Timeline of breakfast television in the United Kingdom

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This is a timeline of the history of breakfast television in the United Kingdom.

  • 1974
    • 30 January – BBC2 shows the first early morning Open University programming, airing between 6:40am and 7:30am.[1]
  • 1975
    • No events.
  • 1976
    • 4 February – Early morning programming from the Open University begins on BBC1, with Electrons in motion airing at 7:05am.[2]
  • 1977
    • 28 March–27 May – Yorkshire Television and Tyne Tees Television carry out a nine-week breakfast television experiment. Airing at 8:30am, YTV's programme is called Good Morning Calendar and Tyne Tees' programme is called Good Morning North. They are credited as being the United Kingdom's first breakfast television programmes, airing six years before the launch of full-time breakfast television.[3][4]
  • 1978
    • No events.
  • 1979
    • No events.

1980s

  • 1983
    • 17 January – At 6:30am, Britain's first-ever breakfast television show, Breakfast Time, launches on BBC1.
    • 1 February – TV-am launches on ITV, with Daybreak and Good Morning Britain.
    • 14 February – Following the launch of Breakfast Time, the Open University (OU) programmes previously shown on BBC1 on weekday mornings move to BBC2, resulting in the weekday early morning OU transmission on BBC2 being extended from 1 hour 15 minutes to 2 hours 5 minutes. BBC1 continues to broadcast early morning OU transmissions at the weekend until September 1992.
    • 28 February
      • TV-am cuts its Daybreak programme to thirty minutes, allowing Good Morning Britain to begin half an hour earlier. Original Daybreak presenters Robert Kee and Angela Rippon are both replaced, with Gavin Scott (Weekdays) and Lynda Barry (weekends).[10][11]
      • BBC1 begins broadcasting a 30-minute Ceefax slot prior to the start of Breakfast Time. It is called Ceefax AM.[12] It is first mentioned in the Radio Times on 21 March.[13]
    • 18 March – Amid falling ratings and mounting pressure from investors, Peter Jay steps aside as TV-am's Chief Executive allowing Jonathan Aitken to take on the role.[14][15][16]
    • 1 April – Roland Rat makes his first appearance on TV-am.[17] Created by David Claridge and launched by TV-am Children's editor Anne Wood to entertain younger viewers during the Easter holidays,[18] Roland is generally regarded as TV-am's saviour, being described as "the only rat to join a sinking ship".[19]
    • 12 April – Timothy Aitken succeeds his cousin Jonathan as chief executive of TV-am due to the IBA rules regarding MPs operating a television station.[20]
    • 19 April – Angela Rippon and Anna Ford are dismissed from TV-am.[21]
    • 29 April – Michael Parkinson is appointed to TV-am's board of directors.[22]
    • 23 May – TV-am's new look starts.[23] Daybreak is axed, with Good Morning Britain now the sole weekday programme, beginning at 6:25am. Commander David Philpott is moved to weekends only, with Wincey Willis becoming the new weekday weather presenter.[24]
  • 1984
    • Bruce Gyngell is appointed as TV-am's chief executive. To make the company financially viable, he introduced cost-cutting measures which were brought sharply into focus in the Brighton hotel bombing. The night before the terrorist attack, TV-am sent the production team home as it could not afford to pay for hotel rooms and TV-am's response was limited to a caption of reporter John Stapleton reporting over the phone.[25] Trade union agreements at the time meant that technical staff at the local ITV station TVS could not provide cover for another commercial television company, and TV-am's previous conflicts with ITN meant that the latter would not share its footage. The IBA told the company to invest and improve its news coverage, or it would lose its licence.
