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<sup>1</sup> Children's Programming will air on 4Kids Channel coming soon.{{citation needed|date=April 2012}} <sup>1</sup> Children's Programming will air on 4Kids Channel coming soon.{{citation needed|date=April 2012}}
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=== Upcoming programming ===

Some children's programmes aired on the 4 Junior block include:
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Channel 4, in common with the other main British stations broadcast on analogue, airs a range of programming. It was established in 1982 with a specific intention of providing programming to groups of minority interests, not catered for by its competitors, which at the time were only the BBC and ITV.

Channel 4 was one of the first "publisher-broadcaster" stations in the world. All of its programming is produced by other companies; it exists only to fund, broadcast and distribute its programmes — a stipulation which is included in its licence to broadcast. It was also one of the first broadcasters to put its name on the introduction or end credits of programmes that it did not produce, a practice that is now widespread.

Animation

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The channel has established a tradition of broadcasting the animated film of Briggs's picture book The Snowman, which in 1982 was the new channel's first major animated commission, every Christmas. The Channel also commissioned early work by Nick Park and Aardman Animation. Other notable animations include:

And imported animations:

Breakfast

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Channel 4's first dedicated breakfast show was The Channel Four Daily, launched in 1989. In September 1992 it was replaced with The Big Breakfast, then RI:SE in 2002. Since the end of RI:SE in 2003, Channel 4 hasn't had a dedicated programme, it currently broadcasts music video shows and repeats of sitcoms in the breakfast timeslot.

Children

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Children's programmes had been featured as part of the weekend segment Early Morning since Channel 4 began broadcasting at breakfast time in April 1989. A children's magazine-style series called Early Bird was launched,, and broadcast on Saturday mornings. In September 1992, Early Bird was dropped to make way for a Saturday morning spin-off of The Big Breakfast.

Children's programming

Some children's programmes aired on the 4 Junior block include:

Children's Programming will air on 4Kids Channel coming soon.

Upcoming programming

Some children's programmes aired on the 4 Junior block include:

Children's programming will air on 4Kids Channel coming soon.

T4

Main article: T4 (Channel 4)

T4 is a separately identified strand carried on Channel 4 and (as of 2012) E4. It consists of programming in the mornings seven days a week for an age range of around 16–25.

Some programmes include:

Comedy

During the station's early days screenings of innovative short one-off comedy films produced by a rotating line-up of alternative comedians went under the title of The Comic Strip Presents. The Tube and Friday Night Live also launched the careers of a number of comedians and writers. Channel 4 broadcast a number of popular American imports including: Roseanne, Friends, Sex and the City, South Park and Will & Grace. Other significant US acquisitions include The Simpsons, for which the station was reported to have paid £700,000 per episode for the terrestrial television rights.

In April 2010, Channel 4 became the first UK broadcaster to adapt the American comedy institution of roasting to British television, with A Comedy Roast.

Other notable comedies include:

2010 Comedy gala

In 2010, Channel 4 organised Channel 4's Comedy Gala, a stand-up comedy benefit show in aid of Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital. With over 25 comedians appearing, it billed it as "the biggest live stand up show in United Kingdom history". Filmed live on 30 March in front of 14,000 at The O2 Arena in London, it was broadcast on 5 April.

Factual and current affairs

Channel 4 also has a strong reputation for history programmes and real-life documentaries. It has also courted controversy, for example by broadcasting live the first public autopsy to be carried out in the UK for 170 years, carried out by Gunther von Hagens in 2002, or the 2003 one-off stunt Derren Brown Plays Russian Roulette Live.

Its critically acclaimed news service, Channel 4 News, is supplied by ITN whilst its long-standing investigative documentary, Dispatches, causes perennial media attention.

Other notable factual programmes include:

Documetaries

In 2002 it broadcast live the first public autopsy to be carried out in the UK for 170 years, which was carried out by Gunther von Hagens. In 2003 it broadcase the one-off stunt Derren Brown Plays Russian Roulette Live.

News

The Channel 4 News is supplied by ITN.

Food

Channel 4 has broadcast a number of Jamie Oliver's documentaries, such as Jamie's Kitchen, Jamie's School Dinners and Jamie's Great Escape.

