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ITV, legally known as Channel 3, is a British free-to-air public broadcast television network. It is branded as ITV1 in most of the UK except for central and northern Scotland, where it is branded as STV.
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 2014 ...
ITV1 (formerly known as ITV) is a British free-to-air public broadcast television channel [b] owned and operated by the British media company ITV plc.It provides the Channel 3 public broadcast service across all of the United Kingdom except for the central and northern areas of Scotland where STV provides the service.
Band of Gold (TV series) The Baron (TV series) The Bay (TV series) Beasts (TV series) Beecham House; Belgravia (TV series) Beowulf: Return to the Shieldlands; Bernard's Watch; Between the Sheets (TV series) Big Breadwinner Hog; Bill Brand (TV series) The Black Velvet Gown; Black Work; The Blackheath Poisonings (TV series) Blade on the Feather
Programmes Programme Since Monday to Friday Saturday Sunday; Good Morning Britain 2014 06:00–09:00; Lorraine 2010 09:00–10:00; This Morning 1988 10:00–12:30
itv.com is the main website of ITV plc, the UK's largest commercial television broadcaster which operates 13 out of 15 regions on the ITV network under the ITV1 brand. [1] The website offers the ITVX streaming service, with sections for ITV News, certain ITV1 programmes and competitions.
Map of the sub-regions, coded to the list below. The table below lists the current 14 regions and 23 sub-regions for ITV and its two associated channels, the timeshifted ITV +1 and the high-definition ITV HD.
This Week is a British weekly current affairs television programme that was first produced for ITV in January 1956 by Associated-Rediffusion (later Thames Television), running until 1978, when it was replaced by TV Eye. [1] In 1986, the earlier name was revived and This Week continued until Thames lost its franchise at the end of 1992.