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Television in the United Kingdom

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Television broadcasts in the United Kingdom began in 1932, however, regular broadcasts would only begin four years later. Television began as a public service which was free of advertising, which followed the first demonstration of a transmitted moving image in 1926. Currently, the United Kingdom has a collection of free-to-air, free-to-view and subscription services over a variety of distribution media, through which there are over 480 channelsTaking the base Sky EPG TV Channels. A breakdown is impossible due to a) the number of platforms, b) duplication of services, c) regional services, d) part time operations, and e) audio. For the Sky platform alone, there are basically 485 TV channels, additionally 57 "timeshifted versions", 36 HDTV versions, 42 regional TV options, 81 audio channels, and 5 promotion channels as of mid-2010 for consumers as well as on-demand content. There are six main TV channel owners who are responsible for most material viewed.

There are 27,000 hours of domestic content produced a year, at a cost of £2.6 billion.Taking the data from note 1 above, this is a very crude estimate Since 24 October 2012, all television broadcasts in the United Kingdom have been in a digital format, following the end of analogue transmissions in Northern Ireland. Digital content is delivered via terrestrial, satellite and cable, as well as over IP. As of 2003, 53.2% of households watch through terrestrial, 31.3% through satellite, and 15.6% through cable.

The Royal Television Society (RTS) is a British-based educational charity for the discussion and analysis of television in all its forms, past, present, and future. It is the oldest television society in the world.

Broadcast television providers

Free-to-air, free-to-view and subscription providers operate, with differences in the number of channels, capabilities such as the EPG, VOD, HD tv, interactive television via the red button, and coverage across the UK. All providers make available the UK's five most-watched channels: BBC One, BBC Two, ITV (ITV1/STV), Channel 4 and 5.

Broadcast television is distributed as radio waves via terrestrial or satellite transmissions, or as electrical or light signals through ground-based cables. In the UK, these use the Digital Video Broadcasting standard. Most TVs sold in the UK (as well as much of the rest of Europe) come with a DVB-T (terrestrial) tuner. Set-top boxes are generally used to receive channels from other providers. All of the traditional services have integrated their broadcast TV with streamed channels or on-demand programmes when connected to the Internet. Since 2022, broadcast-like TV services can be wholly received via Internet-connected devices, which do not require an aerial, satellite or a traditional cable TV connection.

ProviderLaunchedFree or payNo. broadcast channelsHouseholdsNotes
**Terrestrial and Internet hybrid**
EE TV2006As BT VisionTerrestrial channels: As Freeview
IPTV: Unknowndate=5 February 2025title=2024 Q4 Quarterly Network Report / Sheet T7url=https://www.barb.co.uk/barb-establishment-survey-quarterly-data-report-total-network-oct-2024-to-dec-2024/access-date=9 February 2025website=Barb}}Listed as BT Vision in Barb's dataFreeview reception only on boxes equipped with an aerial input and set to 'aerial mode'.
Requires BT Broadband or EE Broadband
Freeview / Freeview Play200250+ (TV)
24 (radio)2.87 millionThis figure is for terrestrial only households, calculated from column I of Barb's figures (DTT only households with BT Vision and Talktalk deducted, which assumes they are subscription Youview devices connected to an aerial)On demand via Freeview Play devices
Netgem TV2019Terrestrial channels: As Freeview
IPTV: Unknown
TalkTalk TV2000As HomeChoiceTerrestrial channels: As Freeview
IPTV: Unknown0.25 millionRequires TalkTalk Broadband
**Satellite**
Freesat2008115 (TV)
38 (radio)Around 200 additional channels available if manually tuned; see List of free-to-air channels at 28°E0.89 million
Sky1998400+ (TV)
160+ (radio)6.5 million
**Cable**
Virgin Media2006date=29 June 2011title=TV Size: XL – Channel Listingurl=http://allyours.virginmedia.com/html/sorter/channels_sizexl.htmlurl-status=deadarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090429021836/http://allyours.virginmedia.com/html/sorter/channels_sizexl.htmlarchive-date=29 April 2009access-date=13 February 2012publisher=Allyours.virginmedia.com}}
35+ (radio)3.47 millionTaken from the cable TV figure in Barb's data
**Internet "streaming" (IPTV)**This section refers to closed platform TV services which use an Internet-connected box connected to a TV, and a remote control giving direct access to a curated list of live channels via an on-screen guide. The list doesn't include individual over-the-top media services or streaming apps such as Netflix. Channels, on-demand TV and the programme guide are received via the Internet connection instead of broadcast infrastructure.
Freely202425+ (TV)
EE TV2022Requires BT Broadband or EE Broadband
Sky Stream / Sky GlassSky Glass: 2021
Sky Stream: 2022
FlexAs Stream from Virgin Media2022Requires Virgin Media Broadband

Barb Audiences publish quarterly statistics of the number of UK households per broadcast TV platform. The following table shows a summary of TV availability for Quarter 4 2024 and earlier quarters. Some of the figures are derived from others and will contain inaccuracies as Barb's data doesn't state the overlap between different combinations of technologies.

CohortHouseholds Q4 2024Q2 2021This is the first quarter with IPTV dataQ1 2010
**Households with or without a TV**
Households with a TV27.52 million26.92 million25.95 million
Households without a TV1.81 millionTotal households minus TV households1.52 million0.93 million
**Broadcast TV households** - terrestrial, satellite or cable
Terrestrial only3.06 million4.38 million9.96 million
Terrestrial TV alongside other services14.28 million16.92 million16.61 million
Satellite7.73 million9.33 million10.32 million
Cable3.47 million3.91 million3.92 million
Free terrestrial or satellite TV3.98 millionSum of Freeview, Freesat and non-subscription Sky5.36 million-Not enough data
Subscription terrestrial/satellite/cable TV11.78 millionSum of Sky subscription, other satellite, cable, BT Vision, Talktalk, Plusnet, other services14.29 million-
Total broadcast TV15.76 million19.65 million25.95 million
No broadcast TV13.57 million8.79 million0.93 million
**IPTV households**
IPTV with broadcast TV10.46 millionTotal broadcast TV minus 5.30 million broadcast only households (TV households minus IPTV total)12.13 million-
IPTV without broadcast TV11.76 millionTotal IPTV minus IPTV with broadcast households7.27 million-
IPTV total22.22 million19.4 million-
No IPTV7.11 million9.03 million

Digital terrestrial television

Main article: Digital terrestrial television in the United Kingdom

The primary digital terrestrial TV service, Freeview, launched in 2002 and is free-of-charge to view. It replaced the subscription service named ONdigital or ITV Digital, which ran from 1998 to 2002. Digital terrestrial television was itself the replacement for analogue terrestrial TV, which ran from 1936 to 2012.