Other food related programmes include:

Observational / Documentary

Observational and Documentary carried by Channel 4 over the years include:

FourDocs

FourDocs is an online documentary site provided by Channel 4. It allows viewers to upload their own documentaries to the site for other people to view. It focuses on documentaries of between 3 and 5 minutes. The website also includes an archive of classic documentaries, interviews with documentary film makers and short educational guides to documentary-making. The also includes a strand for documentaries of under 59 seconds called 'Microdocs'.

Entertainment

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Channel 4 pioneered the concept of 'after the pub' television, with series such as Who Dares Wins, Tonight with Jonathan Ross, Friday Night Live and The Word broadcast in the 10–11pm slot. Channel 4 is also noted for the screening of Big Brother.

Other reality-TV shows on Channel 4 include Three in a Bed/Four in a Bed, the bed and breakfast exchange show.

In October 2005, Channel 4 began broadcasting the UK version of the Deal or No Deal game show. Despite being broadcast at non-peak timeslots, on some occasions this show has been the most-watched show on Channel 4.

Countdown was Channel 4's first broadcast programme.

Light Entertainment

Drama

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On 4 November 2003, Channel 4 screened its final episode of Brookside, a soap opera which had run for the 21 years since the channel started. Channel 4 currently runs a soap opera called Hollyoaks, which sharing the same creator as Brookside, aims at a younger audience. An imported French soap, Chateauvallon was shown on the station for a time, dubbed into English.

American drama is a key part of Channel 4's broadcasting, initially with NYPD Blue and ER. These were followed by Without a Trace, The Sopranos, The West Wing and Six Feet Under.

Popular US teen series Dawson's Creek began airing on channel 4 in 1998, drawing large audiences to its prime time slot in the six years it was broadcast.

In August 2005, Channel 4 started showing the US TV show Lost after a lengthy advertising campaign that included a 60-second commercial which cost over £1 million, becoming the most expensive advertisement produced in the UK. the pilot episode was watched by over 6 million viewers, placing it second in the overall ratings for the channel for that year. However, BSkyB acquired the rights to the third and fourth seasons of Lost.

Also in 2008, after a lengthy bidding war with Channel 5, ITV2 and Living, Channel 4 acquired the rights to the updated version of 90210. In the same year, it started airing True Blood after its global success, having originally aired on FX in the United Kingdom.

In 2013, Channel 4 obtained the rights to screen The Returned, a French drama that was broadcast with English subtitling from June 9, 2013. June 9, 2013, also saw Channel 4 broadcast the United Kingdom's first ever French language advertisements, which aired to celebrate the premiere of The Returned.

Other notable dramas include:

Schools Programming

Channel 4 is obliged to carry schools programming as part of its remit and licence.

ITV Schools on Channel 4

Main article: ITV Schools On Channel 4

Since 1957 ITV had produced schools programming which became an obligation. In 1987, five years after the station was launched, the IBA afforded ITV free carriage of these programmes during Channel 4's, then unused, weekday morning hours. This arrangement allowed the ITV companies to fulfil their obligation to provide schools programming, whilst allowing ITV itself to broadcast regular programs complete with advertisements. During the times in which schools programmes were aired, Channel 4 was effectively operated by ITV, with Central Television providing most of the continuity, and play-out originating from Birmingham.

Channel 4 Schools / 4Learning

After the re-structuring of the station in 1993, ITV's obligations to provide such programming on Channel 4's airtime passed to Channel 4 itself, and the new service became Channel 4 Schools, with the new corporation administering the service and commissioning its programmes, some still from ITV, others from independent producers.

In 2000, the service was renamed 4Learning, and in April 2007, the commercial arm and rights exploitation of its programmes and support materials was sold to Espresso Education and the business renamed Channel 4 Learning. Today, the service has diversified into pre-school and adult programmes, with much of its content also available in text and video form via the Internet, or through DVD sales. Its programming runs to around 400 hours per annum. One of its well known programmes is The Hoobs.

In March 2008, the 4Leaning interactive new media commission slabovia.tv was launched. The Slabplayer online media player showing TV shows for teenagers was launched on 26 May 2008.

See also: Channel 4 Learning site.

The schools programming has always had elements different to its normal presentational package. In 1993, the Channel 4 Schools idents featured famous people in one category, with light shining on them in from of an industrial looking setting supplemented by instrumental calming music. This changed in 1996 with the circles look to numerous children touching the screen, forming circles of information then picked up by other children. The last child would produce the channel 4 logo in the form of three vertical circles, with another in the middle and to the left containing the Channel 4 logo.

