Broadcast (magazine)

UK TV and radio industry magazine

Broadcast
EditorChris Curtis
CategoriesMedia and television
FrequencyMonthly
Circulation6,383 (Jan–Dec 2012)[1]
Founded1973; 51 years ago (1973)
CompanyMedia Business Insight
CountryUnited Kingdom
Based inLondon
LanguageEnglish
WebsiteBroadcastNow.co.uk
OCLC1043120303

Broadcast is a monthly magazine for the United Kingdom television and radio industry, owned by Media Business Insight.

History

Broadcast was started in 1973 by Rod Allen, who went on to work at LWT, HTV and HarperCollinsInteractive. He was most recently head of the Department of Journalism at City University, London, until he retired in 2006.

Description

The magazine covers a wide range of news and issues affecting the professional broadcast market in the UK. It has regular monthly sections covering news, commissioning, facilities, analysis, opinion, interview, platforms, production and ratings. Broadcast also often has a special feature covering an issue relevant to the industry. It is owned by Media Business Insight, a publishing, events and information business that also includes Screen International.

Notable former staff

Awards

Since 1996 the magazine has conferred the annual Broadcast Awards, in a ceremony held at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London, to recognise and reward excellence in and around the UK television programming industry. Additionally, each June since 2005, the magazine has held the annual Broadcast Digital Channel Awards specifically for the digital TV industry, recognising and rewarding innovation, creativity and commercial success.

In 2019 the Broadcast Tech Innovation Awards were instituted to celebrate the exceptional teams behind the most outstanding broadcast productions of the year, and 2021 saw the inaugural Broadcast Sport Awards.

Broadcast Awards

2024 nominations[2] and winners[3][4][5]

29th annual awards: 8 February 2024 - Host: Sue Perkins[6]
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Current Affairs Programme
  • A Kind of Spark (BBC)
    • I Am Your Mother (Star Wars: Visions Volume 2) (Disney+)
    • Lloyd of the Flies (CITV)
    • Newsround Special: Ukraine - The Children's Story (BBC)
    • Operation Ouch! Let's Talk About Cancer (CBBC)
    • The Rubbish World of Dave Spud (CITV)
  • Russell Brand: In Plain Sight (Channel 4)
    • Inside the Iranian Uprising (BBC)
    • Putin vs The West (BBC)
    • The Crossing (ITV1)
    • Under Poisoned Skies (BBC News Arabic)
    • Undercover Hospital: Patients at Risk (BBC)
Best Daytime Programme Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series
  • Lyra (Channel 4)
    • London Bridge: Facing Terror (Channel 4)
    • Panorama Mariupol: The People's Story (BBC)
    • Scandalous: Phone Hacking on Trial (BBC)
    • Stranger In My Family (BBC)
    • This World: The Shamima Begum Story (BBC)
Best Drama Series or Serial Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme
  • I Kissed A Boy (BBC)
    • Married at First Sight UK (E4)
    • Rolf Harris: Hiding in Plain Sight (ITVX)
    • Sexsomnia: Case Closed? (BBC)
    • Spike Milligan: The Unseen Archive (Sky Arts)
    • The Ice Cream Wars (BBC Scotland)
Best Music Programme Best News Programme Best Original Programme
Best Popular Factual Programme Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • 123 Number Squad! (Sky kids)
    • Pip and Posy (Milkshake! and Sky Kids)
    • Pop Paper City (Milkshake!)
    • Roots & Fruits (CBeebies)
    • The Makery (Sky Kids)
    • What's In Your Bag? (CBeebies)
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Specialist Factual Programme Best Sports Programme
  • Inside Our Autistic Minds (BBC)
    • Anorexic (Channel 5)
    • Head On: Rugby, Dementia and Me (BBC)
    • How The Holocaust Began (BBC)
    • The Holy Land and Us: Our Untold Stories (BBC)
    • Windrush: Portraits of a Generation (BBC)
International Programme Sales Best Post-Production House Emerging Indie Of The Year
  • Dreaming Whilst Black
    • Ancient Egypt By Train
    • Planet Sex with Cara Delevinge
    • Rogue Heroes
    • The Elon Musk Show
    • Wreck
  • runVT
    • dock10
    • Gorilla Post Production
    • Halo
    • Sky Post Production
    • Splice Post
  • Curious Films
    • Mindhouse Productions
    • Motive Pictures
    • Wonderhood Studios
Best Independent Production Company Channel Of The Year Special Recognition Award
  • Martin Lewis
TV Moment of the Year
  • Succession (Logan Roy's death)
    • Beckham (David queries Victoria claiming she's from a working-class family)
    • Eurovision Song Contest (Former Eurovision contestants in Liverpool & Ukraine join for a performance of You'll Never Walk Alone)
    • Happy Valley (Catherine caught Clare in a lie)
    • The Bear (S2 takes a stressful family Christmas to the next level)
    • The Piano (Blind & Neurodiverse Lucy stunning commuters in Leeds railway station)

