2005 in British television

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This is a list of British television-related events in 2005.

January

February

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

March

April

May

June

July

  • 1 July – Channel 4 broadcasts the last episode of Countdown to be hosted by Richard Whiteley.[59]
  • 2 July – Broadcast of Live 8, a string of benefit concerts, in the G8 states and South Africa. They are timed to precede the 31st G8 summit being held at the Gleneagles Hotel in Auchterarder, Scotland from 6–8 July; they also coincide with the 20th anniversary of Live Aid.
  • 4 July – The BBC apologises to viewers after a computer malfunction causes its new 3D weather graphics to freeze.[60]
  • 6 July – London wins the bid to host the 2012 Summer Olympics. The announcement of the decision is broadcast live on BBC One and as a newsflash on all other major terrestrial networks.
  • 7 July
    • Regular programming is suspended by major networks to provide ongoing news coverage after a series of co-ordinated terrorist bombings strike London's public transport system during the morning rush hour.[61] BBC One makes a news report before Homes Under the Hammer at 10am, only to interrupt it twenty-one minutes later to simulcast BBC News 24, when the gravity of the incident becomes clearer. ITV1 breaks during the commercial break of The Jeremy Kyle Show (only in its fourth day on air) to simulcast the ITV News Channel news coverage at 10.12am, while Five airs a breaking news ticker during The Wright Stuff, later interrupting the programme at 10.48am to broadcast Sky News. ITV1 then airs the ITV Lunchtime News (without opening credits) with Mark Austin and Andrea Catherwood in its usal time slot, with Five switching by then to blanket news coverage, presented by Kate Sanderson. BBC One's One O'Clock News is extended to fifty-five minutes, with Huw Edwards presenting the newscast from the Westminster studio, joined by Darren Jordon for five minutes at BBC Television Centre. By 1.05pm, Sky 1 airs Sky News, with BBC One airing a five-minute regional news magazine at 1.55pm. Normal programming resumes on Five at 2.03pm with the film The Spoilers. At the same time, MTV, VH1, TMF, VH2 and VH1 Classic suspends all scheduled programming and are showing continuous music videos, with local channels Channel M and Solent TV doing the same thing, this time showing a simulcast of EuroNews and Sky News respectively. BBC One and ITV's children programming then moves to their secondary channels, with CBBC (alongside the Neighbours afternoon broadcast) airing on BBC Two and ITV2 broadcasting CITV. ITV1 resumes its regular schedule at 7pm, with Emmerdale, followed by local newscasts (airing one and a half hour later than planned) and The Bill, before airing Target London: An ITV News Special, a two-hour news special from 9 to 11pm, presented by Trevor McDonald, with Britain's Biggest Brood following until midnight, when normal programming resumes with a rerun of the American series Providence. BBC One suspends blanket news coverage to air EastEnders at 7.30pm, but airs a Newsnight special at 8pm, with Jeremy Paxman presenting. The documentary series Elephant Diaries follows at 8.30pm, one and a half hour later than scheduled, with Huw Edwards making a ten-minute newsflash at 9pm, with a repeat of a 2000 Ground Force about Nelson Mandela airing instead of what was supposed to be the last programme of the series, which was scheduled to air at 8pm, displaced by the aformentioned Newsnight special. BBC One's last programme change was at 12.25am: the BBC News 24 simulcast (originally due to air on BBC Two until 2am) replaces both the film Fast Company (who moves to BBC Two) and the Sign Zone programme block. Finally, a news special airs at 10.50pm on Channel 4, presented by Jon Snow. Among the programmes to be pulled from the day's schedule, are the lunchtime showing of Neighbours, Cash in the Attic and Diagnosis: Murder on BBC One, This Morning and Heartbeat on ITV1, and lunchtime repeats of Family Affairs and Home and Away, alongside BrainTeaser on Five. On 12 September, the BBC defends its decision to await corroboration before giving details of the event, but on 26 September Ofcom censures the BBC and other broadcasters for insensitive use of pictures.
    • BBC One airs an edition of Question Time from Johannesburg, South Africa as world leaders convene for the 31st G8 summit in Scotland, and following the Live 8 concerts.[30]
  • 8 July – The Animals of Farthing Wood airs on CBBC for the very last time but continues to air on RTÉ2 in Ireland.
  • 12 July – BBC One airs the 250th episode of Holby City.[62]
  • 17 July – After forty-one years broadcasting on BBC One, music show Top of the Pops is switched to BBC Two due to declining audiences.[63] This is not enough to save it, and it is axed the following year.[64]
  • 19 July – Jessie Wallace confirms she will leave EastEnders at the end of the year, having played Kat Slater since 2000.[65]