, Freeview provides over seventy TV and radio channels, which are received via an aerial. It is operated by Everyone TV and DTV Services Ltd., joint ventures between the BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Channel 5. The transmitter network is predominately operated by Arqiva. The TV channels are transmitted in bundles, called multiplexes, and the available channels are dependent on how many multiplexes are transmitted in each area. The six national multiplexes are available to 90% of households from 92 transmitters; and three multiplexes are available to 9% of households from 1,067 transmitters.Coverage figures calculated from the per-multiplex coverage in Figure 42 of Connected Nations Report 2017. Transmitter counts calculated from the Television transmitter frequency data spreadsheet. In Northern Ireland, a multiplex carrying channels from the Republic of Ireland can reach 71% of Northern Irish households from 3 transmitters. Local TV and radio is available to 54% of households from an additional multiplex via 44 transmitters, and an extra multiplex is available to 54% of households in Greater Manchester.

Multiple vendors sell hybrid set-top-boxes or smart TVs which combine terrestrial channels with streamed (Internet TV) content. Internet-based TV apps such as BBC iPlayer, ITVX and Channel 4 are available via the broadband connection of Freeview Play and Netgem devices. These also support optional subscription services such as Netflix and Prime Video. EE TV and TalkTalk TV offer additional subscription services for their respective broadband customers using Netgem or YouView devices. Saorview, the terrestrial TV service in the Republic of Ireland which launched in 2011, can be received in parts of Northern Ireland via overspill transmissions.

Cable television

Many regional companies developed cable-television services in the late 1980s and 1990s as licences for cable television were awarded on a city-by-city basis. The mid-1990s saw the companies start to merge and the turn of the century only three big companies remained. In 2007 Telewest and NTL merged, resulting in the formation of Virgin Media, which is available to 55% of households. Cable TV is a subscription service normally bundled with a phone line and broadband.

Satellite television

There are two distinctly marketed direct-broadcast satellite (DBS) services (also known as direct-to-home (DTH), to be distinguished from satellite signals intended for non-consumer reception). Sky TV is a subscription service operated by Sky Ltd, owned by Comcast, which launched in 1998 as SkyDigital. Compared to the previous analogue service which had launched in 1989, it provided more channels, widescreen, interactive TV and a near video-on-demand service using staggered start times for pay-per-view content. Innovations since have included high definition, 3D TV, a digital video recorder, the ability to view recordings on other devices, remote operation via the Internet to add recordings, and on-demand content via the satellite-receiver's broadband connection of both Sky and third-party TV. The Sky subscription also includes access to Sky Go, which allows mobile devices and computers to access subscription content via the Internet.

Freesat is a free satellite service operated by Everyone TV, who also operate Freeview. Like Sky, it provides high-definition content, digital recording and video-on-demand via the broadband connection. Freesat and Sky TV transmit from SES Astra satellites at 28.2° east (Astra 2E/2F/2G). As the satellites are in geostationary orbit, they are positioned above the earth's equator () approximately 35,786 km above sea level; this places them above the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Internet video services

TV via the Internet can be streamed or downloaded, and consist of amateur or professionally produced content. In the UK, most broadcasters provide catch-up TV services which allow viewing of TV for a window after it was broadcast. Online video can be viewed via mobile devices, computers, TVs equipped with a built in Internet connection, or TVs connected to an external set-top-box, streaming stick or games console. Most of the broadcast TV providers have integrated their set-top-boxes with Internet video to provide a hybrid broadcast and online service.

Catch-up services

Since 2006, UK channel owners and content producers have been creating Internet services to access their programmes using catch-up television. Often, these are available for a window after the broadcast schedule. These services generally block users outside of the UK.

Service nameOwnerBroadcast channels with catch-upCatch-up periodAdditional contentStreamedDownloadFree/PaySite
BBC iPlayerBBCBBC channels, S4C30 days
S4CS4CS4C35 days
Channel 4Channel Four Television CorporationChannel 4, E4, More4, 4seven, Film430 days
ITVXITV plcITV1–4, ITV Quiz30 days
[5](5-streaming-service)Paramount Networks UK & Australia5, 5USA, 5STAR, 5Action, 5Select30 days
Sky GoSky UKUp to 65 channels
STV PlayerSTV GroupSTV30 days
UUKTV MediaU&Dave, U&Drama, U&W, U&Yesterday30 days

Online video services for professionally produced content

UK TV online services offer subscription, rental, and purchase options for viewing online TV. Most are available via the Internet but some require a specific broadband provider. Some services sell 3rd party services, such as Amazon's Prime Video.

Barb tracks the number of households subscribing to subscription video-on-demand services. Their statistics for Q3 2024 show that 69% of households subscribe to at least one of these.

date=13 November 2024title=Barb releases Q3 2024 SVOD subscriptions data from its Establishment Surveyurl=https://www.barb.co.uk/news/barb-releases-q3-2024-svod-subscriptions-data-from-its-establishment-survey/access-date=5 January 2025website=www.barb.co.uk}}%
[[File:BARB_Q3_2024_SVOD_households_UK.svg]]
20.1 million

The table following is the number of subscribers per service according to Barb's Q3 2024 figures. Barb's data excludes services with a household penetration below 5% (1.5 million households), omitting services like ITVX Premium. It also omits services linked to a broadcast TV subscription, like Sky Go, and free services like BBC iPlayer, as they don't have a paid subscription.

ServiceHouseholds
Netflix17.3m
Amazon Prime Video13.4m
Disney+7.5m
Discovery+3.2m
Paramount+2.8m
AppleTV2.5m
Now2.1m

The table below summarises some of the available Internet TV services in the UK. For brevity, it does not include catch-up-only or amateur-only services, individual channels, distributors of illegal or adult content, services which solely redistribute free broadcast channels, portals, or services which don't target the UK. 'Free' refers to free at the point of consumption, not including fees for Internet connectivity or a TV licence.

