2002 in British television

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

List of years in British television (table)
+...

This is a list of

British television
related events from 2002.

Events

January

February

March

  • 1 March – Martin Kemp makes his last appearance as Steve Owen in EastEnders when he is killed off in a fireball car explosion.
  • 2 March – BBC Knowledge ceases transmission in the early hours (the first BBC channel to permanently close) with BBC Four launching to replace it at 7pm. The opening night is simulcast on BBC Two.[43]
  • 3 March
    • Will Young's debut single tops the charts, having accrued calculated sales of 1,108,269.[44] It remains at the number one position for three weeks, before being replaced on 24 March by Pop Idol runner-up Gareth Gates, with his version of "Unchained Melody".[45]
    • The acclaimed US spy drama 24, starring Kiefer Sutherland as agent Jack Bauer makes its British television debut on BBC Two.[46]
  • 11 March – Somerville College, Oxford wins the 2001–02 series of University Challenge, beating Imperial College London 200–185.
  • 12 March – A report conducted for the Independent Television Commission and Broadcasting Standards Commission indicates that for the first time at least half of television viewers have access to multi channel television, i.e., channels other than the main five terrestrial channels.[47]
  • 13 March – A report by the Independent Television Commission indicates that viewer dissatisfaction with the quality of television stood at 64% in 2001, an 18% rise on the previous year. However, the authors of the report attribute the dramatic increase to the time at which their survey was conducted, shortly after the controversial Channel 4 spoof Brass Eye was broadcast.[48]
  • 15 March – Former
    Gemma Osbourne, will be seen on screen in the Summer.[49]
  • 19 March – The Office of Communications Act 2002 receives Royal Assent, enabling the establishment of Ofcom.[50]
  • 21 March – Theo Paphitis and Neil Doncaster, the respective chairmen of Millwall and Norwich City football clubs, warn of serious financial consequences for their teams if ITV are allowed to renegotiate the £315 million agreement they signed to screen Football League matches.[51]
  • 26 March –
    Rhythm & Movement on 29 March.[52]
  • 27 March – ITV Digital is placed into administration after failing to reach an agreement with the Football League over the £315 million three-year deal to air league matches. The company still owes £180 million which it says it cannot pay after its revenue was not as good as forecasts had predicted. Services will continue while negotiations to resolve the issue continue.[53]
  • 28 March – ITV announces the removal of Night and Day from its weekday teatime slot from 11 April, although late night episodes will continue to air on Thursdays, as well as a Sunday omnibus on ITV2. This is in response to the series attracting a relatively low audience of 1.5 million.[54]
  • 29 March
    • At 2:10am (in Northern Ireland at 2:50am), the last
      'Rhythm & Movement' idents
      , premiere at 9am.
    • Channel 4's The Big Breakfast ends after nine and a half years on the air.[55][56]
  • 30 March – The death of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother is announced at 5:49pm. Most broadcasters abandon regular programming and begin airing tributes to her. Some rescheduling also happens on 31 March, before largely returning to normal on 1 April.[57]
  • March – Mark Thompson succeeds Michael Jackson as Chief Executive of Channel 4.[58]

