The One Show
The One Show | |
---|---|
File:Theoneshow.jpg | |
Presented by | Alex Jones Matt Baker (See full list) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Production | |
Production locations | Broadcasting House (2014–) BBC Media Village (2007–13) The Mailbox (2006) |
Running time | 30 minutes 60 minutes (Wednesdays, occasional) |
Production companies | BBC and independent companies across the United Kingdom |
Original release | |
Network | BBC One (2006–) BBC One HD (2010–) BBC HD (2010) |
Release | 14 August 2006 present | –
The One Show is a BBC Television magazine programme. Broadcast live on BBC One on weekdays at 7pm, it features topical stories and studio guests.[1] It is co-hosted by Alex Jones, alongside Matt Baker (Mondays to Thursdays) and a guest host on Fridays. Various reporters also assist with subject-specific presenting, both in the studio and on location, or through filmed segments. Originally produced in Birmingham and then in BBC's Media Village in White City, London, since 2014 the studio is in Broadcasting House, the BBC's headquarters in London.
Launched with a pilot series in 2006, leading to a full series from 2007, it has had various previous permanent and temporary hosts; the partnership of Jones and Baker began in 2011, with Chris Evans serving as the first Fridays only host from 2010 until 2015. Prior to the introduction of Evans, the longest presenting partnership was Adrian Chiles and Christine Bleakley from 2007 to 2010. Their easy and approachable on-screen chemistry is credited with boosting ratings after an unpromising start, establishing the show as a popular staple of British viewing.[2]
The programme is ordinarily 30 minutes long, although it is occasionally extended to an hour. It runs all year round, save a two-week break at Christmas and a four-week summer vacation, with the summer slot filled with a highlights show, The One Show: Best of British, presented by Matt Allwright and Lucy Siegle.
Launching the full series represented a major financial commitment for the BBC and was seen by them as a first test of a wide-ranging restructuring of the BBC's production arm into a more flexible and creative organisation, with the show seen as potential platform for piloting other programme ideas.[3]
Format
As a topical magazine programme, The One Show covers a variety of stories, ranging from the light hearted humour to serious issues or tragic current events. The broadcast features a mix of in studio presenting, outside live broadcasting, and pre-recorded segments. Reporters and other experts are included to provide contributions on various topics, both in the studio and as part of segments. Special guests are usually introduced at the top of the show, and remain throughout, often being encouraged to interact with it in various ways, as opposed to simply answering questions. Inside the studio, filming is done in front of a small standing audience, and focuses on on two sofas (one for the two presenters, one for guests and contributors) arranged around a coffee table, often serving a practical use, i.e. during food tasting. Use of the forecourt of Broadcasting House for outside live broadcasts are common, allowing for a larger audience and/or a bigger stage for a performance or demonstration. The show will often take an active part in events such as Comic Relief/Sport Relief and Children In Need. Cross promotion of other BBC shows is common, although under BBC rules the show cannot give the BBC preferential coverage.
History
The One Show was initially commissioned for a four-week trial run. It was broadcast on weeknights at 6:55 pm between 14 August and 8 September 2006. The programme was billed as a topical magazine show that was to showcase stories of interest from around the United Kingdom. The trial was hosted by Adrian Chiles and Nadia Sawalha, featuring reports from a variety of people across the UK. The show was intended to be an updated version of the BBC news magazine show Nationwide (1969–83).[4]
After favourable viewing figures for the pilot, the show returned for a full series after being revamped on 9 July 2007.[2][5] Team members were Adrian Chiles, studio presenter, Hardeep Singh Kohli, head roving reporter, and 13 other reporters or contributors.[6] A number of changes were made to the format. The show was moved from Birmingham to London. Sawalha was replaced by Myleene Klass.[7] Klass then left in August to give birth to her first child, and was replaced by Christine Bleakley.[8] The line-up was completed by the addition of a new team of reporters.[5] The show replaced Real Story,[9] and Holiday.[10]
On 18 March 2009, the show aired for the 400th episode, which was an hour long instead of the usual 30 minutes. From September 2009 The One Show included a 60-minute episode every week, after successfully trying the format in May 2009.[11] The hour-long format continued until December 2009 and was revived in April 2011.