2023 nominations[7] and winners[8][9][10]

28th annual awards presented: 8 February 2023 – Host: Sue Perkins[11]
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
  • Robin Robin (Netflix)
    • Efaciwîs (Evacuees) (S4C)
    • FYI Investigates "Escape From Ukraine" (Sky Kids and Sky News)
    • Gym Stars (CBBC)
    • My Life: Dancing Queen (CBBC)
    • Shaun the Sheep: The Flight Before Christmas (BBC & Netflix)
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • Jimmy Savile: A British Horror Story (Netflix)
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
  • The Whistleblowers: Inside the UN (BBC Two)
    • Afghanistan: No Country for Women (ITV1)
    • Fearless: The Women Fighting Putin (ITV1)
    • Myanmar: The Forgotten Revolution (Channel 4)
    • Panorama: "SAS Death Squads Exposed: A British War Crime?"
    • Ukraine: Life Under Attack (Channel 4)
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • Halo Post
    • Dock 10
    • Fifty Fifty
    • Films at 59
    • Fitzrovia Post Production
    • Storm
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Specialist Factual Programme Best Sports Programme
International Programme Sales Emerging Indie of the Year Best Independent Production Company
  • Forest
    • Buzz 16
    • Honey Bee
    • Long Story TV
    • Mam Tor Productions
    • The Format Factory
Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award
TV Moment of the Year[12]

2022 nominations[13] and winners[14][15]

27th annual awards presented: 10 February 2022 – Host: Alex Horne and The Horne Section
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
  • My Life: I'm Leading the Dance (CBBC)
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • It's a Sin
    • Manhunt: The Night Stalker
    • Small Axe
    • Stephen
    • The Serpent
    • Time
Best Entertainment Programme Best Lockdown Programme Best Multichannel Programme
  • Surviving Covid (Channel 4)
    • Help (Channel 4)
    • I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here!
    • Kate Garraway: Finding Derek (ITV)
    • Pandemic 2020 (BBC Two)
    • Staged
Best Music Programme Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme
  • Krept and Konan: We Are England
Best Popular Factual Programme Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme
  • Halo Post
    • Envy
    • Fifty Fifty
    • Films at 59
    • Splice
    • The Edit
  • World According to Grandpa (Milkshake!)
    • Go Green with the Grimwades (Milkshake!)
    • Milo (Milkshake!)
    • Numberblocks (CBeebies)
    • Odo (Milkshake!)
    • Pip & Posy (Milkshake!)
Best Single Drama Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Specialist Factual Programme
  • Help
    • Boys (Sky Arts)
    • Danny Boy
    • I Am...: "I Am Victoria"
    • Roald & Beatrix: The Tail of the Curious Mouse
    • Romeo & Juliet (Sky Arts)
Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales Emerging Indie of the Year
  • Alex Rider
    • Death in Paradise
    • Inside Chernobyl with Ben Fogle
    • It's a Sin
    • Planet Defenders (CBBC)
  • Flicker Productions
    • Air TV
    • Cardiff Productions
    • Doc Hearts
    • Licklemor Productions
    • South Shore
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award
  • David Frank (Founder, RDF Media)
TV Moment of the Year

2021 nominations and winners[16][17]