April

  • 1 April –
    Bobbi Lewis this month, is to have a starring role in Sky One's new airline based drama Mile High, it is reported.[59]
  • 2 April – More than 1,500 viewers have complained to the BBC about its coverage of the Queen Mother's death, it is reported, with the majority of complaints concerning the rescheduling of favourite programmes and the belief that too much airtime was devoted to events surrounding her death. Peter Sissons is criticised by some newspapers, including the Daily Mail, for not wearing a black tie to report the death, and by some viewers for what is perceived to have been an insensitive interview with The Hon. Margaret Rhodes, the Queen Mother's niece.[60]
  • 3 April – GMTV presenter Eamonn Holmes signs a three-year contract to stay with the broadcaster until 2005.[61]
  • 6 April
  • 8 April – The shopping channel Shop! closes down after 4 years on the air.
  • 9 April
    • Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother's funeral is held at Westminster Abbey and aired on all major television channels. The event makes UK television history as the country's largest ever outside broadcast, while proceedings are watched by an average 10 million viewers. Provisional viewing figures released the following day suggest BBC audiences peaked at 7.1 million and ITV at 3.3 million. The BBC coverage is presented by
      Sir Trevor McDonald.[63]
    • Emmerdale confirm the axing of their Soapstars family. Ruth Abram leaves the series immediately, with the other four actors appearing on screen until the Summer.[64]
  • 10 April
    • Producers of The Experiment are forced to reedit parts of the programme ahead of its debut after some participants complain about the way they are shown in the series.[65]
    • BBC Four airs Ian Curteis's The Falklands Play, in which Patricia Hodge plays the role of Margaret Thatcher during the Falklands War.[66][67] The play was originally written in 1986, but shelved by the BBC because of an upcoming general election and the play's perceived pro-Thatcher stance. The play has separate radio and television versions, airing on Radio 4 on 6 April and gives BBC Four an audience of 174,000, the channel's highest audience since its launch a month earlier.[68]
  • 12 April – Tamzin Outhwaite leaves EastEnders as Mel Owen.[69]
  • 17 April – The first Helen Rollason Cancer Care Centre, named for the sports presenter Helen Rollason who died of cancer in 1999 is opened in Chelmsford, Essex.[70]
  • 18 April –
    An episode of The Bill in which six characters are killed off in a petrol bomb attack is watched by 8.6 million viewers, giving the show its largest audience of the year so far.[71]
  • 20 April – The final edition of The Generation Game presented by Jim Davidson is broadcast.[72]
  • 21 April – Blackadder: Back & Forth makes its terrestrial television debut on BBC One.[73] The programme, having been scheduled to air on 31 March, was postponed because of ongoing coverage of the death of the Queen Mother.[60]
  • 22 April
    • Liquid News presenter Christopher Price is found dead at his London home.[74] An inquest later returns a verdict of death by natural causes after hearing he died of heart failure caused by meningoencephalitis, a rare brain infection similar to meningitis.[75]
    • The pay-per-view movie channel ITV Select closes. The channel, a joint venture between ITV Digital and SDN, is taken off air after ITV Digital's administrators withdrew its funding.[76]
  • 25 April – ITV Digital is officially put up for sale by administrators Deloitte & Touche, but the company must be sold in the next few days to avoid liquidation because owners Carlton and Granada have not put forward any extra money to keep it afloat.[77]
  • 26 April – Making her first appearance as a panellist on an edition of Have I Got News for You at the age of 16, singer Charlotte Church becomes the youngest person to appear on the show.[78][79]
  • 27 April – Stewart Duff wins the fourteenth series of Stars in Their Eyes, performing as Elvis Presley.[80]
  • 29 April – The first edition of RI:SE is broadcast as a replacement for The Big Breakfast, exactly a month after it was axed.[81]
  • 30 April – The 900 workers at ITV Digital's Pembrokeshire call centre are told they are likely to be made redundant as the firm's troubles continue.[82]

