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{{short description|Television series}} |
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: ''This article is about the British television show. For the Canadian television show of the same name, see [[The Big Breakfast (Canada)]]. For the Australian television show of the same name, also known as "The Big Arvo", see [[The Big Arvo]].'' |
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{{about|the British television show}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2014}} |
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{{Use British English|date=January 2014}} |
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{{Infobox television |
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| image = Lock Keeper Cottages.jpg |
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| caption = [[Lock-keeper]]'s cottages, in [[Old Ford Lock]], [[Bow, London|Bow]], [[London Borough of Tower Hamlets|Tower Hamlets]] used as the studio for ''The Big Breakfast'' |
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| runtime = {{plainlist| |
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*120 minutes (Original series) |
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*150 minutes (Revival) |
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*300 minutes (''The Bigger Breakfast'') |
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*510 minutes (''The Biggest Breakfast Ever'') }} |
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| company = [[Planet 24]] (1992–2002)<br>Lifted Entertainment (2021–2022) |
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| creator = [[Charlie Parsons]] |
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| presenter = [[Mo Gilligan]]<br />[[AJ Odudu]] |
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| channel = [[Channel 4]] |
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| first_aired = {{Start date|1992|09|28|df=y}} |
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| last_aired = {{End date|2002|03|29|df=y}} |
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| first_aired2 = {{Start date|2021|09|10|df=y}} |
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| last_aired2 = {{End date|2022|09|03|df=y}} |
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| num_series = |
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| num_episodes = 2,486 |
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| country = United Kingdom |
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| language = English |
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| producer = |
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}} |
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'''''The Big Breakfast''''' is a British breakfast [[light entertainment]] television programme that was broadcast on [[Channel 4]] from 1992 to 2002, and as a revival from 2021 to 2022. The show had various presenters, starting with [[Chris Evans (presenter)|Chris Evans]] and [[Gaby Roslin]] at launch with the revival episodes presented by [[Mo Gilligan]] and [[AJ Odudu]]. |
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The programme was distinctive for broadcasting live from a real house (which had been [[lock-keeper]]s' cottages), commonly referred to as "The Big Breakfast House", or more simply, "The House", located on [[Fish Island, London|Fish Island]], in [[Bow, London|Bow]] in [[east London]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=Lockkeeper's+Cottages,+Old+Ford+Lock&sll=54.162434,-3.647461&sspn=12.526923,29.619141&ie=UTF8&ll=51.538244,-0.020471&spn=0.000811,0.001808&t=k&z=19&iwloc=A&om= |title=Lockkeeper's Cottages, Old Ford Lock |publisher=Google Maps |date=1 January 1970 |access-date=12 November 2012}}</ref> The original house on Fish Island in Bow has since been sold. |
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[[Image:Lock Keeper Cottages.jpg|thumb|Lockkeeper's Cottages, in Old Ford Lock, used as the studio for ''The Big Breakfast'']] |
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'''''The Big Breakfast''''' was a British light entertainment television show shown on [[Channel 4]] each weekday morning from [[28 September]] [[1992]] until [[29 March]] [[2002]]. In this time there were a total of 2482 shows produced. In the aftermath of [[September 11, 2001 attacks|11 September 2001 attacks]], ''The Big Breakfast'' was not shown from the [[September 12]] – [[September 14|14]], [[2001]]. ''The Big Breakfast'' was produced by [[Planet 24]], the production company co-owned by former [[Boomtown Rats|Boomtown Rat]] and [[Live Aid]] organiser, [[Bob Geldof]]. |
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The show was a mix of news, weather, interviews, audience phone-ins and general features, with a light tone which was in competition with the maturer [[GMTV]] and [[BBC Breakfast]] programmes.<ref>{{cite news|url= https://www.nytimes.com/1993/08/30/business/the-media-business-britain-s-zany-way-to-start-the-day.html?pagewanted=2&src=pm|title= THE MEDIA BUSINESS; Britain's Zany Way to Start the Day|work= The New York Times |date= 30 August 1993|access-date=12 November 2012 |first=Suzanne |last=Cassidy}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url= https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1993-09-30-9309300132-story.html|title=America's 'Zoo' Radio Inspires British TV Hit|last=Cassidy|first=Suzanne|date=30 September 1993|work=Chicago Tribune|access-date=12 November 2012}}</ref> |
