Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Channel 5 airs a wide variety of programming that covers various genres and themes, with programmes about farming, trains and royalty being popular.. The channel is notable for its travel and holiday shows, whether presented by comedians such as Susan Calman [1] [2] and Alexander Armstrong [3] or whether they are programmes in a fly-on-the-wall reality format like Allo Allo!
A Big Brother Demand 5 app for the iPad, iPod Touch and iPhone launched on 19 August 2011, the app offered a 30-day catch-up service for Big Brother content. The app has been extended to incorporate catch-up content from Channel 5, 5* and 5USA, creating an overall Demand 5 app. [26] The app is compatible with iOS 10.0 or later. [27]
This category has the following 5 subcategories, out of 5 total. Channel 5 (British TV channel) television dramas (1 C, 41 P) Channel 5 (British TV channel) sitcoms (3 P)
Pages in category "Channel 5 (British TV channel) television dramas" The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Channel 5: 2024 11 February Wilderness with Simon Reeve: BBC Two 21 February The Daily Global: BBC News: 2023 Breathtaking: ITV1 2024 22 February Too Good to Be True: Channel 5 29 February Alice & Jack: Channel 4 4 March The Way: BBC One: 14 March Love Rat: Channel 5 21 March Coma: 22 March Fantasy Football League: BBC Two / ITV1 / Sky Max ...
My5 was a channel based on the most popular TV shows that are broadcast across all of the Channel 5 network. It was originally launched as Channel 5 +24, a 24-hour timeshift of the main Channel 5 schedule, and began broadcasting on 4 February 2014, available on Freeview, Freesat, Sky and Virgin Media. [4]
The Benny Hill Show (BBC TV/ BBC One 1955–1968, ITV/Thames 1969–1989) Big Brother (Channel 4 2000–2010, Channel 5 2011–2018, ITV2/ITV1 2023–present) Bigheads (2017) The Big Match (1968–1992, ITV4 2008–present as The Big Match Revisited) The Bill (1983, 1984–2010, repeated on Drama) Birds of a Feather (BBC One 1989–1998, ITV ...
The channel's launch on 30 March 1997 (Easter Sunday) at 6 p.m. After a brief voice over by continuity presenter David Vickery, the first broadcast was the Spice Girls singing a cover version of Manfred Mann's hit "5-4-3-2-1" as "1-2-3-4-5", [15] [16] for which they were reportedly paid around £500,000. [17]