May

June

  • 3 June – The Golden Jubilee of Elizabeth II. During the Golden Jubilee Weekend, BBC One airs the Party at the Palace, while BBC Parliament reruns footage of the Queen's Coronation from 1953.
  • 6 June
    • BBC Two begins showing The Hunt for Britain's Paedophiles, a three part documentary series following investigations by Scotland Yard's specialist Paedophile Unit.[99] The programme proves to be controversial, even before going on the air, as it is reported that after spending two years shadowing investigators, many members of the production team required counselling to deal with their exposure to the things witnessed by the unit's detectives. Executive producer Bob Long defends the programme, saying he hopes it will lead to better policing of the crime.[100] The series concludes on 20 June.[101]
    • An advert for Microsoft's Xbox console featuring a newborn boy who flies through the air while rapidly aging, before falling into his grave is banned from being shown again by the Independent Television Commission after complaints were received from 135 viewers who found the commercial to be "offensive, shocking and in bad taste".[102]
  • 8 June – ITV airs the first edition of Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, a new live Saturday night entertainment show hosted by Ant & Dec. It airs for a total of nine series until it is put on hiatus in 2009, before returning for a further eleven series from 2013 until 2024.
  • 10 June – ITV introduces a second Monday episode of Coronation Street. It is broadcast at 8:30pm to usher in the return of Bet Lynch.[103] The episode also used intermittently during the popular Richard Hillman storyline but becomes fully scheduled from Monday 25 August 2003.
  • 13 June
    • BBC One airs Episode 4000 of Neighbours.[104]
    • Variety magazine reports that Channel 4 has won the British terrestrial television rights to The Osbournes, paying £100,000 per episode.[105]
  • 14 June – The BBC, ITV and Channel 4 are among the six applicants who have submitted proposals for a licence to run a digital terrestrial television service. Three licences will be awarded, a process expected to happen in July.[106]
  • 17 June – ITV recommissions Crossroads for another year, despite falling audience figures. Yvon Grace is also hired as its executive producer and announces plans to make it a "must-see daytime show".[107]
  • 19 June
    • BBC One airs Tomorrow's World: the Science of Spider-Man, a special edition of Tomorrow's World that looks at the scientific facts behind the Spider-Man film.[108]
    • As England prepare to take on Brazil in the World Cup, BBC One makes an eleventh hour decision to replace the scheduled film, Falling Down, with a repeat of the England v Brazil match from the 1970 World Cup.[109]
  • 23 June – Sky One airs the Star Trek-themed episode of Futurama, featuring guest stars from the main cast of the original series with its special appearance by The Next Generation's Jonathan Frakes.
  • 24 June – Catchphrase returns to ITV1 in a new teatime slot airing five days a week, with former Blue Peter presenter Mark Curry taking over as host from Nick Weir.
  • 25 June – ITV has told the newspapers that Peak Practice is axed after nine years.[110]
  • 29 June – EastEnders actress Kim Medcalf is injured in a motoring accident while on holiday in France, suffering a broken hand, leg and breastbone.[111] She is airlifted back to the UK a few days later.[112] and discharged from hospital on 9 July.[113]

July

August

September

October

November

December

Debuts

BBC One

13 October – Sahara with Michael Palin (2002)

BBC Two

BBC Choice

CBBC Channel

  • 23 February – Yvon of the Yukon (2002–2005)
  • 24 February – UK Top 40 (2002–2005)
  • 31 August –
    Dick and Dom in da Bungalow
    (2002–2006)

ITV (Including ITV1 and ITV2)

Channel 4

Channel 5/Five

  • 3 August – Audrey and Friends (2000; 2002)
  • 5 August – BrainTeaser (2002–2007)
  • 2 September - Make Way for Noddy (2002-2003)
  • 12 September – Menace (2002)
  • 29 September – The Shield (2002–2008)
  • 6 October – Don't Blame the Koalas (2002–2003)
  • 2 November – Beyblade (2001-2003)

Living TV

Sky One

  • 17 January – Scrubs (2001–2008)
  • 23 January – Alias (2001-2006)
  • 26 May – Is Harry on the Boat? (2002–2003)
  • 2 September -
    Power Rangers: Wild Force
    (2002)

Cartoon Network UK

Nickelodeon UK

Nicktoons UK

  • 7 January –
    The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius
    (2002–2011)
  • 12 January –
    Invader ZIM
    (12 January 2002-19 August 2006)
  • 12 January – Yu-Gi-Oh! (2001-2006)
  • 1 September –
    The Fairly OddParents!
    (2001–2017)

Fox Kids UK

  • 4 February - Shinzo (2000-2003)
  • 18 February - Medabots (1999-2000)
  • 22 April -
    Shin Chan
    (1999-)
  • 2 September - Hamtaro (2000)
  • 7 September - Pig City (2002)

Disney Channel UK

Trouble UK

Channels

New channels

Date Channel
11 February CBBC
CBeebies
2 March BBC Four
4 July
Avago
22 July Nicktoons TV
10 October Reality TV
14 October CNX
30 October The Hits
UK History
31 October Solent TV
TMF
5 December NASN
9 December Sky One Mix
13 December E! Europe

Defunct channels

Date Channel
22 January UTV2
2 March BBC Knowledge
8 April Shop!
30 April
Granada Breeze
Tara Television
12 May ITV Sport Channel
30 September Play UK
31 December F1 Digital+

Rebranded channels

Date Old Name New Name
20 May Challenge TV Challenge?
1 July Sky Premier/MovieMax/Cinema Sky Movies Premier/Max/Cinema
16 September Channel 5 Five
30 September ITN News Channel ITV News Channel