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The programme, broadcast live from a set of former lockkeeper's cottages (now a private residence) in [[Bow, London|Bow]] in east [[London]],<sup>[http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=Lockkeeper's+Cottages,+Old+Ford+Lock&sll=54.162434,-3.647461&sspn=12.526923,29.619141&ie=UTF8&ll=51.538244,-0.020471&spn=0.000811,0.001808&t=k&z=19&iwloc=A&om=]</sup> was a colourful mixed format of news, weather, interviews, audience phone-in and features. The popularity of the show waxed and waned repeatedly over the nine-and-a-half years of its existence - its popularity being closely linked to the spontaneity and humour of the two main presenters at any given time. |
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==History== |
==History== |
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''The Big Breakfast'' was launched |
''The Big Breakfast'' was launched on 28 September 1992 to replace ''[[The Channel Four Daily]]'', which was Channel 4's unsuccessful first foray into the breakfast television market. The ''Daily'', which had focused on current affairs and news bulletins alongside bitesized magazine shows, a quiz show segment and a daily cartoon slot, had failed to attract enough viewers so Channel 4 opted to change direction and work towards a lighter style concentrating mainly on entertainment and humour<ref>{{cite news |last=Brown |first=Maggie |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/channel-4-breaching-its-remit-to-win-viewers-1495640.html |title=Channel 4 'breaching its remit to win viewers' |work=The Independent |date=5 March 1993 |access-date=12 November 2012 |location=London}}</ref> with news bulletins restricted to brief summaries every 20 minutes. |
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The |
The first two presenters were [[Chris Evans (presenter)|Chris Evans]] (from 1992 to 1994) and [[Gaby Roslin]] (1992 to 1996). At its height in 1993, viewing figures reached around two million per edition, and it was the highest rated UK breakfast television programme. Along with Evans and Roslin, [[Bob Geldof]] presented a short-lived political interview slot. His wife [[Paula Yates]] interviewed people whilst lying on a bed, and the puppet characters [[Zig and Zag (puppets)|Zig and Zag]] created morning mayhem in the bathroom with Evans in a slot called 'The Crunch'. |
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As part of his contract with ''The Big Breakfast'', Evans was committed to developing a new show for Channel 4. ''[[Don't Forget Your Toothbrush]]'' began in early 1994, and Evans cut his involvement with ''The Big Breakfast'' to three days a week, Tuesday to Thursday. ''[[Neighbours]]'' actor [[Mark Little (Australian actor)|Mark Little]] replaced Evans on Mondays and Fridays. When Evans left the show later that year, Little continued Thursdays, and Fridays while [[Paul Ross]] took over Mondays to Wednesdays. Richard Orford replaced Ross around Easter 1995 but was quickly dropped and exchanged with ''Down Your Doorstep'' presenter [[Keith Chegwin]]. In July 1995, the show reverted to using just one male presenter (Mark Little) throughout the week. Chegwin would cover for Little when he was on tour as a comedian or on holiday. |
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Evans started his own production company and moved onto other projects in 1994. He was replaced by former ''[[Neighbours]]'' star [[Mark Little (Australian actor)|Mark Little]]. Little and Roslin presented for two years before Roslin made way for [[Zoe Ball]] in 1996. Audience figures slipped a little after Evans left, and a little more after Roslin departed. Mark Little left shortly after and was replaced by [[Keith Chegwin]]. To stop the sliding viewing figures, an ill fated relaunch was given to the show, including the refurbished house at a cost of £2million, Ball and Chegwin were replaced by [[Rick Adams (television presenter)|Rick Adams]] and [[Sharron Davies]], two less accomplished hosts on the small screen. Viewing figures fell dramatically, losing its audience primarily to radio and ''[[GMTV]]''. Producers stopped the rot quickly, finding a winning partnership in [[Johnny Vaughan]] (who spent 1023.82 hours in front of the cameras) and [[Denise van Outen]]. Audience figures jumped back to their peak. Vaughan briefly presented also with [[Kelly Brook]] (who was largely unknown at the time) in 1999; however Brook's lack of experience in the field of presenting a TV show clearly showed and audience figures quickly dropped. As a result, Brook was sacked while on holiday from the show (she only found out about losing her job from reading the newspaper while on holiday){{Fact|date=February 2007}}. [[Liza Tarbuck]] then co-presented for a while but when she decided to leave after eighteen months, Van Outen returned. Viewing figures rose until the pair quit together in 2001. This turned out to be the death knell for the show as viewers did not warm to their replacements, [[Richard Bacon (television presenter)|Richard Bacon]], [[Paul Tonkinson]], [[Amanda Byram]] and [[Simon Fielder]]. |