**International services**Arte
Filmzie
JustWatchTV
Plex
Pluto TV
Revry
RTÉ Player
Runtime
Samsung TV Plus
Tubi
Vevo
wedotvApple TV
HBO Max
Netflix
DAZN
Hayu
Paramount+iTunes Store (Apple)
Microsoft Films & TV
YouTube Movies & TVDisney+
Prime Video (Amazon)
Rakuten TV

Other international streaming services with pricing in GBP include: Acorn TV, Arrow, BroadwayHD, CHILI, Crunchyroll, Curiosity Stream, DAFilms, Dekkoo, Demand Africa, Docsville, Eros Now, GuideDoc, Hayu, Hoichoi, Hotstar, iQiyi, iWant, Klassiki, Magellan TV, MovieSaints, Mubi, NewsPlayer+, Shahid VIP, Shudder, SonyLIV, Spamflix, Sun NXT, True Story, TVPlayer, VMX, Viva One, WOW Presents Plus and ZEE5.

Channels and channel owners

Viewing statistics

Most viewed channels

Barb Audiences measures television ratings in the UK. As of November 2024, the average daily viewing time per home was 2 hours 54 minutes (of Barb-reported channels, includes broadcast and Internet viewings). 13 channels have a monthly share of ≥ 1.0%, as well as non-linear (streamed) viewing of BBC and ITV plc. programmes.

ChannelOwnerFree/PayMonthly share (%)Average daily minutes (mins:secs)
BBC OneBBC21.0132:23
ITV1ITV plc15.2123:26
BBC TwoBBC5.208:01
Channel 4Channel Four Television Corporation4.887:31
5Channel 5 Broadcasting (Paramount Skydance)3.996:09
BBC Non-linear (on TV set)BBC2.573:57
ITV3ITV plc2.113:15
E4Channel Four Television Corporation1.802:46
ITV2ITV plc1.612:29
U&DramaUKTV Media (BBC)1.362:05
ITV Non-Linear (on TV set)ITV plc1.191:50
Sky Sports Main EventSky UK (Comcast)1.111:43
Film4Channel Four Television Corporation1.091:41
BBC NewsBBC1.051:37
5USAChannel 5 Broadcasting (Paramount Skydance)1.041:36

Most viewed broadcaster groups

As of November 2024, there are 10 broadcaster groups with a monthly share of ≥ 1.0% (although Barb reports sub-groups of BBC and Paramount individually, and it's unclear what the 'ITV' group refers to).

Channel ownerShare of total viewing time (%)Average daily minutes
BBC33.1151:02
ITV21.8133:37
Channel Four Television Corporation10.2315:46
Sky UK (Comcast)9.4814:37
Channel 5 Broadcasting (Paramount Skydance)6.6110:11
Warner Bros. Discovery5.208:01
UKTV Media (BBC)4.426:49
Non-grouped Barb-reported channels1.963:01
Narrative Entertainment1.502:19
CBS AMC Networks UK (Paramount Skydance/AMC)1.322:02

BBC and UKTV

Main article: BBC, UKTV

The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is the world's oldest and largest broadcaster, and is the country's principal public service broadcaster of radio and television. BBC Television is funded primarily by a television licence and from sales of its programming to overseas markets. It does not carry advertising. The licence fee is levied on all households that watch or record TV as it is broadcast and the fee is determined by periodic negotiation between the government and the BBC.

Its first analogue terrestrial channel was launched by the BBC Television Service in 1936. It rebranded to BBC1 in 1964 following the launch of BBC2, the UK's third analogue terrestrial channel after ITV. BBC News 24 launched as an analogue cable channel in 1997, later rebranding to BBC News in 2008. BBC Parliament, which was originally an analogue cable channel known as The Parliamentary Channel, was acquired by the BBC in 1998. From 1998 onwards the BBC started digital TV transmissions, launching new channels and broadcasting via satellite in addition to terrestrial and cable.

The BBC's Internet-based service iPlayer contains content from the BBC's TV channels, the Welsh-language public-service broadcaster S4C, as well as videos created from BBC radio programmes.

UKTV is a commercial broadcaster owned by BBC Studios, one of the BBC's commercial units. Originating in 1992 with UK Gold, UKTV expanded its channels from 1997 onwards, with the BBC taking full ownership in June 2019. Unlike the BBC's public service channels, the UKTV channels contain advertising.

Public service channelsUKTV (Commercial)
BBC One, BBC Two, BBC Three, BBC Four, BBC News, BBC Parliament, CBBC, CBeebies, BBC Scotland, BBC Alba, BBC Red Button
None
Internet TV servicesBBC iPlayer

ITV

Main article: ITV (TV network)

ITV, branded as ITV1 or STV, is the network of fourteen regional and one national commercial television franchise, founded in 1955 to provide competition to the BBC. ITV was the country's first commercial television provider funded by advertisements. Each region was originally independent and used its own on-air identity. Through a series of mergers following relaxation of regulation in 1990, thirteen of the franchises are now held by ITV plc, and the remaining two by STV Group. Since 2012, ITV plc produces the network nationally, with STV Group acting as an affiliate.

STV Group uses the channel name of STV for its two franchises in Scotland. ITV plc names the channel UTV in Northern Ireland, and ITV1 for the remaining regions, although UTV has used ITV or ITV1 branding since April 2020. The national breakfast-time franchise is held by ITV plc, which appears as an indistinguishable programming block across the network. Legally, the network has been known as Channel 3 since 1990, which is the name Ofcom uses.

ITV plc or its predecessor companies created additional free or subscription channels, of which the oldest still running is ITV2, having launched in 1998. Several older channels have since stopped broadcasting; the oldest of these is Super Channel which was launched by a consortium of ITV regional companies in 1987, was sold and eventually closed in 1998.

ITV plcSTV Group
ITV1, ITV2, ITV3, ITV4, ITV Quiz
Internet TV ServicesITVX

Channel 4

Main article: Channel 4

Launched in 1982, Channel 4 is a state-owned national broadcaster which is funded by its commercial activities (including advertising). Channel 4 has expanded greatly after gaining greater independence from the IBA, especially in the multi-channel digital world launching E4, Film4, More4, 4Music, 4seven and various timeshift services. Since 2005, it has been a member of the Freeview consortium, and operates one of the six digital terrestrial multiplexes with ITV as Digital 3&4. Since the advent of digital television, Channel 4 is now also broadcast in Wales across all digital platforms. Channel 4 was the first British channel not to carry regional variations for programming, however it does have six set advertising regions.

Channel 4 channels
Internet TV Services

Sky

Main article: Sky UK

Sky is a European broadcaster owned by global American media conglomerate Comcast. Sky Television launched in 1989, with a 4-channel service received via satellite. The channels at launch were Sky Channel, Sky News, Sky Movies and Eurosport. They were initially free to receive, and Sky Movies was the first to move to a subscription early in 1990. Sky News was the UK's first dedicated news channel. The new service was the UK's first consumer satellite TV service, beating rival BSB, with which Sky would later merge to become BSkyB. Sky's satellite service grew to become a subscription platform through which Sky offer their own channels, pay-per-view services and channels from other broadcasters. Sky's digital platform launched in 1998, with the original analogue service closing in 2001. Sky was acquired by Comcast in 2018.