On 13 April 2010, it was announced the show was being revamped with an hour long Friday episode, to be hosted by Chris Evans.[12] He was not due to start until after the summer break, but prior to this, both Chiles and Bleakley departed the show. Chiles left first, being announced on 19 April, his last appearance being 30 April.[13] His replacement was announced as Jason Manford on 26 May, to begin in July.[14] Bleakley continued alongside stand-ins until the last show before the break, on 10 June 2010,[15] with her departure confirmed during the break, on 8 July.[16] The BBC had also confirmed that following the break, The One Show would be broadcast in high-definition, with the set updated to HD standards.
The show returned on 12 July with stand-in presenters.[16] On 26 July, S4C presenter Alex Jones was announced as the new female co-host.[17] The new lineup of Jones and Manford on Monday to Thursday, and Jones and Evans on Friday, did not debut until the week beginning 16 August,[18] Evans' first show being Friday 20 August.[19]
On Friday 19 November it was announced Manford was resigning,[20] his last show having been Wednesday as Evans had presented the end of week episode on Thursday due to the Children in Need telethon being on Friday.[21] Filling in, Jones was joined by guest presenters including Matt Baker, Alexander Armstrong and Matt Allwright on Monday to Thursday, with Evans also presenting extra episodes on occasion.
The show began broadcasting from New Broadcasting House on 6 January 2014[22] with revamped opening title sequence graphics. The opening sequence is also enhanced for the run-up to Christmas each year with extra vocals and visual sparkle.
On 25 January 2011, Matt Baker was announced as Manford's replacement.[23] On 19 June 2015 it was announced Evans would be leaving,[24] his last show being 10 July 2015.[25] Following the departure of Evans, the Friday show has been presented by Jones alongside various guest presenters, the first being Patrick Keilty (on 17 July).[26]
On 1 February 2016 the show broadcast an extended 1-hour tribute to TV and radio host Sir Terry Wogan, who had died the previous day.[27] This format was repeated (albeit for the usual 30-minute duration) on 31 March 2016 as a tribute to comedian Ronnie Corbett who had died earlier in the day.[28]
Production
The pilot show was transmitted from a temporary studio built at The Mailbox complex in Birmingham. It was produced by BBC Birmingham, with production input from various BBC regions. When The One Show returned for a full series, it was moved to BBC Media Village in White City, London, in 2007. It moved again to Broadcasting House in January 2014.[2]
On 23 February 2011, the fire alarm at the BBC White City studios went off, causing the programme to be taken off air and the remainder of the show was replaced with a recording of Nigel Slater's Simple Suppers.[29]
Ratings
The show attracts on average a daily audience of 5 million viewers.[30] It received its lowest ever audience on Friday 24 June 2011, with just 1.92 million tuning in. The reason for this unusually low figure was because the show was unexpectedly moved to BBC Two after a Wimbledon match overran.[31] The trend to a Friday ratings slump has coincided with Evans' being handed the role of co-host for the pre-weekend edition since early 2011. The show has shed 2 million viewers for the Friday edition since Evans joined the programme.[32]
The show reached a 12-month-high audience on 18 January 2013 of 5.83 million viewers.[33]
On air team
The One Show's current main presenters are Alex Jones and Matt Baker.[34]
Hosts
Former hosts
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Friday guest presenters
The Friday guest presenters since Evans' departure have been:
Date | Presenter |
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3 April 2015 | Patrick Kielty |
10 April 2015 | Richard Osman |
22 May 2015 | Patrick Kielty |
12 June 2015 | |
17 July 2015 | |
14 August 2015 | |
21 August 2015 | |
28 August 2015 | Chris Evans |
4 September 2015 | Angellica Bell |
11 September 2015 | Nick Grimshaw |
18 September 2015 | Warwick Davis |
25 September 2015 | Ed Byrne |
2 October 2015 | Patrick Kielty |
9 October 2015 | Trevor Nelson |
16 October 2015 | Shane Richie |
23 October 2015 | Geri Halliwell |