26th annual awards presented: 27 May 2021 (live-streamed event) – Host: Claudia Winkleman
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
  • I Want to Change the World (Film4)
    • FYI Investigates – Brazil: Children Caught in the Crossfire (Sky Kids)
    • Jamie Johnson: "Outside the Box"
    • Operation Ouch!: "Virus Alert"
    • Our School
    • The Rubbish World of Dave Spud
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • For Sama
    • Belsen: Our Story (BBC Two)
    • Exposure: "In Cold Blood"
    • Italy's Frontline: A Doctor's Diary (BBC Two)
    • The Talk (Channel 4)
    • Undercover with the Clerics: Iraq's Secret Sex Trade (BBC News Arabic)
Best Entertainment Programme Best Lockdown Programme –
Entertainment, Comedy and Scripted
Best Multichannel Programme
Best Lockdown Programme –
News, Documentaries and Factual
Best Lockdown Programme –
Sport and Live
Best Lockdown Programme –
Factual Entertainment, Popular Factual & Kids
  • Dim Ysgol: Maesincla (S4C)
    • Good Morning Britain
    • Hospital Special: Fighting COVID-19 (BBC Two)
    • Imagine: "This House is Full of Music"
    • Old, Alone & Stuck at Home (Channel 4)
    • The Talk (Channel 4)[a]
Best Music Programme Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme
Best Popular Factual Programme Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme
  • Fifty Fifty
    • Dock 10
    • Films at 59
    • Fitzrovia Post
    • Halo Post
    • The Edit
  • JoJo & Gran Gran: "It's Time To Go To The Hairdresser's"
    • Let's Go For A Walk: "Wind Sounds and Sandcastles Walk" (CBeebies)
    • Molly and Mack: "The Best Christmas Ever"
    • The Adventures of Paddington (Nick Jr.)
    • The Snail and the Whale
    • Waffle the Wonder Dog: "Waffle is a Listening Dog"
Best Single Drama Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Specialist Factual Programme
Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales Emerging Indie of the Year
  • Label1
    • Dancing Ledge Productions[a]
    • Electric Robin
    • Monster Films
    • Two Rivers Media
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award

2020 nominations and winners[18][19]

25th annual awards presented: 5 February 2020 – Host: Harry Hill
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
  • Leaving Care (CBBC)
    • FYI (Sky News)
    • Horrible Histories
    • Jamie Johnson: "Phoenix Reunited"
    • The A List (BBC iPlayer)
    • The Athena (Sky Kids)
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • The Virtues
    • A Confession
    • Chernobyl
    • Peaky Blinders
    • The Cry
    • Top Boy
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • Dock10
    • Envy
    • Films at 59
    • Halo Post
    • Molinare TV & Film
    • Splice
  • Brexit: The Uncivil War
    • 8 Days: To the Moon and Back (BBC Two)
    • Black Mirror: Bandersnatch
    • Doing Money
    • I Am Kirsty
    • The Left Behind (BBC Three)
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Specialist Factual Programm Best Sports Programme
  • The Interrogation of Tony Martin (Channel 4)
    • 100 Vaginas (Channel 4)
    • Jade: The Reality Star Who Changed Britain (Channel 4)
    • Our Planet
    • Surgeons: At the Edge of Life (BBC Two)
    • The Planets
International Programme Sales Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year
Special Recognition Award
TV Moment of the Year
  • Winner: Chernobyl (Tense countdown as conscripts have 90 seconds to throw radioactive granite into the reactor's core)
    • Bros: After the Screaming Stops (Luke and Matt Goss debate the danger of conkers)
    • Fleabag (Fleabag and the ‘hot priest’ get up close and personal in the confession box)
    • Leaving Neverland (Abuse victim James Safechuck reveals the ‘engagement ring’ Michael Jackson bought him for a mock wedding)
    • Line of Duty (DCS Carmichael puts Ted through the wringer about his murky past in a lengthy grilling in the interrogation room)
    • Lorraine (‘What's the point of that?’: Lorraine Kelly lashes out at Jennifer Arcuri)
    • Love Island (‘I was coming back to tell you that I love you’: Amy's heartbreak as Curtis confesses his feelings for Jourdan)
    • Newsnight Special: "Prince Andrew & the Epstein Scandal" (Prince Andrew reveals an unlikely alibi location: Pizza Express in Woking)
    • Succession (‘L to the OG’: Kendall becomes KenWA as he delivers a rap)
    • This Time with Alan Partridge (Alan Partridge meets his Irish doppelganger... who proceeds to sing a rousing rebel song)
    • The Virtues (Joseph confronts his abuser)
    • Years and Years (“It's our fault. This is the world we built”: Muriel Deacon delivers a bleak but powerful monologue that spawns a hundred protest banners)