Since 2012, Sky operate Now, an Internet TV streaming service offering subscriptions without a fixed-term contract.

Sky's channel portfolio has grown greatly since the launch of digital TV. Sky make their channels available via rival cable and Internet services as well as their own satellite service and Now.

ComcastSky UKNBCUniversalWholly ownedAt The Races (joint venture)A&E Networks UK (joint venture)
Challenge, Sky Arts, Sky Mix HD, Sky NewsNoneBlaze
Sky Arts HD, Sky Atlantic, Sky Comedy, Sky Crime, Sky Documentaries, Sky Kids, Sky Max, Sky Nature, Sky News HD, Sky Replay, Sky Showcase, Sky Witness
Sky Cinema channels: Action, Animation, Comedy, Drama, Family, Greats, Hits, Premiere, Sci-fi & Horror, Select, Thriller
Sky Sports channels: Action, Active, Arena, Cricket, F1, Football, Golf, Main Event, Mix, Premier League, Sports NewsSky Sports RacingCrime & Investigation, Lifetime, Sky History, Sky History 2
Sky Sports Box OfficeNoneNone
Internet TV ServicesSky Go, NowATR PlayerNone

Paramount Skydance

Main article: Paramount Skydance

5 was the fifth analogue terrestrial channel to launch, in March 1997. Due to constraints with the available UHF frequencies at the time, many households had to retune their video recorders, which shared the frequency on their RF output with the frequency used by Channel 5's new broadcasts. Channel 5 was the first terrestrial channel to also broadcast via satellite. From 2006 onwards, Channel 5 launched new digital channels and an Internet on-demand service. After changing ownership several times, in May 2014 Channel 5 and its sister channels were acquired by Viacom, an American media conglomerate, known as Paramount since 2022.

By the time it acquired Channel 5, Paramount already operated a large number of subscription channels in the UK, including the MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central channels, which are available via Sky TV, Virgin Media and Now. In terms of viewing share, the combined viewing across Paramount's channels make the group the UK's fifth largest broadcaster, according to Barb's viewing figures for 1 March 2020.

Paramount additionally operates the Pluto TV and Paramount+ Internet streaming services.

Paramount GlobalChannel 5 BroadcastingViacom International Media Networks UKNickelodeon UKParamount UK Partnership (co-owned)CBS AMC Networks UK (co-owned)
[5](5-british-tv-channel), [5Action](5action), [5Select](5select), [5Star](5star), [5USA](5usa)NoneNoneNoneTrue Crime, True Crime Xtra, Legend, Legend Xtra
5Action HDMTV, MTV Hits, MTV Music, MTV 80s, MTV 90sNickelodeon, Nick Jr, Nick Jr Too, NicktoonsComedy Central, Comedy Central ExtraNone
Internet TV Services5 (Streaming Service)NoneNoneNoneWatch Free UK

Local and regional television

Local television

Main article: Local television in the United Kingdom

Since 2012, additional local TV channels are available via Freeview channel 7 or 8. The channels are licensed by Ofcom, with 34 local TV channels licensed as of 2 July 2020. Nineteen of the licences are held by That's TV, and eight are held by Made Television. The remainder are held independently. Each licence contains the amount of local TV programming required. As an example, the licence for Scarborough, which is held by That's TV, requires seven hours of local programming per week (one hour per day on average). Thirteen additional licences were originally intended, but Ofcom decided not to advertise these in June 2018.

The way Ofcom structured local television – being dependent on terrestrial transmission – was criticised in a Guardian article in 2015 for being "years behind in its thinking", as it does not account for the Internet. In the article, Ofcom responded that the licensing scheme was inherited from the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. In April 2018, BBC News reported that "many of the stations have been ridiculed for the poor quality of their output or have been reported to Ofcom for breaching broadcasting rules". The local TV companies receive a subsidy from the BBC of £147.50 per local news story, funded by the licence fee, paid whether the BBC uses the content or not. A June 2018 article on BuzzFeed claimed that That's TV was created "primarily to extract money from the BBC whilst delivering little content of useful value".

Regional television

BBC One, BBC Two and the ITV network (comprising ITV1 and STV) are split into regions in which regional news and other programming is broadcast. ITV1/STV is split into fourteen geographic licencees, with several of these split into two or three sub-regions, resulting in a greater total number of regional news programmes. Ofcom sets a quota for the BBC and ITV on the amount of regional programming required, shown in the following table. Ofcom's quota for S4C is 60 hours per week.

Standard definition+1High definitionNotes
BBC One16 (Freeview only)N/Atitle=Satellite Frequencies Help receiving TV and radiourl=https://www.bbc.co.uk/reception/help-guides/freesat-sky/satellite-frequencieswebsite=www.bbc.co.ukaccessdate=10 January 2025}}
BBC Two3 (Freeview only)N/A3
ITV119 (Freeview only)title=Astra 2E/2F/2G at 28.3°Eurl=https://www.lyngsat.com/Astra-2E-2F-2G.htmlwebsite=www.lyngsat.comaccessdate=10 January 2025}}
6 (cable)6 (Freeview)
18 (satellite)
17 (cable)
STV4 (Freeview)
2 (satellite)2 (Freeview/cable)
0 (satellite)1 (Freeview)
2 (Freesat)
3 (cable)
4 (Sky)

Advertising on ITV1/STV and Channel 4 is regional. Linear Channel 4 is split into 6 advertising regions, but has no regional programming.

Country-specific channels

BBC Scotland and the Gaelic-language channel BBC Alba target Scotland, and the Welsh-language channel S4C targets Wales. In Northern Ireland, channels originating in the Republic of Ireland are available, including RTÉ One, RTÉ2 and the Irish-language TG4.

Programming

British television differs from other countries, such as the United States, in as much that programmes produced in the United Kingdom do not generally have a long season run of around 20 weeks. Instead, they are produced in a series, a set of episodes varying in length, usually aired over a period of a few months. See List of British television series.