August

  • 1 August – BBC Broadcast, formerly Broadcasting & Presentation and responsible for the playout and branding of all BBC Channels, is sold to Creative Broadcast Services, owned by the Macquarie Capital Alliance Group and Macquarie Bank. It is renamed Red Bee Media on 31 October.
  • 2 August – Five announces its soap, Family Affairs will be axed at the end of the year.[66]
  • 4 August – BBC One airs Sinatra: Dark Star, a documentary investigating rumours of Frank Sinatra's links to organised crime.[67]
  • 10 August – Lost premieres on Channel 4, garnering an audience of 6 million viewers, overtaking ER as the highest rated debut for a US series in the channel's history.[68]
  • 12 August – Anthony Hutton wins series six of Big Brother.[69]
  • 17 August – ITV announces plans to launch a children's channel to rival CBBC.[70]
  • 22 August – Peppa Pig makes its debut in the United States, on Cartoon Network's Tickle U programming block, re-dubbed with American voice actors. This turns out to be a flop, so Nick Jr airs the original British version.

September

  • 3 September – After several revamps and presenting changes, BBC One airs the final edition of its children's entertainment series The Saturday Show.[71]
  • 5 September – Pitt & Kantrop debuts on BBC1
  • 7 September –
  • 8 September – Faze TV, a British digital channel aimed at gay men, cancels its launch after failing to secure sufficient funding to deliver "sufficient quality."[74]
  • 11 September – BBC One launches Sunday AM, a Sunday morning current affairs programme presented by Andrew Marr.[75]
  • 12 September – In an interview with The Guardian, the BBC Director of News and Current Affairs Helen Boaden defends the broadcaster's decision to stick with initial reports of a power surge on the London Underground on the morning of 7 July until actual events could be corroborated, saying it was the right thing to do. "Some of our competitors talked immediately of 90 dead. They talked about three bus bombs. That was off a range of various wire services and it was complete speculation and we wouldn't go with that. We would be careful – we would try to check things out."[76]
  • 14 September – Supernanny UK airs the episode in which Sue and Paul Young and their sons Nathaniel, Caleb, Benjamin, Jacob and Joel's horrific behaviour has led to corporal punishment. With so many children to deal with, the house has become a case of mob rule as the elder boys spit, fight and destroy things. Desperate to regain control, Sue and Paul have resorted, unsuccessfully, to physical punishment, including smacking their boys with slippers and wooden spoons.
  • 17 September – Ant & Dec's Gameshow Marathon debuts on ITV1, as part of ITV's 50th anniversary celebrations. The seven week series features celebrity contestants taking part in one-off revivals of seven of ITV's classic gameshows – The Price is Right, Take Your Pick, The Golden Shot, Sale of the Century, Play Your Cards Right, Bullseye and Family Fortunes – to raise money for their chosen charities and win prizes for viewers at home. The series is a success and leads to revived series of both The Price is Right and Family Fortunes airing on ITV1 the following year whilst Bullseye is also revived by Challenge.
  • 19 September – The most famous children's classic television character Muffin the Mule (who disappeared from TV screens in the mid-1950s) is back with a brand new 2D animated series on BBC Two.
  • 20 September
    • After seven and a half years, Emmerdale sees a new sequence to the opening titles of the series, with the same 1998 theme music alongside another helicopter montage, this time marginally slower and without the actors and the closing credits are generic ITV Network style credits over a continuous shot of the village, again from a helicopter, but filmed from a different angle.
    • BBC One airs Derailed, a docudrama dealing with the 1999 Ladbroke Grove rail crash.[77]
  • 22 September – ITV airs a second live episode of The Bill to mark the broadcaster's 50th year on air.
  • 23 September – It is announced that Des Lynam will succeed Richard Whiteley as presenter of Channel 4's Countdown, with his first episode airing on 31 October.[78]
  • 25 September
  • 26 September – The BBC is censured by Ofcom for its coverage of the London bombings on 7 July. Of particular concern to them was an incident in which footage of a man being carried by stretcher into the Royal London Hospital was shown as a BBC News 24 presenter commentated "Let's just take a look at some of the pictures coming from the Royal London." Ofcom concludes that "the pictures were used generically and the commentary did not reflect the seriousness of the images being transmitted". Channel 4 News is also criticised for not "fully reflecting the enormity of the images being reflected", although it had not breached the Ofcom regulations as the images were not used casually. ITV News is not criticised, however, because it provided a "clear narrative context [with] sensitive accompanying reporting".[79]
  • 26–27 September – No Direction Home, Martin Scorsese's documentary on Bob Dylan, receives its broadcast premiere on BBC Two in the UK, under the Arena banner.[80][81]
  • 30 September – CBBC identity relaunched, with its second marketing campaign since the launch of the CBBC Channel.
  • September – ITV celebrates its 50th anniversary with a collection of special programmes, under the name ITV 50.