2019 nominations and winners[20][21]

24th annual awards presented: 6 February 2019 – Host: Harry Hill
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
  • My Life: Locked in Boy (CBBC)
    • Deadly Dinosaurs
    • Free Rein – series 2
    • Horrible Histories – series 7
    • Jamie Johnson
    • Last Commanders (CBBC)
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • Prison (Channel 4)
    • 24 Hours in Police Custody – series 6
    • Drugsland (BBC Three)
    • Hospital – series 3 (BBC Two)
    • Life and Death Row
    • The Detectives: Murder on the Streets
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
  • Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway (series 15)
    • Celebrity Hunted
    • Love Island (series 4)
    • Strictly Come Dancing (series 15)
    • Taskmaster (series 7)
    • The Big Narstie Show
  • Killed by My Debt
    • Drugsland (BBC Three)
    • Love Island (series 4)
    • Taskmaster (series 7)
    • This Country
    • Valley Cops (BBC Three)
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
  • Married to a Paedophile (Channel 4)
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • Halo Post
    • Dock10
    • Encore
    • Fifty Fifty
    • Films at 59
    • Molinare
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Specialist Factual Programm Best Sports Programme
International Programme Sales Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year
  • All Together Now
    • Abandoned Engineering (Yesterday)
    • Britannia
    • Catastrophe
    • Gunpowder
    • Liar
Special Recognition Award
TV Moment of the Year

Winner: Killing Eve (Villanelle breaks into Eve's kitchen)

  • Nominations: Bodyguard (David Budd talks down a suicide bomber on a train)
  • Taskmaster (In the ‘creepiest thing’ prize task, Rhod Gilbert hides in Greg Davies' wardrobe and spies on him while he sleeps)
  • Inside No. 9 (live episode repeatedly breaks down as ghosts take over)
  • Would I Lie to You (Bob Mortimer convinces David Mitchell that Chris Rea taught him to crack an egg in the bath)
  • 24 Hours in Police Custody (Corrupt copper is handcuffed)
  • Carpool Karaoke (Paul McCartney surprises Liverpool pub with a live gig)
  • Michael Palin in North Korea (Palin wakes to the public broadcast of ‘Brian Eno-esque’ music across the city)
  • Love Island (Dani Dyer is shown video of her boyfriend with his ex)
  • Dynasties (Penguins get stuck in an ice ravine)

2018 nominations and winners[22][23]

23rd annual awards presented: 7 February 2018 – Host: Jonathan Ross
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
  • Horrible Histories: "Monstrous musicians"
    • Danger Mouse
    • Free Rein
    • My Life: New Boys in Town (CBBC)
    • Revolting Rhymes
    • The Zoo
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • Rio Ferdinand: Being Mum & Dad (BBC One)
  • Three Girls
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
  • Old People's Home for 4 Year Olds (Channel 4)
    • The Accused (Channel 5)
    • Mutiny (Channel 4)
    • The Real Full Monty (ITV)
    • The Trial: A Murder in the Family
    • This Time Next Year
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • Films at 59
    • Dock10
    • Envy
    • Halo Post Production
    • Molinare TV & Film
    • Technicolor
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales
  • This Time Next Year
    • Diana, Our Mother: Her Life and Legacy
    • The Lie Detective (Channel 4)
    • National Treasure
    • Nightmare on Everest
    • Riviera
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award
TV Moment of the Year

Winner: BBC World News (Professor Robert Kelly’s live interview is gatecrashed by his kids)

2017 nominations and winners[24]

22nd annual awards presented: 01 February 2017 – Host: Jonathan Ross
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • Interview with a Murderer (Channel 4)
    • Abused: The Untold Story (BBC One)
    • Behind Closed Doors (BBC One)
    • How to Die: Simon's Choice (BBC Two)
    • The Murder of Sadie Hartley (ITV)
    • Swim the Channel (BBC Four)[a]
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • Envy
    • Dock10
    • Encore
    • Films at 59
    • Halo Post
    • Molinare TV & Film
  • Ellen (Channel 4)
    • A Midsummer Night's Dream
    • Reg
    • Sherlock: "The Abominable Bride"
    • The Go-Between
    • The Watchman (Channel 4)
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award
TV Moment of the Year