    • 4 August – The BBC airs its first weekend edition of Breakfast Time as part of its coverage of the 1984 Summer Olympic Games. For the duration of the Games, with the exception of news and weather, the programme was entirely devoted to Olympic coverage and the time difference meant that Olympic Breakfast Time was given over to highlights of the overnight action. Frank Bough presents the programme with David Icke providing "Olympic Action Summaries" at 7:05, 8:05 and 8:50.[26] The weekend editions saw news summaries broadcast on the hour and is also the first time that the BBC has broadcast a full service of pre-lunchtime news bulletins at the weekend.[27]
    • 13 October – TV-am launches a new Saturday morning children's series called the Wide Awake Club. The live programme replaces pre-recorded shows such as Data Run and SPLAT.
  • 1985
    • 3 January – TV-am expands its broadcasting hours. Weekday programmes begin ten minutes earlier during the week, at 6:15am and weekend programmes begin at 6:55am.
    • 18 February – Breakfast Time moves to a later slot, now running between 6:50am and 9:20am. Consequently, Ceefax AM is now on air for an extra 20 minutes each day, from 6am until 6:50am.
    • TV-am launches After Nine. It is only broadcast during term time as children's programmes are shown during the school holidays.
    • 14 September – TV-am's Wide Awake Club is doubled in length, broadcasting for almost two hours from 7:30am until 9:25am.
    • 3 October – Roland Rat, the puppet rodent who saved an ailing TV-am transfers to the BBC.[28] With only a week until October half term was due to start, TV-am launches Wacaday, a spin-off of the existing and successful Saturday morning programme, Wide Awake Club.
  • 1986
    • 25 July – Selina Scott presents Breakfast Time for the final time.[29]
    • 10 November – BBC1 revamps its breakfast programming. Breakfast Time is relaunched with a more formal news and current affairs format. The programme now begins at the later time of 7am. Prior to Breakfast Time, BBC1 starts showing The Flintstones at 6:30am, reducing Ceefax AM to a 30-minute broadcast.
  • 1987
    • July – TV-am reintroduces a weekday news programme, GMB Newshour, airing initially from the start of programmes until 7am. Good Morning Britain now airs between 7am and 9am.
    • 7 September – TV-am recommences broadcasting each day from 6am. This is the first time since 1983 that TV-am has transmitted throughout its allocated broadcast hours.
    • 16 October – Following the Great Storm of 1987, electrical power to TV-am's studios is lost and an emergency programme has to be transmitted from facilities at Thames Television's Euston Road centre using reports from TV-am's own crews and those of ITN, TSW and TVS. The BBC's Breakfast Time, which would usually come from Lime Grove, was unable to broadcast as the studios were without power, as was most of BBC Television Centre at Wood Lane. The early part of the programme was broadcast from the continuity suite at TV Centre usually used for Children's BBC presentation as this area had generator support, before a larger studio was able to be brought into use.
    • 23 November – The TV-am strike begins after members of the technicians' union the ACTT walk out in a dispute over the station's ‘Caring Christmas Campaign’. What is meant to be a 24-hour stoppage continues for several months when staff are locked out by Managing Director Bruce Gyngell. TV-am is unable to broadcast Good Morning Britain, replacing it with shows such as Flipper, Batman and Happy Days. By December, a skeleton service that sees non-technical staff operating cameras and Gyngell himself directing proceedings, begin to allow Good Morning Britain to start broadcasting again. The strikers are eventually sacked and replaced with non-union staff. Viewing figures remain high throughout the disruption, which continues well into 1988.
    • 7 December – TV-am is able to switch from airing 100% pre-recorded material with the introduction of a 30-minute live segment each morning presented by Anne Diamond.[30]
    • 14 December – TV-am extends its live broadcasting to an hour a day.[30]
    • 18 December – Frank Bough, who launched breakfast television on 17 January 1983, presents Breakfast Time for the final time.[31]
  • 1988
    • 14 January – Talks between TV-am's management and the ACTT begin aimed at resolving the ongoing strike.[30]