A present feature of presentation was a countdown sequence featuring, in 1993 a slide with the programme name, and afterwards an extended sequence matching the channel branding. In 1996, this was an extended ident with timer in top left corner, and in 1999 following the adoption of the squares look, featured a square with timer slowly make its way across the right of the screen with people learning and having fun while doing so passing across the screen. It finished with the Channel 4 logo box on the right of the screen and the name 'Channel 4 Schools' being shown. This was adapted in 2000 when the services name was changed to '4Learning'. In 2001, this was altered to various scenes from classrooms around the world and different parts of school life. The countdown now flips over from the top, right, bottom and left with each second, and ends with four coloured squares, three of which are aligned vertically to the left of the Channel 4 logo, with is contained inside the fourth box. The tag 'Learning' is located directly beneath the logo. The final countdown sequence lasted between 2004 and 2005 and featured a background video of current controversial issues, overlaid with upcoming programming information. the video features people in the style of graffiti enacting the overuse of CCTV cameras, fox hunting, computer viruses and pirate videos, relationships, pollution of the seas and violent lifestyles. Following 2005, no branded section has been used for school programmes.

Film

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Numerous genres of film-making - such as drama, comedy, documentary, adventure/action, romance and horror/thriller - are represented in the channel's schedule. From the launch of Channel 4 until 1998, film presentations on C4 would often be broadcast under the "Film On Four" banner.In March 2005, Channel 4 screened uncut Lars von Trier film The Idiots that includes unsimulated sexual intercourse, making it the first UK terrestrial channel to do so. The Channel had screened before other films with similar material but censored and with warnings. The broadcast after midnight only raised one complaint and has been taken as an indication of how far audience values have changed since the Channel began.

Since 1 November 1998, Channel 4 has had a digital subsidiary channel dedicated to the screening of films. This channel launched as a paid subscription channel under the name FilmFour, and was relaunched in July 2006 as a free-to-air channel under the current name of Film4. The Film4 channel carries a wide range of film productions, including acquired and Film4-produced projects. Channel 4's general entertainment channels E4 and More4 also screen feature films at certain points in the schedule as part of their content mix.

Music

Some Music programmes and strands include:

Channel 4 also operates a music and entertainment digital channel, 4Music, as part of its Box Television subsidiary.

Sports

Current Sporting events on Channel 4; (Most shown overnight and in early morning - Only horseracing and Paralympics shown in peak time)

  • 2012 Summer Paralympics - Channel 4 took over form the BBC as broadcaster of the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, with 150 hours of television coverage. Channel 4 will also show the 2016 Summer Paralympics as well as some coverage of the 2014 Winter Paralympics.
  • That Paralympic Show - Saturday afternoon magazine show about Paralympic Sports with Rick Edwards and Ade Adepitan
  • American Football - the channel covered both the NFL from 1982 until 1998, and the World League of American Football in its inaugural 1991 season. Hosts included The Vicious Boys, former NFL player Mick Luckhurst and Gary Imlach. Channel 4 is widely considered to have pioneered the sport to the wider UK public. Channel 4 regained coverage of the NFL showing Sunday Night Football from 2010–present after it was dropped by Five. NFL on Channel 4 is currently hosted by Danny Kelly and analysed by Mike Carlson.
  • Channel 4 Racing - (Live on Saturday Afternoons and big meetings during the week) 1984–present
  • The Morning Line - Live on Saturday Mornings
  • UK Indoor Athletics
  • Freesports on 4 (Extreme sports magazine show) on Weekend Mornings
  • KOTV Boxing Weekly - Shown through the night and is a Boxing Magazine show
  • Beach Volleyball
  • GT on 4
  • World Cup Skiing
  • World Cup Snowboard
  • World Superbike Highlights