Winner: Planet Earth II (Racer Snakes vs. Iguanas)

2016 nominations and winners[25][26]

21st annual awards presented: 10 February 2016 – Host: Jonathan Ross
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • Doctor Foster
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
  • Dispatches: "Escape from ISIS"
    • Al Jazeera Investigates: "Inside Kenya's Death Squads"
    • BBC News at Ten: "Tunisia Terror Attack"
    • Dispatches: "Kids in Crisis"
    • Panorama: "To Walk Again"
    • Sky News: "Tunisia Terror Attack"
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • Halo Post Production
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales
  • Fortitude
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award
TV Moment of the Year

Winner: Japan v South Africa, Rugby World Cup – ITV Sport (Japan's last minute try defeats South Africa)

2015 nominations and winners[27][28][29]

20th annual awards presented: 4 February 2015 – Host: David Walliams
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • Storyville: Pussy Riot - A Punk Prayer
  • Happy Valley
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
  • Dispatches: "Nigeria's Hidden War"
    • Breadline Kids (Channel 4)
    • Dispatches: "Children on the Frontline"
    • Exposure: "Fashion Factories Undercover"
    • Israel–Gaza: War Without End (Channel 4)
    • Pakistan's Hidden Shame (Channel 4)
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award
Best Broadcast Award-winning programme of the past 20 years

Winner: The Office (Best Comedy Programme – 2003)

  • Nominations: Big Brother (Best New Programme – 2001)
  • Brass Eye Special (Best Comedy Programme – 2003)
  • Broadchurch (Best Drama Series – 2014)
  • Educating Yorkshire (Best Documentary Series – 2014)
  • Gavin & Stacey (Best Comedy Programme – 2009)
  • I'm Alan Partridge (Best Comedy Programme – 1999)
  • Life on Mars (Best Original Programme – 2007)
  • Man on Wire (Best Documentary Programme – 2010)
  • Who Do You Think You Are? (Best Popular Factual Programme – 2006)

2014 nominations and winners[30]

19th annual awards presented: 5 February 2014 – Host: Alexander Armstrong
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
  • Gogglebox
    • Insect Dissection: How Insects Work (BBC Four)
    • The Last Leg
    • The Plane Crash (Channel 4)
    • Playhouse Presents... "Psychobitches"
    • Plebs
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • Halo Post Production
    • Clear Cut Pictures
    • Encore
    • Envy Post Production
    • Films at 59
    • Splice TV
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award

2013 nominations and winners[31]

18th annual awards presented: 30 January 2013 – Host: Rob Brydon
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
  • Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished
    • Britain's Gay Footballers (BBC Three)
    • Dispatches: "Britain's Sex Gangs" (Channel 4)
    • ITV News: "The Forgotten Fallen?"
    • Panorama: "Homs: Journey into Hell"
    • Syria's Torture Machine (Channel 4)
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • My Murder (BBC Three)
    • A Mother's Son
    • Birdsong
    • Black Mirror: "The National Anthem"
    • Holy Flying Circus
    • Murder: "Joint Enterprise"
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award

2012 nominations and winners[32]

17th annual awards presented: 2 February 2012 – Host: Stephen Mangan
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
  • Downton Abbey
    • Any Human Heart
    • Mad Dogs
    • Misfits
    • The Crimson Petal and the White
    • The Hour
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
  • Our War (BBC Three)
    • Celebrity Juice
    • Dynamo: Magician Impossible
    • Getting On
    • Junior Doctors: Your Life in Their Hands
    • The Only Way Is Essex
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
  • The Trip
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award

2011 nominations and winners[33]

16th annual awards presented: 2 February 2011
Best Children's Programme Best Comedy Programme Best Daytime Programme
Best Documentary Programme Best Documentary Series Best Drama Series or Serial
Best Entertainment Programme Best Multichannel Programme Best Music Programme
Best News/Current Affairs Programme Best Original Programme Best Popular Factual Programme
Best Post Production House Best Pre-School Programme Best Single Drama
  • Clear Cut Pictures
    • Envy
    • Films at 59[a]
    • Halo Post
    • Molinare
    • Prime Focus
Best Soap/Continuing Drama Best Sports Programme International Programme Sales
Best Independent Production Company Channel of the Year Special Recognition Award