    • 25–29 January – TV-am airs a week of live broadcasts from Sydney to celebrate Australia's bicentenary, and featuring Anne Diamond and Mike Morris.[30]
    • 1 February
      • TV-am celebrates its fifth birthday, with Anne Diamond joined by Richard Keys, Gyles Brandreth, Su Pollard and Jimmy Greaves. It is the first time TV-am has been able to get its daily output down to an hour of pre-recorded material since the beginning of the strike. However, the station continues to air imports of old American shows for several more months.[30]
      • The deadline on which the ACTT must accept TV-am's "Ten Point Plan" aimed at resolving the strike. However, the plan is rejected by a ballot and the union refuses to resume negotiations.[30]
    • 16 February – TV-am Managing Director Bruce Gyngell sacks the station's locked out staff, and calls a meeting of its remaining employees the following morning to announce that the ACTT will never again organise itself at TV-am's studios. His decision fails to resolve the crisis, however, as picketing continues and the quality of its output remains unchanged.[30]
    • 30 May – TV-am does not go on air, with its airtime instead taken up by coverage of ITV's Telethon '88. The ACTT had asked its members to boycott the programme on this date, and fearful of sparking a nationwide dispute, TV-am's acting Managing Director, Adrian Moore, allows ITV to use the early morning airtime.[30]
    • July – Stephen Barden is appointed TV-am's new Managing Editor. With the station facing criticism from the IBA over the quality of its output, he acts quickly to improve matters. Repeats of imported American programmes finally come to an end. New programming is launched, and programmes such as Frost on Sunday (off air since the strike began) are restored.[30]
    • 19 August – Following concerns about the quality of TV-am's programming, an emergency meeting of the IBA considers whether to review the station's franchise in early 1989. However, it is ultimately decided not to proceed with the review since the next franchise round is approaching, and the IBA feels the success of both organisations is mutually exclusive.[30]
    • 17 September–2 October – Channel 4 broadcasts at breakfast for the very first time as part of its coverage of the 1988 Summer Olympic Games and the BBC resurrects Olympic Breakfast Time for the duration on the event, and this includes the return of weekend editions which, like in 1984, also includes hourly news summaries.[32]
    • 1 November – Having decided to step down from her presenting role on TV-am, Anne Diamond makes her final regular appearance on the station.[30]
    • TV-am's GMB Newshour is relaunched as The Morning Programme.
  • 1989
    • 6 February – Launch of the Sky News flagship breakfast programme Sky News Sunrise.
    • 3 April – Channel 4 launches its breakfast television show The Channel Four Daily. The programme is based heavily on news and current affairs, with segments focusing on sports, finance, lifestyles, arts and entertainment, and discussion.
    • April – The Wide Awake Club is renamed WAC '90. It is broadcast from Granada's studios in Manchester rather than from TV-am's London studios.
    • 15 September – Ceefax AM is broadcast for the final time.
    • 2 October – The BBC relaunches Breakfast Time as Breakfast News. The new programme adopts a rolling news format and starts 30 minutes earlier, at 6:30am. Most of the first 30 minutes is devoted to business news.
    • 22 November – Following the commencement of televised coverage of the House of Commons the previous day, BBC2 launches a breakfast round-up of yesterday's proceedings. This is preceded by the 8am bulletin from Breakfast News.[33] Previously, the only BBC2 breakfast output was programmes from the Open University. Open University programmes continue to be shown on BBC2 at breakfast, but in an earlier timeslot. The new programme line-up is completed by the introduction of the first peak-breakfast Pages from Ceefax broadcast with Ceefax shown between the end of the Open University transmission, or from 7:30am when no OU programmes are broadcast.

