force 1997
3 August Born and Bred 2002
18 August Should I Worry About...? 2004
15 October Star Spell 2005
23 October Monarch of the Glen 2000
4 December Rocket Man 2005
16 December Bleak House
25 December The Two Ronnies Sketchbook
30 December Family Affairs Channel 5 1997

Births

DateNameCinematic Credibility
25 February Noah Jupe British actor

Deaths

DateNameAgeCinematic Credibility
2 January Cyril Fletcher 91 British comedian (That's Life!)
5 January Gabrielle Daye 93 actress (Bless Me Father, Coronation Street)
9 February Kate Peyton[18] 39 BBC journalist and producer
11 February Stan Richards 74 actor (Seth Armstrong in Emmerdale)
10 March Dave Allen 68 Irish comedian, host of solo shows on BBC1 and ITV.
15 April Margaretta Scott 93 English actress, best known for "All Creatures Great and Small".
26 June Richard Whiteley 61 presenter, host of Countdown.
4 July Bryan Coleman 94 actor
11 July Gretchen Franklin[104] actress (Ethel Skinner in EastEnders)
9 August Kay Tremblay 91 Actress (Road to Avonlea)
31 August Michael Sheard[105] 67 actor (Mr Bronson in Grange Hill)
3 October Ronnie Barker 76 actor and comedian (The Two Ronnies, Porridge, The Frost Report, Runaway Railway)
17 October Leslie Duxbury 79 television producer (Coronation Street)
25 October Barbara Keogh 76 actress (EastEnders)
31 October Mary Wimbush 81 actress (Poldark, Jeeves and Wooster, Century Falls)
gollark: The base GPT-2 models can do that. So if they finetuned one and didn't accidentally erase all its previous knowledge, it should also do that.
gollark: Generally they can manage to use basically-correct grammar and spelling, even if the semantics are wrong.
gollark: The bot doesn't actually display the coherence you'd expect from a GPT-2-based thing, so I'm not sure how much it's actually being used.
gollark: Can't wait for ceramic AGI.
gollark: I mean, GPT-2 just gives a probability distribution over the next token in some text, so it could totally be done. I just have no idea how you'd make it work nicely.

See also

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