30 October 2015 | Paul Hollywood |
6 November 2015 | Adil Ray |
20 November 2015 | Patrick Kielty |
27 November 2015 | Will Young |
4 December 2015 | Ricky Wilson |
11 December 2015 | Jasper Carrott |
8 January 2016 | Rory Bremner |
15 January 2016 | Anton du Beke |
22 January 2016 | Richard Osman |
29 January 2016 | Omid Djalili |
5 February 2016 | Jeremy Vine |
12 February 2016 | Dermot O'Leary |
19 February 2016 | Nick Grimshaw |
26 February 2016 | Dermot O'Leary |
4 March 2016 | Vernon Kay |
11 March 2016 | Joe Crowley Louise Minchin |
25 March 2016 | Richard Osman |
1 April 2016 | Greg James |
8 April 2016 | Jeremy Vine |
15 April 2016 | Patrick Kielty |
22 April 2016 | Craig Charles |
29 April 2016 | Michael Ball |
Other guest presenters
- Leslie Ash (2007)[35]
- Phil Tufnell (2007)[35]
- Dominic Littlewood (2008)
- Dan Snow (2008, 2014)
- Colin Jackson (2008)
- Matthew Wright (2008)
- Nicky Campbell (2008–09)
- Andrew Neil (2008)
- Lucy Siegle (2009, 2012)
- Gethin Jones (2009)
- Gloria Hunniford (2009)
- John Sergeant (2009)
- Myleene Klass (2009)
- Matt Baker (2009–10)
- Chris Hollins (2010, 2016)
- Louise Minchin (2010—)
- Paul Merton (2010)
- Anita Rani (2011–12, 2014, 2016)
- Aled Jones (2011; 1 episode)
- Joe Crowley (2011–12; 2016, 8 episodes)
- Zoë Ball (2012–13, 2016; 5 episodes)
- Jake Humphrey (2012–13; 5 episodes)
- Sarah Millican (2013; 2 episodes)
- Julia Bradbury (2013; 4 episodes)
- Michael Ball (2013, 2016; 4 episodes)
- Tess Daly (2013; 1 episode)
- Fearne Cotton (2013, 2014, 2016; 7 episodes)
- Jo Brand (2014; 2 episodes)
- Vernon Kay (2014, 2016; 5 episodes)
- Richard Madeley (2014, 2016; 2 episodes)
- Eddie Mair (2014; 4 episodes)
- Richard Osman (2014–16; 3 episodes)
- Terry Wogan (2014; 1 episode)
- Nick Grimshaw (2014–16; 3 episodes)
- Mel Giedroyc (2014–15; 3 episodes)
- Denise Lewis (2015–16; 3 episodes)
- Shane Richie (2015; 2 episodes)
- James Martin (2015; 3 episodes)
- Dan Walker (2015; 2 episodes)
- Ore Oduba (2015; 1 episode)
- Richard Blackwood (2015; 2 episodes)
- Adil Ray (2015–16; 5 episodes)
- Chris Evans (2015; 1 episode)
- Warwick Davis (2015; 2 episodes)
- Ed Byrne (2015; 1 episode)
- Geri Halliwell (2015; 1 episode)
- Paul Hollywood (2015; 1 episode)
- Will Young (2015; 1 episode)
- Ricky Wilson (2015; 1 episode)
- Jasper Carrott (2015; 1 episode)
- Nina Wadia (2016; 2 episodes)
- Rory Bremner (2016; 1 episode)
- Anton du Beke (2016; 1 episode)
- Omid Djalili (2016; 1 episode)
- Jeremy Vine (2016; 2 episodes)
- Dermot O'Leary (2016; 2 episodes)
- Konnie Huq (2016; 1 episode)
- Greg James (2016; 1 episode)
- Craig Charles (2016; 1 episode)
The One Show: Best of Britain presenters
Louise Minchin | 2010–14 |
Matt Allwright |
Reporters
Current
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Former
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Controversies
Carol Thatcher
Carol Thatcher did not have her short term contract as a One Show roving reporter renewed after the BBC refused to accept her apology following an allegedly racist comment made in January 2009 following filming. It was made during a private conversation between her, presenter Adrian Chiles and guest, comedian Jo Brand, but the comment was subsequently reported to BBC staff. Thatcher argued that the comment had been meant in jest, and that she considered the way the incident had been handled to be a breach of trust, for which she expected an apology from the BBC.[99]
Dog trainer
According to the Daily Mail, the BBC received hundreds of complaints over the methods of a dog trainer featured several times on the show in September 2011, after he appeared to be exclusively using confrontational techniques in an attempt to fix a problem of food guarding in a Jack Russell Terrier called Roxy. Amid conflicting accounts about how he came to be booked for the show and what qualifications or experience he had, the show stated they had no plans to repeat the feature, having previously attempted to address complaints with clips of the trainer using other techniques. The charity RSPCA investigated several complaints over the segment.[100][101]
Jeremy Clarkson