1990s

  • 1990
    • 2 January – The weekday 6am Ceefax slot returns to BBC1.
    • 17 April – The Channel Four Daily is revamped in a bid to attract more viewers. Some of the segments are changed and the programme starts 30 minutes later, at 6:30am.
    • July – Hey, Hey, it's Saturday! replaces Wac '90 as TV-am's flagship Saturday morning children's programme.
  • 1991
    • 17 January–2 March – The Gulf War sees the broadcast of extra and extended news bulletins at breakfast. These include weekend summaries on the hour on BBC1 and a Saturday edition of The Channel Four Daily.
    • September – TV Mayhem replaces Hey, Hey, it's Saturday! as TV-am's Saturday morning children's programme.
    • 21 September – More than eight years after launching its weekday breakfast television service, the BBC launches a five-minute long weekend breakfast news bulletin.[34] The Saturday bulletin is broadcast at 7:25am and on Sunday, the bulletin is shown at 9:10am.
    • 16 October – The ITV franchise auction sees TV-am losing the national breakfast television franchise to Sunrise Television,[35] but as Sky News' breakfast programming also uses that name (and did so until 2019) Sky protested, resulting in a change of name to GMTV.[36] As a result of this, TV-am immediately axes TV Mayhem and replaces it with Cartoon World which as the name suggests, only shows cartoons.
  • 1992
    • February – TV-am closes its in-house news service and contracts out news bulletins to Sky News.
    • 25 September – Channel 4 airs the final Channel Four Daily. The news based breakfast television show was axed due to poor ratings.
    • 28 September – The Channel Four Daily's replacement, The Big Breakfast, launches. The programme takes a lighter tone and proves to be more popular with viewers.
    • 31 December – At 9:25am, TV-am ends its final broadcast after 9 years and 10 months on air.
  • 1993
    • 1 January – Good Morning Television (GMTV) takes over the breakfast television franchise from TV-am. Among its programmes is Saturday Disney which overlaps past its 9:25am cut off time. It continues to be produced by Scottish Television which was one of the owners of GMTV at the time.
    • 3 January – Debut of Breakfast with Frost, a Sunday morning current affairs programme on BBC1 presented by David Frost.[37]
    • 4 January – The BBC launches Business Breakfast as a 60-minute standalone programme. It had previously been part of Breakfast News. Consequently, the BBC's weekday breakfast programmes start half an hour earlier, at 6am and the early morning Ceefax transmission now runs for just 15 minutes, beginning at 5:45am.
  • 1994
    • 17 October – BBC Scotland airs a regional version of the Children's BBC Breakfast Show between 7am to 8am on BBC Two Scotland throughout the half-term October holidays, the hour-long slot is presented by Grant Stott until 21 October.
  • 1995
    • 9 October – The launch of the BBC Learning Zone sees the end of standalone weekday breakfast Open University transmissions on BBC2. From this date, children's programmes are shown on the channel during the peak breakfast period and the strand is called the Children's BBC Breakfast Show.
    • 16 October – BBC Scotland opts out of the network and broadcast their regional version of the Children's BBC Breakfast Show for the second year running, presented by Grant Stott and Gail Porter between 7:15am to 8:25am on BBC Two Scotland for a whole week until 20 October.
  • 1996
    • 5 February – Breakfast News Extra is launched. The 20-minute programme which airs at the end of the main edition of Breakfast News, is presented by Juliet Morris.[38]
    • 30 March – Saturday Disney is broadcast on GMTV for the final time.
    • 3 July – The Children's BBC Breakfast Show on BBC Two Scotland is presented by Grant Stott and Gail Porter throughout the opening weeks of the Scottish school Summer holidays, airing between 7:30am to 8:35am until 12 July and the October BBC Two Scotland opt-out returns for a third year.
  • 1997
    • 31 March – Channel 5 launches a 90-minute weekday breakfast news programme 5 News Early. It broadcasts between 6am until 7:30am. The rest of the channel's breakfast airtime is given over to children's strand Milkshake!.
    • 30 June – BBC Two Scotland launch a brand-new Summer holiday children's programme called Up For It! airing between 8:35am to 9:30am for the first three weeks of the Scottish school holidays.[39]
    • 29 August – The final edition of Breakfast News Extra is broadcast.
    • 9 November – BBC News 24 launches and from that night, the new continuous news channel broadcasts all night on BBC One. Consequently, the 15-minute early morning Ceefax is broadcast on BBC One for the final time.
  • 1998
    • Spring – The first edition of The World Today is broadcast on BBC One and BBC News 24 as it simulcasts overnight with BBC World.
    • 14 March – Diggit launches as GMTV's flagship children's programming block. It is broadcast from 7:10am to 9:25am on Saturdays and 8am to 9:25am on Sundays. Additional editions on bank holidays and Summer holidays were shown under the name Diggit Extra.
    • 29 June – BBC Two Scotland airs a second series of the Summer holiday children's show Up for It for three weeks of the Scottish Summer holidays, it is now presented by Marsali Stewart from 8:35am to 9:35am.[40]
    • 5 October – Sky One begins simulcasting part of Virgin Radio's The Chris Evans Breakfast Show after Virgin signed a three-year sponsorship deal with BSkyB. Under the agreement, Evans is not allowed to mention Virgin Radio while the programme is being simulcast with Sky.[41][42]
  • 1999
    • 4 January – GMTV2 launches on ITV2. Its broadcast hours are the same as those of the main GMTV service, 6am to 9:25am.[43]