100 Greatest British Television Programmes

Main article: BFI TV 100

100 Greatest British Television Programmes was a list compiled in 2000 by the British Film Institute (BFI), chosen by a poll of industry professionals, to determine what were the greatest British television programmes of any genre ever to have been screened. Although not including any programmes made in 2000 or later, the list is useful as an indication of what were generally regarded as the most successful British programmes of the 20th century. The top 10 programmes are:

RankProgrammeChannelYear
1*Fawlty Towers***BBC2**1975–1979
2*Cathy Come Home* (*The Wednesday Play*)**BBC1**1966
3*Doctor Who***BBC1**1963–1989, 1996, 2005–present
4*The Naked Civil Servant***ITV**1975
5*Monty Python's Flying Circus***BBC2**1969–1974
6*Blue Peter***BBC1**1958–present
7*Boys from the Blackstuff***BBC2**1982
8*Parkinson***BBC1/ITV**1971–1982, 1998–2007
9*Yes Minister* / *Yes, Prime Minister***BBC2**1980–1988
10*Brideshead Revisited***ITV**1981

100 Greatest TV Moments

100 Greatest TV Moments was a list compiled by Channel 4 in 1999. The top 10 entries are:

RankProgrammeChannelYearMoment
1NewsBBC1 / BBC2 / ITV1969The Apollo 11 Moon landing
2NewsBBC1 / BBC2 / ITV1990The release of Nelson Mandela
3NewsBBC1 / ITV1997Michael Portillo loses his seat in the [general election](1997-united-kingdom-general-election), which came to symbolise the end of the period of Conservative government which had begun in 1979 with Margaret Thatcher as Prime Minister
4NewsBBC1 / BBC2 / ITV1997The death of Diana, Princess of Wales
5NewsBBC1 / BBC2 / ITV1989The fall of the Berlin Wall
6[1966 FIFA World Cup](1966-fifa-world-cup)BBC1 / ITV1966[Final](1966-fifa-world-cup-final): England beats Germany 4–2; commentator Kenneth Wolstenholme's quotation "They think it's all over"
7*Only Fools and Horses*BBC11989"Yuppy Love": Del Boy falls through a bar flap
8Live AidBBC1 / BBC21985The multi-venue rock concert to raise funds for the [famine](1984-1985-famine-in-ethiopia) of Ethiopia
9*Blackadder Goes Forth*BBC11989"Goodbyeee": the protagonists go over the top
10NewsBBC / ITV1963John F. Kennedy assassination

List of most watched television broadcasts

Main article: List of most watched television broadcasts in the United Kingdom

The majority of special events attracting large audiences are often carried on more than one channel. The most-watched programme of all time on a single channel is the 1973 wedding ceremony of The Princess Anne, shown only on BBC1. The figures in these tables represent the average viewership achieved by each broadcast during its run-time and do not include peak viewership.

  • Post-1981 figures verified by Barb Audiences
  • Pre-1981 figures supplied by the British Film Institute (BFI)
RankEventViewers
(millions)DateNetworkTotalChannel
1[1966 FIFA World Cup Final](1966-fifa-world-cup-final): England v West Germanytitle=Features Britain's Most Watched TV 1960surl=http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/mostwatched/1960s.htmlarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051122221448/http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/mostwatched/1960s.htmlarchive-date=22 November 2005access-date=7 July 2016publisher=British Film Institute (BFI)}}BBC1/ITV
2Funeral of Diana, Princess of Walestitle=Features Britain's Most Watched TV 1990surl=http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/mostwatched/1990s.htmlarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051125215025/http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/mostwatched/1990s.htmlarchive-date=25 November 2005access-date=7 July 2016publisher=British Film Institute (BFI)}}BBC1/ITV
3*Royal Family* (documentary)30.69andBBC1/ITV
4UEFA Euro 2020 Final: Italy v Englanddate=11 July 2021title=Euro 2020 final: TV audience peaked at 31m as England lost on penaltieslanguage=en-GBpublisher=BBC Newsurl=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-57802981access-date=12 July 2021}}BBC One/ITV
5Apollo 13 splashdowntitle=Features Britain's Most Watched TV 1970surl=http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/mostwatched/1970s.htmlarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051122221511/http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/mostwatched/1970s.htmlarchive-date=22 November 2005access-date=7 July 2016publisher=British Film Institute (BFI)}}BBC1/ITV
6[1970 FA Cup Final replay](1970-fa-cup-final)28.49BBC1/ITV
7Wedding of Charles, Prince of Wales, and Lady Diana Spencertitle=Features Britain's Most Watched TV 1980surl=http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/mostwatched/1980s.htmlarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051122221538/http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/mostwatched/1980s.htmlarchive-date=22 November 2005access-date=7 July 2016publisher=British Film Institute (BFI)}}BBC1/ITV
8Wedding of Princess Anne and Mark Phillips27.60BBC1
9[Prime Minister Boris Johnson's statement on COVID-19](23-march-2020-downing-street-address)27.115.4BBC One
5.7ITV
1.6Channel 4
Channel 5
Sky News
BBC News
10[2012 Summer Olympics closing ceremony](2012-summer-olympics-closing-ceremony)24.4624.46BBC One

Notes:

  • The Wedding of Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon (6 May 1960) was watched by an estimated 300 million viewers around the world.
  • At least two Muhammad Ali boxing matches were reported to have been watched by at least 26million viewers in the United Kingdom: the Fight of the Century (Ali vs. Frazier) was reported to have been watched by 27.5million British viewers in 1971, and The Rumble in the Jungle (Ali vs. Foreman) was reported to have been watched by 26million viewers on BBC1 in 1974.
  • Live Aid is reported to have reached approximately 24.5million British viewers in July 1985.
  • The Wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton (29 April 2011) received a total audience peak of 26 million viewers, but this is a combined figure aggregated from the ten different channels that broadcast the ceremony. The highest figures of these were 13.59 million on BBC1, with an extra 4.02 million watching on ITV.

Genre lists

100 Greatest Kids' TV shows

The 100 Greatest Kids' TV shows was a poll conducted by the British television channel Channel 4 in 2001. The top 5 UK-produced programmes are:

RankProgrammeYear
1*The Muppet Show*1976–1981
2*Danger Mouse*1981–1992
3*Bagpuss*1974
4*Grange Hill*1978–2008
5*Mr Benn*1971–1972

British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series

Main article: British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series

The British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series is one of the major categories of the British Academy Television Awards. The last 5 winners are:

  • 2022: In My Skin – Expectation Entertainment / BBC Three
  • 2021: Save Me Too – World Productions / Sky Atlantic
  • 2020: The End of the F*ing World – Clerkenwell Films / Channel 4
  • 2019: Killing Eve – Sid Gentle Films / BBC One
  • 2018: Peaky Blinders – Tiger Aspect Productions / BBC Two

Terrestrial channel programming

Weekday

Weekday programming on terrestrial channels begins at 6 am with breakfast national news programmes (along with regional news updates) on BBC Breakfast on BBC One and Good Morning Britain on ITV, with Channel 5 showing children's programmes under the Milkshake! brand. Channel 4 predominately broadcasts comedy programmes such as Everybody Loves Raymond in its morning slot. The weekday breakfast news programme ends at 9:30am on BBC One and 9am on ITV.