Former Sporting Events on Channel 4

  • Football Italia with James Richardson 1992-2002. Coverage consisted of a weekly game shown live on Sunday afternoons and a Saturday morning highlights and magazine show. (Moved to Eurosport from 2002-2007, on Channel 5 from 2007-2008 and now on ESPN UK)
  • Live Home Test Match Cricket and Highlights of Home One-Day Internationals plus Semi-Finals and Final of C&G Trophy 1999-2005 (Now on Sky Sports with highlights on Channel 5)
  • The Cricket Roadshow/Cricket Show 1999-2005
  • Red Bull Air Race 2005-2006 (Moved to Channel 5 in 2007) 2008-2009 (Moved to ITV4 in 2010 but series now cancelled)
  • French Football (Moved to Channel 5 but not shown anymore on UK TV)
  • FT on 4
  • Channel 4 Tennis - 1990, 2010
  • Sumo Wrestling - 1990, 2005
  • Tour de France - Until 2001, now on ITV4
  • Transworld Sport Until 2009 (Now on Sky Sports)
  • World Wrestling Entertainment Heat (import) - 2000-2001 (Moved to Sky Sports but now finished)
  • World Athletics Championships - 1983 and 1987 (in conjunction with ITV Sport) and 2011 (Live coverage and Highlights). Channel 4 had planned to show the 2013 event but later sold the rights to BBC Sport
  • IAAF Indoor Athetics Championships - 2012
  • Olympic Games - 1988 (in conjunction with ITV, Channel 4 showed the overnight and morning coverage with ITV broadcasting coverage during the day)
  • *UK Athletics major events - 1997 and 1998. During the 1980s and early 1990s Channel 4 shared UK and European meetings coverage with ITV, showing the second hour (9pm to 10pm) of evening meetings - ITV had shown the first hour.

Other programmes

Some programmes not mentioned above include:

Channel 4 Presents... 3-D Week

From November 16, 2009 for one week only showing programmes such as...

The glasses are classic amber/blue colour and featured a chequered theme, the glasses were available at Sainsburys in the UK, Channel 4 also asked for viewers to create a film and then use software to make it 3D and will be shown online. However there was a massive demand for 3D specs and they were not met and Channel 4 received a number of complaints that viewers could not enjoy 3D quality as the colours were amber/blue unlike the red/blue glasses received in DVD releases of 3D movies.

Controversies

Channel 4 and its associated channels do not cut programmes or movies for commercial timing purposes, however some imported shows have been known to be edited. Channel 4's broadcasts of animated comedy The Simpsons are heavily edited in comparison to those on rival channel Sky1.

Wank Week

Main article: Wank Week
Masturbate-a-thon logo

A season of television programmes about masturbation, called Wank Week, was to be broadcast in the United Kingdom by Channel 4 in March 2007. The first show was about a Masturbate-a-thon, a public mass masturbation event, organised to raise money for the sexual health charity Marie Stopes International. Another film would have focused on compulsive male masturbators and a third was to feature the sex educator Dr Betty Dodson.

The series came under public attack from senior television figures, and was pulled amid claims of declining editorial standards and controversy over the channel's public service broadcasting credentials. However, the films it was meant to showcase may yet be broadcast by the channel at a later date.

Global Warming

On March 8, 2007 Channel 4 screened the highly controversial documentary The Great Global Warming Swindle. The programme states that global warming is "a lie" and "the biggest scam of modern times". The programme's accuracy has been disputed on multiple points and several commentators have criticised it for being one-sided, noting that the mainstream position on global warming is supported by the scientific academies of the major industrialized nations There were 246 complaints to Ofcom as of April 25, 2007, including the complaints that the programme falsified data. The programme has been criticised by scientists and scientific organizations and various scientists which participated in the documentary claimed their views had been distorted.

Against Nature: An earlier controversial Channel 4 programme made by Martin Durkin which was also critical of the environmental movement and was charged by the Independent Television Commission of the UK for misrepresenting and distorting the views of interviewees by selective editing.

The Greenhouse Conspiracy: An earlier Channel 4 documentary broadcast on 12 August 1990, as part of the Equinox series, in which similar claims were made. Three of the people interviewed (Lindzen, Michaels and Spencer) were also interviewed in The Great Global Warming Swindle.

Ahmadinejad's Christmas speech

In the Christmas address of 2008, a Channel 4 tradition since 1993, Mr Ahmadinejad made a thinly veiled attack on the United States by claiming that Christ would have been against “bullying, ill-tempered and expansionist powers”.

A spokeswoman for the FCO said: “President Ahmadinejad has, during his time in office, made a series of appalling anti-Semitic statements. The British media are rightly free to make their own editorial choices, but this invitation will cause offence and bemusement not just at home but among friendly countries abroad.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article5397462.ece(subscription required)

Notable Failures

Channel 4 has for a long time struggled in the breakfast slot. In 1989 the Channel launched a breakfast television slot produced by Mentorn Films, called The Channel Four Daily. In 1992 this was replaced by The Big Breakfast, which briefly outrated the ITV breakfast broadcast, GMTV, after the closure of TV-am. The Big Breakfast was axed in March 2002. It was replaced by RI:SE, which rated poorly. With the demise of RI:SE, Channel 4 withdrew from original programming in the breakfast TV slot. Now T4 runs the early morning slots on weekdays showing repeats of popular shows such as Friends, Everybody Loves Raymond and Just Shoot Me. (This was temporarily interrupted in early 2006 with the show Morning Glory, designed to keep the audience following the early morning transmission of Big Brother's Little Breakfast).

