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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!
In November 2008, Channel 5 had been set to launch a new children's channel based on its pre-school programming block. This was a response to the BBC launching the CBBC channel and CBeebies in 2002 and ITV launching the CITV channel in 2006, [4] but plans to launch a standalone preschool channel were put on hold indefinitely while the broadcaster awaited a buyer.
During Channel 5's major network relaunch of 2002, The Core was renamed to Milkshake! FM in January 2002, taking its name from the established Channel 5 preschool-age slot Milkshake! . This block aired in the mid-morning from 9 am to noon on Saturdays and Sundays, while a number of programs aired during The Core continued to be broadcast during ...
NBC's "Saturday Night Live" 50th anniversary episode airs Sunday night. The live, three-hour special airs one day after the late-night comedy show's first episode from 1975 re-aired on NBC ...
The Jan. 25 "SNL" episode will be available to watch live on NBC at 11:30 p.m. ET/8:30 p.m. PT. Viewers can also stream it the next day on Peacock . Watch SNL live with Fubo
Bottled Water Ads; Tonight Show Audience Trivia Night; Tonight Show Audience Suggestion Box (NBA Goes to Broadway, Tariq and Jimmy high five each other, House of the Dragon Ad, The Great Banito, Times Square Elmo gets dunked by John Franco); Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays guitar for his wife
The 2025 Golden Globes pre-show, in partnership with Entertainment Tonight and Variety, began at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT across Variety and Penske Media platforms.
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]