Television shows

Changes of network affiliation

Show Moved from Moved to
Dig and Dug
Channel 4
Five
Ky's Boomerang ITV
Boomerang
Blockbusters
Sky1
Challenge
Knightmare
Sci-Fi Channel
You Bet! ITV
Wheel of Fortune
Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies
CBBC
The Fairly OddParents!
Nickelodeon
BBC One
SpongeBob SquarePants ITV
As Told by Ginger

Returning this year after a break of one year or longer

Continuing television shows

1920s

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

1930s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Ending this year

Births

Deaths

Date Name Age Cinematic Credibility
12 January Stanley Unwin 90 comic performer (The Secret Service)
15 January Jeremy Hawk 83 actor and host of Criss Cross Quiz
17 January Peter Adamson[240] 71 actor (Coronation Street)
24 January Stuart Burge 84 television director
29 January Stratford Johns 76 actor (Z-Cars)
Phil McCall actor (Minder)
11 February Barry Foster 74 actor (
Van der Valk
)
21 February John Thaw[241] 60 actor (
Kavanagh Q.C.
)
27 February Spike Milligan[242] 83 comedian
4 March Eric Flynn 62 actor
6 March Donald Wilson 91 television producer and scriptwriter (Doctor Who, The Forsyte Saga)
25 March Kenneth Wolstenholme[243] 81 BBC football commentator and presenter
27 March Dudley Moore[244] 66 comedian and actor (Not Only... But Also)
31 March Barry Took[245] 73 comedian, writer and television presenter
11 April Delphi Lawrence 70 actress (The Saint, Sir Francis Drake)
12 April Howard Pays 74 actor (Sixpenny Corner)
15 April Dave King 72 actor (Coronation Street)
21 April Terry Walsh 62 actor and stuntman
22 April Christopher Price[246] 34 television presenter
25 April Michael Bryant 74 actor (The Stone Tape, The Roads to Freedom)
1 May John Nathan-Turner 54 television producer (Doctor Who)
10 May Austen Kark 75 television director (BBC World Service)
15 May Bryan Pringle 67 actor (The Dustbinmen, Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, Inspector Morse)
17 May Norman Vaughan 79 actor and comedian
18 May Gordon Wharmby 68 actor (Last of the Summer Wine)
25 May Pat Coombs[247] 75 actress (Till Death Us Do Part, EastEnders)
30 May Kenny Craddock 52 theme tune composer (Joking Apart)
26 June Dermot Walsh 77 actor (Richard the Lionheart)
9 July Gerald Campion 81 actor (Billy Bunter of Greyfriars School)
23 July Leo McKern[248] 82 actor (Rumpole of the Bailey)
24 July Maurice Denham 92 actor
26 July Tony Anholt 61 actor (Howards' Way)
28 July Jack Karnehm 85 BBC snooker commentator
29 July Peter Bayliss 80 actor (Please Sir!, The Sweeney, Coronation Street, Lovejoy, The Bill)
3 August Carmen Silvera 80 actress (
Edith Artois in 'Allo 'Allo!
)
7 September Katrin Cartlidge 41 actress (Brookside)
Michael Elphick[249] 55 actor (Boon, EastEnders)
29 September Edmund Trebus[184] 83
compulsive hoarder who featured in the BBC's A Life of Grime
8 October Phyllis Calvert 87 actress (Kate, Crown Court, Tales of the Unexpected, After Henry)
17 October Pattie Coldwell[250] 50 television presenter and journalist
24 October Charmian May 65 actress (The Good Life, Keeping Up Appearances, You're Only Young Twice)
25 October Richard Harris[251] 72 actor (Harry Potter films)
7 November Dilys Hamlett 74 actress
8 November Christopher Parsons 70 television producer (Life on Earth)
27 November Stanley Black 89 theme tune composer
10 December Ian MacNaughton 76 comedy producer-director (Monty Python's Flying Circus)
17 December James Hazeldine[252] 55 actor (London's Burning)
19 December Roger Webb 68 theme tune composer (Strange Report, Hammer House of Horror, The Gentle Touch, Paradise Postponed, George and Mildred)
20 December Joanne Campbell[253] 38 actor

See also

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