Francais | English | Espanõl

BBC Prime

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
<tr><td colspan="2" style="text-align: center; padding: 10px 0 10px 0;">Image:Bbcprime.gif</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right;">Type</th><td>Encrypted Satellite
& Cabletelevision network</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right;">Availability</th><td>Europe, Africa, the Middle East and Asia</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right;">Founder</th><td>BBC Worldwide</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right;">Owner</th><td>BBC</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right;">Launch date</th><td>January, 1995</td></tr><tr><th style="text-align:right;">Website</th><td>www.bbcprime.com</td></tr>
BBC Prime

BBC Prime is the BBC's general entertainment TV channel in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. It was launched in January, 1995, and began broadcasts in Africa in March, 1999. A version of the channel was launched in Asia on December 1st, 2004. It is funded by subscription available either as part of a satellite package or as a stand-alone channel. As it may carry advertisements in some world regions, it is not available in the United Kingdom as, under the terms of the BBC's Charter, its domestic services cannot show advertising.

The channel broadcasts drama, comedy and lifestyle programmes via satellite and cable. In the past, it had allocated six hours per day for educational programmes from BBC Learning; this practice was abandoned in August 2006 "with the intention of improving the relevance and appeal of the channel to the widest audience" [1].

When it first launched, BBC Prime also carried programming from the former ITV company Thames Television, as BBC Worldwide had a joint venture, known as European Channel Management, with Thames' parent company, Pearson. This venture was later dissolved, and programmes like The Bill were no longer carried. Owing to rights issues, much of the current programming on BBC Prime is from the Corporation's archive.

The channel's emphasis on archive programming caused considerable annoyance to many British expatriate viewers, who had much preferred the mix of BBC One and Two previously offered by BBC TV Europe and BBC World Service Television.

Consequently, many people in mainland Europe bought viewing cards to receive full broadcasts of BBC One and Two from the UK, which prompted GBC in Gibraltar to end terrestrial retransmission of BBC Prime in 1999. Even after the BBC switched to broadcasting unencrypted on a satellite with a much weaker signal, many people in Spain and elsewhere could still receive these signals, particularly those who already had large satellite dishes.

BBC Prime is broadcast alongside BBC One and Two in the Netherlands, which have long been available on cable television, together with BBC World. It is also available on digital terrestrial television (DTT) in the Netherlands, as well as the Faroe Islands and Malta. In February 2006, BBC Worldwide secured a slot for the channel in the Swedish DTT network.

The BBC argues that most of BBC Prime's viewers are not British, and often may not have English as a first language, hence the availability of subtitles in Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Czech, Polish, Romanian, Hungarian, Italian, Hebrew and Serbian.

Similarly, some programmes on BBC Prime in Africa are different from the European service, as many have already been licensed to South African broadcasters, and the service does not show BBC Learning.

In Asia the programming is completely different to take account of time zones and cultural differences, with subtitles in local languages like Chinese, Thai, and Korean. BBC Prime's Asian service is available in Hong Kong, Thailand, Singapore, and South Korea, but will become available on cable and satellite services in other countries in the region, including the Philippines and Taiwan.

Among the more contemporary BBC programmes shown on BBC Prime are Top of the Pops and EastEnders, the latter of which debuted in Asia in January 2006.

A similar channel, called BBC Japan, launched in Japan on December 1st, 2004, but ceased broadcasting on April 30, 2006, owing to problems with its local distributor.

The recent programming schedules for BBC Prime are showing their lack of support in Europe, as they are repeating programmes on a daily basis. BBC Learning (1.00 - 6.00 CET) has been discontinued, and the previous evening's programmes are repeated again. [2]

[edit] BBC Entertainment

See main article: BBC Entertainment

In September 2006, it was announced that the channel was to be rebranded as BBC Entertainment, as part of a new group of international BBC channels. The channel will be broadcast from 8 October in Asia and replaces BBC Prime on StarHub (Channel 76), UBC (Channel 58), Skylife (Channel 334) and Now TV (Channel 529). In other markets BBC Prime will be replaced by the end of the year. BBC Worldwide's Managing Director of Global Channels, Darren Childs said: "BBC Prime will disappear as a brand. It is something we can do better. It was too non-specific. BBC Entertainment will do what it says on the tin."[3]

[edit] External links

BBC Television

Television Assets: BBC One | BBC Two | BBC Three | BBC Four | BBC News 24 | BBC Parliament | CBBC Channel | CBeebies | BBC 2W | BBCi | BBC HD
BBC One Scotland | BBC Two NI

International Channels: BBC America | BBC Canada | BBC Food | BBC Kids | BBC Prime | BBC Entertainment | BBC World | BBC Knowledge | BBC Arabic Television

Joint Ventures: Animal Planet | People+Arts | UKTV (UK and Ireland) | UK.TV (Australia and New Zealand)

Defunct channels: BBC Knowledge | BBC Choice | BBC World Service Television | BBC TV Europe | BBC Japan

Other: BBC Worldwide | BBC Scotland | BBC Wales | BBC Northern Ireland

it:BBC Prime

de:BBC Prime nl:BBC Prime no:BBC Prime pl:BBC Prime sv:BBC Prime

Personal tools