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Heir Hunters

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Heir Hunters
GenreFactual
Directed byJohn Widdup (series 4)
Presented byNadia Sawalha
(series 1)
Lisa Faulkner
(series 2–11)
Michael Buerk
(series 12)
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series12
No. of episodes240
Production
Executive producersMatthew Gordon
Roger Bolton (2012)
ProducersHarriet Scott (2012)
John Widdup (2010–2011)
Livia Russell (2009)
Paula Fasht (2008)
Production locationVarious
Running time45–60 minutes
Production companyFlame Television
Original release
NetworkBBC One
Release4 June 2007 (2007-06-04) –
27 July 2018 (2018-07-27)

Heir Hunters is a BBC television programme focusing on attempts to find missing or unknown heirs, entitled to deceased people's estates before the British Treasury lawfully collects the money. The show follows the work of probate researchers from a number of different firms to show how the results of time-consuming research turned out. The main firms followed have been Fraser and Fraser, Celtic Research and Finders International.

It was announced in 2011 that Heir Hunters would run in both BBC One daytime and in primetime television on BBC Two that autumn.[1] The eleventh series was aired on BBC One from 27 February 2017.

Description

The series is made by Flame TV, which is part of the Avalon Group. The first series was presented by Nadia Sawalha, while all subsequent series are narrated by Lisa Faulkner up to series 11. Series 12 is presented by Michael Buerk. The programme combined the worlds of legal probate genealogy and family history for the first time[citation needed] attracting audiences of over 1.2 million.

The series was devised and developed by Jezz Wright for Irish Production company MINT TV after a meeting with Hector Birchwood from Celtic Research who features in the series. BBC Daytime executive Richard Thomson commissioned the first series to run alongside ITV's Trisha which had moved to Channel 5. MINT TV opted for a co-production with FLAME TV for the first series.

The series runs as part of BBC One's weekday lineup in the early morning factual slot (9:15 am – 10:00 am), alongside shows including Animal 24:7 and Helicopter Heroes. The second series had record viewing numbers for the time slot and beat The Jeremy Kyle Show on ITV consistently during its run, prompting the BBC to immediately recommission repeatedly series after series with series 11 being filmed in the autumn of 2016.

The title cards for the 2008 and later series spell 'Heir Hunters' as 'H£ir Hunt£rs', using the pound sterling sign as a capital E. In each programme of the first two series three unclaimed estates from Bona Vacantia are mentioned in the hope of information being given by a viewer which could help find an heir or heirs. One of these mentioned in the first series resulted in information that led to some heirs being found for an estate.

The term "Heir Hunter" has become known to refer to any person or firm who tracks down beneficiaries to estates of deceased persons. "Heir hunters" may also be known as probate genealogists, probate researchers, heir searchers, or forensic genealogists although the latter is mainly an American term for the industry.

Heir Hunters are unregulated in the UK[2] although STEP (the Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners) have endorsed their use.[3]

The series has been repeated on the A+E Networks UK channels History and Bio. and UKTV channels Watch and Yesterday.

In 2011, it began to be transmitted on the History Channel in the UK, New Zealand and Australia. Despite being syndicated around the world the participants only received a nominal £1.00 in return for signing a standard Flame TV/reality television waiver.

From 21 November – 2 December 2011, ten re-versioned episodes of series 5 were shown on BBC Two at 7pm each weekday. The expanded episodes have an increased duration of 59 minutes and feature Lisa Faulkner on camera for the first time interviewing experts and Heir Hunters. BBC Two had ordered 20 episodes in total the 2nd set of 10 were from series 6 and were aired in January 2013.

Transmissions

The series was aired in a stripped daily format, running Monday – Friday for 3, 4, 5 and 4 weeks respectively. Series 10 was set to be re-edited into repeated 30-minute versions later in 2016 whilst filming for series 11 got underway. Series 11 began screening in 2017 and filming for Series 12 began in June 2017.[4][5][6]

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 4 June 2007 22 June 2007 15
2 30 June 2008 25 July 2008 20
3 29 June 2009 31 July 2009 25
4 18 January 2010 12 February 2010 20
5 21 February 2011 25 March 2011 20
21 November 2011 4 December 2011 10
6 16 April 2012 11 May 2012 20
7 January 2013 25 January 2013 10
7 4 March 2013 29 March 2013 20
8 3 March 2014 28 March 2014 20
9 23 February 2015 23 March 2015 20
10 29 February 2016 29 March 2016 20
11 27 February 2017 25 August 2017 20
12 16 April 2018 27 July 2018 20

See also

References

  1. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 December 2011. Retrieved 11 October 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ Infolaw (12 February 2013). "Heir hunters". Retrieved 15 October 2020.
  3. ^ Pett, Stephen (2020). "Society of Trust and Estate Planning endorses heir hunter fees". Retrieved 15 October 2020.
  4. ^ "BBC Daytime orders third series of Heir Hunters". BBC. 29 July 2008. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
  5. ^ http://www.tvthrong.co.uk/heir-hunters/bbc-daytime-orders-two-more-series-heir-hunters-and-another-instalment-dont-get-done-get-dom
  6. ^ "BBC Daytime orders two more series of Heir Hunters". 29 October 2009. Retrieved 15 October 2020.