Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
BBC Four is a British free-to-air public broadcast television channel owned and operated by the BBC.It was launched on 2 March 2002 [1] and shows a wide variety of programmes including arts, documentaries, music, international film and drama, and current affairs. [2]
Sports Report is one of the longest-running programmes on British radio, and is the world's longest-running sports radio programme. [1] It started on 3 January 1948, [2] and has always been broadcast from 17:00 on Saturday evenings during the football season, for most of its history featuring two readings of the classified football results, although the length of the programme has varied in ...
[7] [8] It is a Red Button and Online exclusive, so therefore does not appear on BBC One or BBC Two. When the BBC regained the rights for the FA Cup in 2014–15, the programme would be renamed FA Cup Final Score when the competition is the main focus, including a modified logo featuring the FA Cup trophy and Sunday broadcasts which show the ...
BBC Four Goes Slow is a series of slow television programmes made for BBC Four, each without narration or underscore. The channel's editor, Cassian Harrison , stated that the series is an "antidote ... to the conventional grammar of television in which everything gets faster and faster". [ 1 ]
"Cherry Hill Park" is a 1969 song written by Robert Nix and Billy Gilmore. It became a hit for the singer Billy Joe Royal . His recording was arranged by Buddy Buie , James Cobb and Emory Gordy, Jr. , and produced by both Buie and Bill Lowery .
The Thick of It is a British comedy television series created, written and directed by Armando Iannucci that satirises the inner workings of British government.It was first broadcast for two short series on BBC Four in 2005, initially with a small cast focusing on a government minister, his advisers and their party's spin-doctor.
The song's name comes from the vindaloo, a type of very spicy Goan curry that is popular in the United Kingdom. [1] Much of the song consists of the phrase "nah nah nah" and the word "vindaloo" repeated over and over by a mixed group, occasionally interspersed with lines such as "And we all like vindaloo" and "We're England; we're gonna score ...
1–5 August – The BBC shows Glorious Goodwood for the final time, having covered the event for the previous 50 years. This is the latest horse-racing event the BBC loses to Channel 4. The BBC broadcasts cricket for the first time in more than seven years when it shows highlights of the 2006-07 Ashes series. 2007