On 30 November 2011, over 21,000 complaints were received because Jeremy Clarkson made two allegedly offensive comments on the show, one in relation to the recent public sector strikes, and another on suicide. The One Show apologised for the suicide comment.[citation needed] The incident registered 763 complaints to regulator OFCOM, the third highest recorded in 2011.[102]
Jimmy Carr
Two jokes told by comedian Jimmy Carr on the 4 November 2011 episode were referred to regulator OFCOM for investigation regarding their potentially discriminatory nature.[103] The jokes were found to be in breach of their broadcasting code, leading the BBC to alter its existing arrangements for ensuring guests do not swear or use offensive language, to also explicitly discourage jokes made at the expense of minorities.[104]
Paul O'Grady
The BBC received complaints that while being interviewed in January 2014 about the issue of benefit reform, the Labour Party supporter and television presenter Paul O'Grady was not adequately challenged on his views, described as forthright in their condemnation of the Channel 4 documentary, Benefits Street. The BBC responded by arguing that a variety of opinions had been heard, and that balance need not be addressed simply through a single programme.[105]
Rita Ora
Singer Rita Ora generated hundreds of complaints to the BBC over her choice of clothing for a 6 January 2015 appearance on the show, in which she wore a trouser suit with nothing underneath the jacket, the fit of which exposed her full cleavage. The BBC defended her clothing as being broadly in line with most viewers' expectations of a pop star's choice of attire, while also making clear it would have requested a more modest outfit had she consulted with them first.[106]
Linking between programmes
Usually, the presenters would say goodbye at the end of the show and link into regular trailers and continuity announcements. However, on some occasions such as Eastenders' "Who Killed Lucy Beale?" finale and Children in Need, they would link between programmes due to the fact they have a countdown and it would take too long to run an ident.
References
- ^ BBC One - The One Show - Next on
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- ^ Brown, Maggie (11 December 2006). "Salmon's leap of faith". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 February 2014.
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- ^ Radio Times; 7 July 2007, pp. 10-11
- ^ 'The One Show' adds some Klass Digital Spy, 21 June 2007
- ^ Myleene gives birth to baby girl BBC News, 16 August 2007
- ^ "BBC1 axes Real Story for One Show". Digital Spy. 17 November 2006. Retrieved 4 April 2007.
- ^ "BBC axes Holiday after 37 years". Digital Spy. 27 November 2006. Retrieved 4 April 2007.
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- ^ a b BBC confirms Bleakley 'One Show' exit Digital Spy, 8 July 2010
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- ^ Plunkett, John (19 November 2010). "Jason Manford quits BBC's One Show". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
- ^ "BBC - Blogs - About the BBC - The (West) One Show". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
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- ^ "10/07/2015, The One Show - BBC One". BBC. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
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- ^ "Michael Palin and Barry Cryer to pay tribute to Ronnie Corbett on The One Show". Radio Times. 31 March 2016. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
- ^ BBC's The One Show taken off air by fire alarm BBC News, 24 February 2011
- ^ "What's new - BARB". Barb.co.uk. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
- ^ "'The One Show' drowns in Wimbledon rain". Digital Spy. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
- ^ David Stephenson. "2 million turned off by Chris Evans on One Show". Express.co.uk. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
- ^ "BARB Top 30". BARB. Retrieved 17 February 2013.
- ^ "The One Show Team". The One Show. BBC. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
- ^ a b "BBC One - The One Show, 07/09/2007". BBC. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
- ^ BBC http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05p5k3f.
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External links
- The One Show at BBC Online
- The One Show at IMDb
- The One Show The TV Room +