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Roslin continued full-time until she made way for [[Zoe Ball]] in 1996. Audience figures dropped a little after Evans left, and a little further after Roslin departed. Mark Little left the programme in July 1996, following press reports that he and Ball had fallen out. Little was replaced by Keith Chegwin, who himself exited the programme in August 1996, just ahead of a relaunch. To stem the sliding viewing figures, the Big Breakfast house was refurbished at a cost of £2 million. New presenters [[Rick Adams (television presenter)|Rick Adams]] and [[Sharron Davies]] were brought in but viewing figures fell dramatically. Davies left the programme in early 1997, to be replaced by [[Denise van Outen]]. Van Outen had initially been brought in as part of the September 1996 relaunch as a weather presenter, before being given a role based at the house as the phone room presenter and holiday relief for Davies. In June 1997, [[Johnny Vaughan]] covered for Adams for a fortnight alongside Van Outen, the pair forging a successful on-screen partnership. Adams left the programme shortly afterwards and, in September 1997, the Vaughan and Van Outen partnership was made permanent. Audience figures stabilised and the duo fronted the programme together until Van Outen's departure on 1 January 1999 (a New Year's Day pre-record). [[Kelly Brook]] was installed as Vaughan's new co-presenter despite an internet campaign for the role to be awarded to [[Liza Tarbuck]], who had successfully covered for Van Outen in the summer of 1998. However, Brook struggled in the role and left the programme in early summer 1999. Liza Tarbuck, having again covered the co-presenter role alongside Vaughan prior to Brook's departure, was made permanent at the end of August 1999. She left the following summer and, following Vaughan's annual one-month summer break, Denise van Outen returned to co-host in September 2000 for Vaughan's final four months on the programme. Vaughan and Van Outen's final ''Big Breakfast'' was on 12 January 2001. |
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[[Mike McClean]] and [[Donna Air]] joined the show as it converted to a multi-presenter format. This format only lasted for a couple of months though, with the show reverting back to its original format for the final months, with Bacon and Byram as the main presenters before it last aired on 29 March 2002. The last programme included a twenty minute retrospective that included contributions from Evans, Roslin, Vaughan and Van Outen. Both Evans and Vaughan declared the cancelling of the show was a bad idea. The show ended with a tribute from the Princess of Wales before the last Friday song, which paid tribute to the success of the show and its ability to attract celebrities. |
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==Demise== |
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[[Mark Lamarr]], [[Keith Chegwin]], [[Paul Ross]], [[Jason Bradbury]] and Richard Bacon were "down your doorstep" outside broadcasters, often turning up live and unannounced at an unsuspecting viewer's house, while rooms within Lock Keeper's Cottages featured the zany aliens [[Zig and Zag (puppets)|Zig and Zag]] and video games guru Ben the Boffin. |
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The programme relaunched with a new logo and updated theme on 22 January 2001. The house had also been redecorated in more muted colours, echoing the ill-fated 1996 revamp. The programme moved to a lineup of three main presenters: [[Paul Tonkinson]], [[Amanda Byram]] and [[Donna Air]]. However, Tonkinson was dropped from the programme at the end of March 2001 and Air left not long after. The programme reverted to two main presenters once more, with Byram and [[Richard Bacon (broadcaster)|Richard Bacon]]. The living room, which had been repainted a dark red as part of the revamp, was changed to a bright yellow and pink design, while the main presenter chairs were also reinstalled in front of the living room's French windows. They replaced the bright-green sofa which had also been brought in as part of the revamp. The new logo was replaced with one more closely resembling the traditional ''Big Breakfast'' logo, albeit utilising a slightly different font. [[Mike McClean]] was given a role on the programme, as Down Your Doorstep presenter and cover for Bacon, most regularly on Fridays when Bacon would reprise his former Down Your Doorstep role alongside [[Johnny Vegas]]. During this time, a pilot<ref>{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Arqa6zlUHWk |title=The First 25 {{!}} 16th July 2024 {{!}} The Chris Moyles Show |date=2024-07-15 |last=The Chris Moyles Show On Radio X |access-date=2024-07-16 |via=YouTube}}</ref> episode was filmed on a Saturday with [[Chris Moyles]] and [[Dominic Byrne]] (reading the news), with [[Andy Goldstein]] doing links from Los Angeles. This pilot episode was shown to bosses at Channel 4, after which Moyles was offered the role but declined. |
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==Cancellation== |
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In December 2001, it was announced that ''The Big Breakfast'' was to be axed the following March. In the programme's final months, former cover presenter [[Lisa Rogers]] was given a role as an extra presenter while Zig and Zag returned for the final six weeks in their former slot, The Crunch, for which a new bathroom set was installed in the house. The final ''Big Breakfast'' aired on 29 March 2002 and included a retrospective that included contributions from Evans, Roslin, Vaughan and Van Outen. Both Evans and Vaughan declared the cancelling of the show a bad idea, but the show ended with a tribute from the [[Charles, Prince of Wales|Prince of Wales]] before the last ever Friday song. When the show finished, the house reverted to a private residence, now known as The Cottage.<ref>{{cite news|url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/1897300.stm |title= Toasting the end of The Big Breakfast |publisher= BBC |date= 29 March 2002|access-date=12 November 2012}}</ref> After renovation following a fire, it has also been used for a few television shows, including the one-off special edition of ''The Big Breakfast'', which aired in 2021. |