Following this on BBC One, lifestyle programming is generally shown, including property, auction and home and gardening. BBC One continues this genre until after the lunchtime news, whereby afternoon has various factual shows and dramas. BBC Two airs the BBC News updates and political programming between 9 am and 1 pm. Channel 4 often shows home-project and archaeology lifestyle programming in the early afternoon after a Channel 4 News summary. Channel 5 broadcasts chat show programmes in the morning including Jeremy Vine with regular news bulletins. In the afternoon, it shows dramas followed by an hour of Australian soaps such as Home and Away and Neighbours and films.

News bulletins are broadcast between 6 pm and 7 pm on both BBC One and ITV, with BBC One beginning with the national BBC News at Six and ITV with the flagship regional news programme. At around 6:30 pm, BBC One broadcasts the regional news programmes whilst ITV broadcasts the ITV Evening News. Channel 4 News starts at 7 pm and 5 News broadcasts for an hour at 5 pm.

Primetime programming is usually dominated by further soaps, including EastEnders on BBC One, Coronation Street and Emmerdale on ITV, and Hollyoaks on Channel 4. These soap operas or 'continuing dramas' as they are now called can vary throughout the year, however weekly dramas, are also fixed to scheduling. BBC Two broadcasts factual programming, including lifestyle and documentaries. BBC Four begins programming at 7pm. The channel shows a wide variety of programmes including arts, documentaries, music, international film, comedy, original programmes, drama and current affairs. It is required by its licence to air at least 100 hours of new arts and music programmes, 110 hours of new factual programmes and to premiere 20 foreign films each year. BBC One, BBC Two, ITV, Channel 4 and Channel 5 broadcast dramas and documentaries in the evenings. At 10pm with the flagship national news on BBC One in BBC News at Ten (followed by Newsnight on BBC Two) and on ITV on ITV News at Ten followed by the regional late night news. Because of this, the UK can often rely more heavily on TV guides, be it with the newspaper, online, via information services on the television such as the BBC Red Button service or the built in Electronic Programme Guides.

Weekend

Weekend daytime programming traditionally consists of more lifestyle programming plus films and live and recorded coverage of sporting events on most weekend afternoons. There are further battles for viewers in the weekend primetime slot, often featuring documentaries and game shows in the evening. Lunchtime, early evening and late evening news programmes continue on BBC One and ITV although the length of the bulletins are shorter than during the week. Sunday night schedules usually consist of dramas, light entertainment, documentaries, films, music concerts, festivals or sporting events.

Cultural impact

Christian morality

In 1963 Mary Whitehouse, incensed by the liberalising policies followed by Sir Hugh Greene, then director general of the BBC, began her letter writing campaign. She subsequently launched the Clean Up TV Campaign, and founded the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association in 1965. In 2008, Toby Young in an article for The Independent wrote: "On the wider question of whether sex and violence on TV has led to a general moral collapse in society at large, the jury is still out. No one doubts that Western civilization is teetering on the brink ... but it is unfair to lay the blame entirely at the feet of BBC2 and Channel 4."

In 2005, the BBC's broadcast of Jerry Springer: The Opera elicited 55,000 complaints, and provoked protests from Christian organisation Christian Voice, and a private prosecution against the BBC by the Christian Institute. A summons was not issued.

Awards

The British Academy Television Awards are the most prestigious awards given in the British television industry, analogous to the Emmy Awards in the United States. They have been awarded annually since 1954, and are only open to British programmes. After all the entries have been received, they are voted for online by all eligible members of the Academy. The winner is chosen from the four nominees by a special jury of nine academy members for each award, the members of each jury selected by the Academy's Television Committee.

The National Television Awards is a British television awards ceremony, sponsored by ITV and initiated in 1995. Although not widely held to be as prestigious as the BAFTAs, the National Television Awards are probably the most prominent ceremony for which the results are voted on by the general public. Unlike the BAFTAs, the National Television Awards allow foreign programmes to be nominated, providing they have been screened on a British channel during the eligible time period.

Regulation

Ofcom is the independent regulator and competition authority for the communication industries in the United Kingdom, including television. As the regulatory body for media broadcasts, Ofcom's duties include:

  • Specification of the Broadcast Code, which took effect on 25 July 2005, with the latest version being published October 2008. The Code itself is published on Ofcom's website, and provides a mandatory set of rules which broadcast programmes must comply with. The 10 main sections cover protection of under-eighteens, harm and offence, crime, religion, impartiality and accuracy, elections, fairness, privacy, sponsorship and commercial references. As stipulated in the Communications Act 2003, Ofcom enforces adherence to the Code. Failure for a broadcaster to comply with the Code results in warnings, fines, and potentially revokation of a broadcasting licence.
  • Rules on the amount and distribution of advertising, which also took effect July 2005
  • Examining specific complaints by viewers or other bodies about programmes and sponsorship. Ofcom issues Broadcast Bulletins on a fortnightly basis which are accessible via its web site. As an example, a bulletin from February 2009 has a complaint from the National Heart Forum over sponsorship of The Simpsons by Domino's Pizza on Sky One. Ofcom concluded this was in breach of the Broadcast Code, since it contravened an advertising restriction of food high in fat, salt or sugar. (Restrictions in food and drink advertising to children were introduced in November 2006.)
  • The management, regulation and assignment of the electromagnetic spectrum in the UK, and licensing of portions of the spectrum for television broadcasting
  • Public consultations on matters relating to TV broadcasting. The results of the consultations are published by Ofcom, and inform the policies that Ofcom creates and enforces.

In 2008, Ofcom issued fines to the total of £7.7m. This included £5.67m of fines to ITV companies, including a £3m fine to LWT over voting irregularities on Saturday Night Takeaway, and fines totalling £495,000 to the BBC. Ofcom said phone-in scandals had contributed significantly to the fine totals.