October

  • 3 October
  • 5 October – The 6am CBeebies programming block on BBC Two ends and is replaced by an hour of Pages from Ceefax.
  • 8 October – BBC One airs the 500th episode of Casualty.[83]
  • 10 October – More4, a digital channel from Channel 4 offering factual content, launches.[84]
  • 24 October – Sky News moves to new studios, with a new schedule and on-air look.[85]
  • 25 October – The relaunched Doctor Who is the major winner at the annual National Television Awards in the UK, taking the Most Popular Drama award, with its stars Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper winning Most Popular Actor and Most Popular actress.
  • 27 October–16 December – Bleak House, a 15-episode adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel of the same name designed to capture a soap opera-style audience by using Dickens's original serial structure in half-hour episodes is broadcast on BBC One.
  • 28 October – Sheffield-based rock band Arctic Monkeys make their first appearance on BBC Two's Later...with Jools Holland.[86]
  • 29 October – The snooker series Pot Black is revived for the third time but rather than a regular series of one frame matches, It is shown as part of that day's Grandstand with all matches taking place on the day, While most of the matches up to the semi-finals were shown in highlights, the final was shown live. This format would remain for another two years.
  • 31 October

November

December

Debuts

BBC One

BBC Two

BBC Three

BBC Four

CBeebies

ITV (1/2/3/4)

Channel 4

More4

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

Five

Cartoon Network UK

Boomerang UK

Disney Channel UK

Playhouse Disney UK

Nickelodeon UK

Nicktoons UK

Jetix UK

Channels

New channels/streaming services

Date Channel
23 February UKTV Style Gardens
30 March Geo TV UK
10 October More4
31 October Sky Three
1 November ITV4
15 December YouTube

Defunct channels

Date Channel
23 December ITV News Channel

Rebranded channels

Date Old name New name
31 October Sky Mix Sky Two

Television shows

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

Changes of network affiliation

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

Returning this year after a break of one year or longer

Continuing television shows

1930s

  • BBC Wimbledon (1937–1939, 1946–2019, 2021–present)
  • Trooping the Colour (1937–1939, 1946–2019, 2023–present)
  • The Boat Race (1938–1939, 1946–2019, 2021–present)