2001–2010 winners[30][34][35]

Best Children's Programme

Best Entertainment Programme

Best Daytime Programme

Best Music Programme

Best Documentary Series

Best Documentary Programme

  • 2010: Man on Wire
  • 2009: My Street (Channel 4)
  • 2008: Dispatches: "China's Stolen Children"
  • 2007: True Stories: Sisters in Law (More4)
  • 2006: The Real Sex Traffic
  • 2005: The Secret Policeman
  • 2004: Cutting Edge: "Bad Behaviour"

Best Comedy Programme

Best Multichannel Programme

Best Drama Series or Serial Programme

  • 2010: The Street
  • 2009: Criminal Justice
  • 2008: Skins
  • 2007: Bleak House
  • 2006: Doctor Who
  • 2005: Shameless
  • 2004: State of Play

Best News/Current Affairs Programme

Best Original Programme

  • 2010: Being Human
  • 2009: Gordon Ramsay: Cookalong Live
  • 2008: Fonejacker
  • 2007: Life on Mars
  • 2006: The Thick of It
  • 2005: Strictly Come Dancing
  • 2004: Wife Swap

Best Popular Factual Programme

Best Pre-School Programme

Best Soap or Continuing Drama

Best Single Drama

Best Sports Programme

Channel of the Year

International Programme Sales

Independent Production Company

  • 2010: Twofour
  • 2009: Talkback Thames
  • 2008: Company Pictures
  • 2007: Kudos Film and Television
  • 2006: RDF Media
  • 2005: Company Pictures
  • 2004: RDF Media
  • 2003: Ideal World
  • 2002: RDF
  • 2001: Lion Television

Post-Production House

  • 2010: Envy
  • 2009: Envy
  • 2008: Envy
  • 2007: Evolutions Television
  • 2006: The Farm
  • 2005: The Farm
  • 2004: The Farm
  • 2003: Blue Post Production
  • 2002: The Farm
  • 2001: The Farm

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Highly commended

References

  1. ^ "Business Magazines Circulation Certificate – Broadcast" (PDF). Audit Bureau of Circulations (UK). 30 June 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2014.
  2. ^ "Shortlist". Broadcast Awards. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  3. ^ "Winners". Broadcast Awards. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  4. ^ "BBC wins big at Broadcast Awards 2024". Broadcast. 8 February 2024. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  5. ^ "Broadcast supplement". edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  6. ^ "Broadcast Awards 2024 in pictures". Broadcast. 13 February 2024. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  7. ^ "Broadcast Awards 2023 shortlist revealed". Broadcast. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  8. ^ McHugh, Marian (8 February 2023). "BBC1 and Sister win big at Broadcast Awards 2023". Broadcast. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  9. ^ "Winners 2023". Broadcast Awards. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  10. ^ "Broadcast supplement". edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  11. ^ "Sue Perkins to host Broadcast Awards 2023". Broadcast. 17 January 2023. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  12. ^ "Timeline TV Moment of the Year shortlist revealed". Broadcast. 24 January 2023. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  13. ^ "Shortlist 2022". Broadcast Awards 2022. Retrieved 13 March 2022.
  14. ^ "Winners". Broadcast Awards 2022. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  15. ^ "Broadcast supplement 2022". edition.pagesuite.com. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  16. ^ "Broadcast supplement 2021". edition.pagesuite.com. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  17. ^ "Winners | Broadcast Awards 2021". Broadcast. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  18. ^ "Broadcast supplement 2020". edition.pagesuite.com. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  19. ^ "Winners | Broadcast Awards 2020". Broadcast. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  20. ^ "Broadcast supplement 2019". edition.pagesuite.com. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  21. ^ "Winners | Broadcast Awards 2019". Broadcast. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  22. ^ "Broadcast supplement 2018". edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  23. ^ "Broadcast Awards 2018 announces its winners". Digital Spy. 8 February 2018. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  24. ^ "Broadcast supplement 2017". edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  25. ^ "Broadcast supplement 2016". edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
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External links

  • Official website
  • Broadcast Awards
  • Broadcast Digital Awards
  • Broadcast Tech Innovation Awards
  • Broadcast Sport Awards