2000s

  • 2000
    • 1 January – Channel 4 airs The Biggest Breakfast Ever, an eight-hour overnight millennium special with Johnny Vaughan and Liza Tarbuck. The channel's New Year's Day schedule also includes a contemporary version of Cinderella starring Kathleen Turner.[44]
    • 15 September – After eleven years on the air, the final edition of Breakfast News is broadcast on BBC One.
    • 2 October – The first edition of the BBC's revamped breakfast news programme Breakfast is broadcast. The new series is carried on both BBC One and BBC News 24, previously News 24 had aired its own breakfast programme, Breakfast 24.
  • 2001
    • 29 August – American illusionist David Blaine appears on GMTV where he is interviewed by Eamonn Holmes, but he refuses to speak and instead gives Holmes the "evil eye". Holmes has subsequently cited this interview as the most awkward moment of his professional career.[45][46]
    • 20 December – A joint venture between BSkyB and Princess Productions is awarded the contract to replace The Big Breakfast with a new breakfast programme for Channel 4.[47]
  • 2002
    • 7 January – Sky News content becomes available on terrestrial television for the first time in a decade when Channel 5 begins simulcasting part of its breakfast news programme Sunrise.[48]
    • 29 March – Channel 4's The Big Breakfast ends after nine and a half years on the air.[49][50]
    • 29 April – The first edition of RI:SE is broadcast on Channel 4.[51]
    • 8 November – Lock Keeper's Cottage, the building in east London used for The Big Breakfast which ended eight months earlier is destroyed by fire.[52]
  • 2003
    • January – Diggit on GMTV is relaunched as Diggin' It.
    • 19 December – The final edition of RI:SE airs on Channel 4. It is axed because of low ratings.[53] It is not replaced with another breakfast programme, instead, Channel 4 airs series such as Friends and The Salon in its early morning slot.[54]
  • 2004
    • No events.
  • 2005
    • 5 February – GMTV's Diggin' It and Up on The Roof are merged into a new programme called Toonattik. It is broadcast on Saturdays and Sundays from 7:25am until GMTV's closedown at 9:25am.
    • 22 February – Eamonn Holmes announces he will step down from his role as a GMTV presenter after twelve years.[55]
    • 27 April – Eamonn Holmes presents his final edition of GMTV after twelve years with the broadcaster.[56]
    • 19 May – Eamonn Holmes has signed a deal with Sky News to present their early morning programme Sunrise, it is reported.[57]
    • 29 May – BBC One airs the final edition of Breakfast with Frost after a twelve-year run.[58]
    • 11 September – BBC One launches Sunday AM, a Sunday morning current affairs programme presented by Andrew Marr.[59]
    • 24 October – Eamonn Holmes presents his first edition of Sunrise on Sky News.
  • 2006
    • 14 January – Debut of Morning Glory, the fourth attempt at breakfast television on Channel 4. It is presented by Dermot O'Leary every weekday morning from 8:30am to 9am.[60] However, due to low ratings, it is not renewed and ends on 28 January.
    • 21 August – Debut of Channel 4's Freshly Squeezed, a music-based breakfast show aired on weekdays and featuring studio performances, music videos and interviews.
  • 2007
    • 9 January – Sky News hires Meridian Tonight presenter Charlotte Hawkins to co-present Sunrise alongside Eamonn Holmes, she makes her debut on 15 January.[61]
    • 16 April – Manchester local television station Channel M launches a breakfast show called Channel M Breakfast.
    • 23 April – A BBC Panorama programme disclosed that callers to GMTV's phone-in competitions may have been defrauded out of millions of pounds, because the telephone system operator, Opera Interactive Technology, had determined the winners before the phone lines had closed. GMTV responded by suspending the phone-in quizzes, but claimed that "it was confident it had not breached regulators' codes". Opera Interactive also denied any wrongdoing.
    • 9 September – The BBC One Sunday morning political programme Sunday AM is renamed The Andrew Marr Show when it returns after its Summer break.[62][63]
  • 2008
    • No events.
  • 2009
    • 5 February – To coincide with the 20th anniversary of Sky's launch, at 6am, Sunrise begins presenting from a new "multi-purpose" area of the Sky News Centre, formally known as the "shoebox".
    • 15 May – Channel M Breakfast is axed as part of severe cutbacks to programming output and staffing levels at the station.[64]
    • 26 November – ITV takes full ownership of GMTV after purchasing Disney's 25% share in the channel.[65]

2010s

2020s

References

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