2001 in Irish television

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The following is a list of events relating to television in Ireland from 2001.

January

  • 1 January – The ITV soaps Coronation Street and Emmerdale move from RTÉ 1 to TV3 following Granada plc's purchase of a stake in the commercial broadcaster.[1][2]
  • 2 January – Long-running Australian soap opera Neighbours begins airing on television in Ireland for the very first time on RTÉ.[3] Prior to airing on RTÉ, there was access to British television stations for viewers in Northern Ireland and several parts of Ireland to see earlier transmissions of the series, including the BBC,[citation needed] where it originally aired since its UK television debut on 27 October 1986.[4]
  • 5 January – Teachta Dála Michael Ring has asked broadcaster TV3 to consider erecting a transmitter near Belmullet, County Mayo, after being inundated with complaints from viewers unable to watch Coronation Street since its move to TV3.[2]
  • January - RTÉ celebrate 75 years of broadcasting.[5]
  • 15 January The ITV Children Programmes Sooty's Amazing Adventures is Going to air on Irish television with Network 2 screening it as part of Den2.

February

March

  • March – RTÉ 1 begins airing BBC One soap EastEnders, the series having previously been shown on TV3.[6]
  • 14 March – New obligations of accountability for RTÉ are introduced under the Broadcasting Act.[5]

May

July

  • 3 July – An increase in the licence fee to £84.50 is announced.[5]

September

  • 11 September – Coverage from the American cable news channel CNN is aired on TV3 News, as events from the United States are broadcast following the September 11 attacks. CNN has often aired on TV3 News since then, when major breaking news stories are taking place, particularly in the United States. Subsequent news footage simulcast from CNN include coverage of the 2008 election of Barack Obama as President of the United States and the 2009 death of Michael Jackson.

October

November

Unknown

Debuts

RTÉ

TV3

TG4

Changes of network affiliation

Ongoing television programmes

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Ending this year

See also

References

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