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Ending this year

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

Births

DateNameCinematic Credibility
25 February Noah Jupe British actor
15 March Ellie Dadd British actress (EastEnders)

Deaths

DateNameAgeKnown for
2 January Cyril Fletcher 91 British comedian (That's Life!)
5 January Gabrielle Daye 93 Actress (Bless Me Father, Coronation Street)
18 January Gabrielle Brune 92 Actress
22 January Patsy Rowlands 74 Actress (Bless This House, Hallelujah!)
9 February Sergei Hackel 83 Russian Orthodox priest and broadcaster of BBC religious programmes
Kate Peyton[19] 39 BBC journalist and producer
11 February Stan Richards 74 Actor (Seth Armstrong in Emmerdale)
13 February Harry Baird 73 Actor (Danger Man, UFO)
6 March Tommy Vance 64 Television presenter (Top of the Pops)
9 March Sheila Gish 62 Actress (The First Churchills, Jewels, The Brighton Belles)
10 March Dave Allen 68 Irish comedian, host of solo shows on BBC1 and ITV.
23 March David Kossoff 85 Actor (The Larkins)
28 March Dave Freeman 82 Television comedy scriptwriter
2 April Betty Bolton 99 Actress
11 April John Bennett 76 Actor (Doctor Who, Porridge, The Avengers, Bergerac)
15 April Margaretta Scott 93 Actress (All Creatures Great and Small)
21 April Jimmy Thompson 79 Actor (Pinky and Perky, The Benny Hill Show, George and Mildred)
22 April Norman Bird 80 Actor (Worzel Gummidge, Fawlty Towers, Ever Decreasing Circles, Yes Minister)
3 May David Batchelor 63 Television sound mixer
14 May Mary Treadgold 95 Television producer
1 June Geoffrey Toone 94 Actor (Doctor Who)
3 June Michael Billington 63 Actor (UFO)
13 June Jonathan Adams 74 Actor (The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Yes Minister)
16 June Alex McAvoy 77 Actor (The Vital Spark, The Bill, Dad's Army, Z-Cars)
26 June Richard Whiteley 61 Presenter, host of Countdown.
30 June Christopher Fry 97 Television scriptwriter
30 June Ian Stirling 64 Television continuity announcer and actor
4 July Bryan Coleman 94 Actor (Upstairs, Downstairs)
11 July Gretchen Franklin[120] 94 Actress (Ethel Skinner in EastEnders)
20 July David Tomblin 74 Television director and producer
25 July David Jackson 71 Actor (Blake's 7, Z-Cars)
9 August Kay Tremblay 91 Actress (Road to Avonlea)
11 August James Booth 77 Actor
22 August Elizabeth Knight 60 Actress (It's Awfully Bad for Your Eyes, Darling)
25 August Terence Morgan 83 Actor (Sir Francis Drake)
31 August Michael Sheard[121] 67 Actor (Mr Bronson in Grange Hill)
12 September Ronald Leigh-Hunt 84 Actor (Danger Man, Doctor Who, Freewheelers)
23 September Roger Brierley 70 Actor (Jeeves and Wooster, Ripping Yarns, Only Fools and Horses)
3 October Ronnie Barker 76 Actor and comedian (The Two Ronnies, Porridge, The Frost Report)
16 October Ursula Howells 83 Actress (Dixon of Dock Green, The Forsyte Saga, Bergerac, Casualty)
17 October Leslie Duxbury 79 Television producer (Coronation Street)
20 October Michael Gill 81 Television producer and director
25 October Barbara Keogh 76 Actress (EastEnders)
31 October Mary Wimbush 81 Actress (Poldark, Jeeves and Wooster, Century Falls)
7 November Harry Thompson 45 Television producer and scriptwriter
Steve Whatley 46 Television presenter
19 November John Timpson 77 Journalist and television presenter (Newsroom)
2 December Leonard Lewis 78 Television director and producer

See also

References

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