The Committee for Advertising Practice (CAP, or BCAP) is the body contracted by Ofcom to create and maintain the codes of practice governing television advertising. The Broadcast Advertising Codes (or the TV codes) are accessible on CAP's web site. The Codes cover advertising standards (the TV Code), guidance notes, scheduling rules, text services (the Teletext Code) and interactive television guidance. The main sections of the TV Code concern compliance, programmes and advertising, unacceptable products, political and controversial issues, misleading advertising, harm and offence, children, medicines, treatments, health claims and nutrition, finance and investments, and religion.

The Advertising Standards Authority is an independent body responsible for resolving complaints relating to the advertising industry within the UK. It is not government funded, but funded by a levy on the advertising industry. It ensures compliance with the Codes created by CAP. The ASA covers all forms of advertising, not just television advertisements. The ASA can refer problematic adverts to Ofcom, since the channels carrying the adverts are ultimately responsible for the advertising content, and are answerable to Ofcom. Ofcom can issue fines or revoke broadcast licences if necessary.

Licensing

Main article: Television licensing in the United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom and the Crown dependencies (though not the British Overseas Territories), a television licence is required to receive any publicly broadcast television service, or for using BBC iPlayer. This includes the commercial channels, cable and satellite transmissions, Internet-streamed channels, and applies regardless of the technology used to view. The money from the licence fee is used to provide radio, television and Internet content for the BBC, Welsh-language television programmes for S4C, monitoring of global mass media, nine orchestras and performing groups, technical research, and contributions to broadband roll out. The fee is classified as a hypothecated tax rather than a subscription. The BBC gives the following figures for expenditure of licence fee income per month in 2021/2022:

Spend per month per licencePercentagePurpose
£7.2955%Television
£2.0916%Radio
£1.2710%BBC Online
£1.3010%BBC World Service
£0.725%Other services and production costs
£0.584%Licence fee collection and pension deficit cost

Production

As of 2002, 27,000 hours of original programming are produced year in the UK television industry, excluding news, at a cost of £2.6bn. Ofcom has determined that 56% (£1.5bn) of production is in-house by the channel owners, and the remainder by independent production companies. Ofcom is enforcing a 25% independent production quota for the channel operators, as stipulated in the Broadcasting Act 1990.

In-house production

ITV plc, the company which owns 12 of the 15 regional ITV franchises, has set its production arm ITV Studios a target of producing 75% of the ITV schedule, the maximum allowed by Ofcom. This would be a rise from 54% at present, as part of a strategy to make ITV content-led chiefly to double production revenues to £1.2bn by 2012. ITV Studios currently produces programmes such as Coronation Street, Emmerdale and Heartbeat.

In contrast, the BBC has implemented a Window of Creative Competition (WOCC), a 25% proportion over and above the 25% Ofcom quota in which the BBC's in-house production and independent producers can compete. The BBC produces shows such as All Creatures Great and Small and F*off I'm a Hairy Woman.

Channel 4 commissions all programmes from independent producers.

Independent production

As a consequence of the launch of Channel 4 in 1982, and the 25% independent quota from the Broadcasting Act 1990, an independent production sector has grown in the UK. Notable companies include Talkback Thames, Endemol UK, Hat Trick Productions, and Tiger Aspect Productions. A full list can be seen here: :Category:Television production companies of the United Kingdom

History

Timeline

Avoiding tests, trials, etc., and things like the launch of ITV4 --

2022Internet televisionStream from Virgin Media launches, a TV service which receives all content as data via Virgin's broadband connection. Like their older cable TV service, access is limited to Virgin's cable network. It later rebrands to Flex.

Closed and aborted television providers

ProviderYearsFree or payNo. of channelsColourDigitalVODTransmission
[VHF terrestrial TV](405-line-television-system)1936–19852Analogue terrestrial
405-line cable service1938–19852Analogue cable
UHF terrestrial TV1965–20125 (or 6)Analogue terrestrial
Multiple cable services1970s–2017Analogue cable
Sky [analogue]1989–2001Analogue satellite
BSB1990–19925Analogue satellite
OnDigital / ITV Digital1998–2002Digital terrestrial
KIT1999–2006IPTV
Top Up TV2004–2013Digital terrestrial
Freewire2006–201450IPTV
EE TVRefers to the TV service launched by EE before it was acquired by BT Group, and is separate from the BT TV service which rebranded to EE TV in 20232014–202199Digital terrestrial + IPTV
Plusnet TV2015–202195Digital terrestrial + IPTV

The following Internet TV services have closed:

ServiceYears
Blinkbox / TalkTalk TV Store2007–2018
SeeSaw2010–2011
UTV Player2014–2016
BBC Store2015–2017

The following services were aborted before launch:

  • Sky Picnic, a proposed subscription digital terrestrial service from Sky in 2007
  • 'Project Kangaroo', an Internet TV service announced by the BBC, ITV and Channel 4 in 2007. Some of the technology was reused in SeeSaw. A similar concept later launched as BritBox.

Analogue terrestrial television

Main article: Analogue terrestrial television in the United Kingdom

UK digital switchover dates

Analogue TV was transmitted via VHF (1936) and later UHF (1964) radio waves, with analogue broadcasts ending in 2012.

VHF transmissions started in 1936 and closed in 1985 (with a gap 1939–1946), carrying two channels. The launch channel was the BBC Television Service, known as BBC1 since 1964. This was joined by Independent Television, a network of regional franchises launching between 1955 and 1962. The channels transmitted in monochrome using the 405-line television system, with 376 visible lines, at 25 interlaced frames per second (50 fields per second), initially with an aspect ratio of 5:4, switching to 4:3 in 1950. The phased closure started in 1982 and completed in January 1985.

UHF transmissions started in 1964 and closed in 2012. The launch channel was BBC2. This would be joined by BBC1, the ITV network, Channel 4 or S4C in Wales, Channel 5 as well as a network of local TV channels. Transmissions started using the System I standard, a 625-line monochrome picture, with 576 visible lines, at 25 interlaced frames/second (50 fields/second) and a 4:3 aspect ratio. Technical advancements included colour (1967), teletext (1974), and stereo sound (1991). The drive to switch viewers from analogue to digital transmissions was a regional process called the digital switchover, which started in 2007 and completed in October 2012 when analogue UHF transmissions ceased in Northern Ireland.

Whilst there are no longer any analogue broadcasts in the UK, a PAL signal may be present in closed RF distribution systems, e.g. a video feed from an intercom in a block of flats, or a security system.