4Talent

4Talent is an editorial branch of Channel 4's commissioning wing, which co-ordinates Channel 4's various talent development schemes for film, television, radio, new media and other platforms and provides a showcasing platform for new talent.

There are bases in London, Birmingham, Glasgow and Belfast, serving editorial hubs known respectively as 4Talent National, 4Talent Central England, 4Talent Scotland and 4Talent Northern Ireland. These four sites include features, profiles and interviews in text, audio and video formats, divided into five zones: TV, Film, Radio, New Media and Extras, which covers other arts such as theatre, music and design. 4Talent also collates networking, showcasing and professional development opportunities, and runs workshops, masterclasses, seminars and showcasing events across the UK.

4Talent has an active presence on social networking site Facebook.

See also 4Talent.

4Talent Magazine

4Talent magazine is the creative industries magazine from 4Talent, which launched in 2005 (originally titled TEN4 magazine) under the editorship of Dan Jones. 4Talent Magazine is currently edited by Nick Carson. Other staff include deputy editor Catherine Bray and production editor Helen Byrne. The magazine covers rising and established figures of interest in the creative industries, a remit including film, radio, TV, comedy, music, new media and design.

Subjects are usually UK-based, with contributing editors based in Northern Ireland, Scotland, London and Birmingham, but the publication has been known to source international content from Australia, America, continental Europe and the Middle East. The magazine is frequently organised around a theme for the issue, for instance giving half of November 2007's pages over to profiling winners of the annual 4Talent Awards.

An unusual feature of the magazine's credits is the equal prominence given to the names of writers, photographers, designers and illustrators, contradicting standard industry practice of more prominent writer bylines. It is also recognisable for its 'wraparound' covers, which use the front and back as a continuous canvas - often produced by guest artists.

Although 4Talent Magazine is technically a newsstand title, a significant proportion of its readers are subscribers. It started life as a quarterly 100-page title, but has since doubled in size and is now published bi-annually.

See also

References

  1. Russ J Graham (2005-09-11). "Yes it's no". seefour by Electromusications from Transdiffusion. Retrieved 2007-03-23. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ "Channel 4 Broadcasting Licence" (PDF). Ofcom. 2006-10-04. pp. Appendix 2, part 10 (Page 13).
  3. Armstrong, Stephen (5 April 2010). "Channel 4 launches comedy roast shows". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 8 April 2010.
  4. "A Comedy Roast - Series & Episodes". www.channel4.com/programmes/a-comedy-roast/episode-guide. Channel 4. undated. Retrieved 8 April 2010. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. "Comedy Royalty unite for Channel 4's Comedy Gala". www.channel4sales.com/news. Channel 4. 11 February 2010. Retrieved 30 March 2010.
  6. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a466789/channel-4-to-air-french-horror-drama-rebound.html
  7. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a486085/channel-4-to-broadcast-first-ever-ad-break-in-french.html
  8. "schoolsTV.com - ITV for SCHOOLS & COLLEGES - HISTORY". Archived from schoolsTV.com the original on 2007-07-06. Retrieved 2008-02-16. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  9. schoolsTV.com History of ITV Schools on Channel 4. Retrieved at the Internet Archive on 16 Feb 2008
  10. "schoolsTV.com - CHANNEL 4 SCHOOLS: 1993-1997 HISTORY". Archived from the original on 2007-07-05. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
  11. Jessica Hodgson (2001-07-30). "ITV pays £5m for Tour de France". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  12. http://www.bikebiz.com/news/20012/Channel-4-drop-Tour-de-France
  13. Houghton, John. "The Great Global Warming Swindle". The John Ray Initiative. Retrieved 2007-03-12. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  14. Adam, David (2007-04-25). "'Move to block emissions 'swindle' DVD". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2007-04-25.
  15. Connor, Steve (2007-05-08). "C4 accused of falsifying data in documentary on climate change - Independent Online Edition > Media". The Independent. London. Retrieved 2007-05-20.

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