BBC Four

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BBC Four
BBC Four logo
Launched 2 March 2002
Owned by BBC
Picture format 576i (SDTV)
Audience share 0.5%
(October 2007, [1])
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Replaced BBC Knowledge
Sister channel(s) BBC One,
BBC Two,
BBC Three
Website www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour
Availability
Terrestrial
Freeview Channel 9
Satellite
Sky Digital Channel 116
Astra 2D 10773H 22000 5/6
Cable
Virgin Media Channel 107
UPC Ireland Channel 117

BBC Four is a BBC television channel available to digital television (Freeview, satellite and cable) viewers in the UK. The part successor (with CBeebies) to BBC Knowledge, it launched on 2 March 2002.

It shows a wide variety of programmes including drama, documentaries, music, international film, comedy and current affairs ... an intelligent alternative to programmes on the mainstream TV channels.[1]

BBC Four has an annual budget of £67m (£49.8m on content, £2m distribution, £15.2 infrastructure) which is only 4.7% of that of BBC One[2] (but 1.8% of the audience) and consequentially has a schedule dominated by repeats.

Contents

The first evening's BBC Four programmes were simulcast on BBC Two. BBC Four is most notable for first showing Larry David's Seinfeld follow-up, Curb your Enthusiasm[3], Armando Iannucci's cutting political satire, The Thick of It and Flight Of The Conchords.

BBC Four share of viewing 2002-2007 BARB figures
BBC Four share of viewing 2002-2007 BARB figures

The channel broadcasts a mixture of art and science documentaries, vintage drama (including many rare black-and-white programmes), and non-English language productions such as films from the Artificial Eye catalogue and the French thriller Spiral. BBC Four further supports foreign language films with its annual World Cinema Award which has been running since 2004.

On weekdays at 19.00, the channel shows a 30-minute global news programme called World News Today, simulcast with and produced by BBC World. It screens a number of original documentaries such as The Century of the Self and The Trial of Henry Kissinger.

Drama has given the channel some of its most popular programmes, with The Alan Clark Diaries (2003) and Fantabulosa! (2006) being among the highest rated, with over 800,000 viewers. Another notable production was a live re-make of the 1953 science-fiction serial The Quatermass Experiment, adapted from the original scripts into a single, two-hour version (though on the night it in fact underran considerably, lasting less than 1 hour 40 minutes), broadcast on the evening of Saturday 2 April 2005. Discounting BBC Four's previous live relays of theatrical Shakespeare productions, this was the first live made-for-television drama to be broadcast by the BBC for twenty years.

According to BARB the comedy panel game QI has the highest ratings of any show on BBC Four. [2]

At the Edinburgh International Television Festival, BBC Four won the Non-Terrestrial Channel of the Year award in 2004 and 2006.

On the Freeview digital terrestrial television platform, BBC Four is broadcast in a statistically multiplexed stream in Multiplex B that timeshares with the CBeebies channel; broadcasting from 7 pm to 4 am every day.

The BBC's "cultural" channel BBC Four was launched on 2 March 2002 as a successor to BBC Knowledge. The initial series of idents were generated dynamically reflecting the frequencies of the continuity announcers' voice or of backing music and were designed by Lambie-Nairn. As a result, no two idents were ever the same.

In September 2005, the channel's new idents based on the theme of an "four" and optical illusions, for example a swimming pool where a person on an inflatable ring appears in the bottom left corner, though ripples don't enter the remaining quarters.

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