Common channel positionChannel nameChannel ownerRegionsThe region counts shown are for the channel overall, and do not account for regions which have undergone digital switch-over and hence are digital-onlyVHF launch dateUHF launch date
1BBC OneBBCtitle=One Programmes – Regional variations for BBC Oneurl=https://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcone/programmes/schedulesaccess-date=13 February 2012publisher=BBC}}2 November 193615 November 1969
2BBC TwoBBCtitle=Two Programmes – Regional variations for BBC Twourl=https://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctwo/programmes/schedulesaccess-date=13 February 2012publisher=BBC}}Count of BBC Two analogue regional variationsN/A20 April 1964
3ITV (on-air brand ITV1, STV or UTV; legal name Channel 3)ITV Network Ltd (ITV plc, STV Group)17 regional variations (14 ITV, 2 STV, UTV); 24 advertising regions; 13 Teletext regionsFrom 22 September 1955 – 14 September 196215 November 1969
4 (English regions, Scotland and Northern Ireland)Channel 4Channel Four Television Corporation6 advertising regionsN/A2 November 1982
4 (Wales)S4CS4C Authority1 regionN/A1 November 1982
5Channel 5Viacom International Media Networks Europe4 advertising regionsN/A30 March 1997
6Restricted Service Licence channelsVarious18 channels (approx)N/AFrom Oct 1998

Defunct channels

There are nearly 200 defunct British channels. For a list, see List of former TV channels in the UK or :Category:Defunct television channels in the United Kingdom.

Commentary

The rise of television in the UK

The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) was established in 1927 to develop radio broadcasting, and inevitably became involved in TV in 1936. The BBC is funded by income from a "Broadcast Receiving Licence" purchased by UK residents. The cost of this is set by agreement with the UK Government.

Television caught on in the United Kingdom in 1947, but its expansion was slow. By 1951, with only two transmitters, near London and Birmingham, only 9% of British homes owned a television set with 1.5 million viewers by 1952.

Commercial television was first broadcast in the United Kingdom in 1955 through Independent Television's London franchise, Associated-Rediffusion. Unlike the US, there was a distinct split between advertisements and programming. Advertisers purely purchased spots within pre-defined breaks within programming, and had no connection to the programme content. The content and nature of adverts was strictly controlled by the Independent Television Authority (ITA), the body controlling commercial television.

By the summer of 1957, Independent Television (ITV) had reached 85% of the country, and the TV audience had grown to 7 million. When all the ITV franchises had launched by 1962, the audience had grown to 12 million.

Up until 1972, television broadcasting hours were tightly regulated by the British government, under the control of the Postmaster General. Before the launch of ITV, the BBC was restricted by law to just five hours maximum of television in a day. This was increased at the launch of the commercial channel ITV to a 7-hour broadcasting day for both channels. Gradually the number of hours were increased. Typically, during the late 1960s, the law regulated a 50-hour broadcasting week for all television channels in the UK. This that meant BBC1, BBC2 and ITV could only broadcast normal programming for 7 hours a day from Mondays to Fridays, and 7.5 hours a day on Saturdays and Sundays.

Until 1957, television in the United Kingdom could not air from 6.00pm to 7.00pm. This was called the "Toddlers' Truce", in which the idea was that parents could put their children to bed before primetime television would commence; this restriction was lifted in 1957. However, on Sundays, television remained off the air from 6.00pm to 7.00pm. This was in response to religious leaders' fears that television would interfere with people attending church services. In 1958, a compromise was reached, in which only religious programming could be aired during this time slot. The restriction was lifted in January 1972.

The Postmaster General allowed exemptions to the regulations. All schools programming, adult education, religious programming, state occasions, political broadcasts and Welsh language programming were totally exempt from the restrictions. Sport and outside broadcasting events were given a separate quota of broadcasting hours which could be used in a year, starting off at 200 hours a year in the mid 1950s, rising to a quota of 350 hours a year by the late 1960s. Broadcasting on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Boxing Day, New Year's Eve and New Year's Day was also exempt from the tightly controlled restrictions.

The election of a Conservative government in June 1970 brought in changes to the control of broadcasting hours. At first, the typical broadcasting day was extended to 8 hours a day, with an increase in exemptions over Christmas, and an increase in the sport/outside broadcasting quota. On 19 January 1972, the then Minister for Posts and Telecommunications, Christopher Chataway, announced to the British House of Commons that all restrictions on broadcasting hours on television would be lifted from that day, with the broadcasters allowed to set their own broadcasting hours from then on. By November 1972, a full daytime schedule had been launched on ITV from 9.30am each day, with the BBC also expanding their schedules to include more daytime programming.

The UK Government previously appointed people to the BBC's Board of Governors, a body responsible for the general direction of the organisation, and appointment of senior executives, but not its day-to-day management. From 2007, the BBC Trust replaced the Board of Governors. It is operationally independent of BBC management and external bodies, and aims to act in the best interests of licence fee payers.

History of satellite television

The first commercial direct-broadcast satellite (DBS, also known as direct-to-home) service in the United Kingdom, Sky Television, was launched in 1989 and used the newly launched Astra satellite at 19.2° east, providing four analogue TV channels. The channels and subsequent VideoCrypt video encryption system used the existing PAL broadcast standard, unlike the winner of the UK state DBS licence, British Satellite Broadcasting (BSB).

In 1990, BSB launched, broadcasting five channels (Now, Galaxy, The Movie Channel, The Power Station and The Sports Channel) in D-MAC format and using the EuroCypher video encryption system which was derived from the General Instruments VideoCipher system used in the USA. One of the main selling points of the BSB offering was the Squarial, a flat plate antenna and low-noise block converter (LNB). Sky's system used conventional and cheaper dish and LNB technology.

The two companies competed over the UK rights to movies. Sky operated from an industrial park in Isleworth in Greater London, whereas BSB had newly built offices in London (Marco Polo House). The two services subsequently merged to form British Sky Broadcasting (BSkyB). BSB's D-MAC/EuroCypher system was gradually replaced with Sky's VideoCrypt video encryption system.

In 1994, 17% of the group was floated on the London Stock Exchange (with ADRs listed on the New York Stock Exchange), and Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation owns a 35% stake.

By 1998, following the launch of several more satellites to Astra's 19.2° east position, the number of channels had increased to around 60 and BSkyB launched the first subscription-based digital television platform in the UK, offering a range of 300 channels broadcast from Astra's new satellite, at 28.2° east position under the brand name Sky Digital. BSkyB's analogue service has now been discontinued, with all customers having been migrated to Sky Digital.

In May 2008, a free-to-air satellite service from the BBC and ITV was launched under the brand name Freesat, carrying a variety of channels from Astra 28.2°E, including some content in HD formats.

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