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In total, 2,481 episodes were broadcast during the original run. Episodes were broadcast every weekday morning from 28 September 1992 to 29 March 2002, with exception of 12–14 September 2001, when it was replaced with news coverage of [[September 11 attacks|the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States of America]], for a total of 2,477. In addition to this, four extra episodes were broadcast on Christmas Day 1994 and Christmas Eve 1995 (both of which fell on the weekend), and the evenings of New Year's Eve 1992 and 1999.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bufvc.ac.uk/tvandradio/c4pp|title=Channel 4 Press Packs 1982-2002|access-date=March 19, 2024|publisher=[[Learning on Screen - The British Universities and Colleges Film and Video Council|British Universities and Colleges Film and Video Council]]}}</ref> |
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On the night of December 31st 1999 a mammoth eight-hour live broadcast took place from Lock Keepers' Cottages to herald in the new century. ''The Biggest Breakfast Ever'' was hosted by Johnny Vaughan and Liza Tarbuck and featured many classic moments and 'best of' features. Even eight hours of airtime was not enough. The show's producers got Channel 4 to extend its broadcast time by half an hour to fit in the premiere of the competition "Wonga" (a large-scale version of [[Jenga]]). The winner of the game had been told to 'stop steadying the stack' on numerous occasions, but was still allowed to play and eventually won £100,000. It was a prize game that returned to the show many times in its final two years, but never again was anyone allowed to blatantly break the rules of the game. |
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==Innovations== |
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Owing to the nature of the filming, much of the crew could be seen on screen. This led to them getting nicknames, such as 'Sturdy Girl', (regularly asked to shake her head so that her hair would be hurled around whilst music played and the camera zoomed in and out). 'The Carpet Monster' was revealed in the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' Special to have been an extra, playing a deadly clown, in the [[Seventh Doctor]] story [[The Greatest Show in the Galaxy]]. |
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{{unreferenced section|date=April 2013}} |
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[[Mark Lamarr]], Keith Chegwin, Paul Ross, Richard Orford, Richard Bacon and Mike McClean were "down your doorstep" outside broadcasters, often turning up live and unannounced at an unsuspecting viewer's house, while rooms within the lock keepers' houses featured the puppets [[Zig and Zag (puppets)|Zig and Zag]] and video games guru Ben the Boffin. |
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The show's style, with hand-held cameras moving around all of the set, meant that many of the crew members could be seen on screen. This led to them getting nicknames, such as 'Sturdy Girl', who was regularly asked to shake her head so that her hair would be hurled around whilst music played and the camera zoomed in and out. |
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The show also used gimics such as live weddings to attract viewers. The first one was in 1993. This featured Jamie and Mandy from Catterick in North Yorkshire, who also returned after their honeymoon. |
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==Presenters== |
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A ''The Big Breakfast'' board game was released and also a fruit machine featuring popular games from the show. |
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{{Incomplete list|date=September 2023}} |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|+ Main anchors |
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|- |
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|[[AJ Odudu]] |
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|2021–2022 |
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|- |
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|[[Mo Gilligan]] |
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|2021–2022 |
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|- |
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|[[Amanda Byram]] |
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|2001–2002 |
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|- |
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|[[Paul Tonkinson]] |
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|2001–2002 |
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|- |
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|[[Mike McClean]] |
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|2000–2002 |
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|- |
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|[[Donna Air]] |
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|2000–2002 |
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|- |
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|[[Lisa Rogers]] |
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|2000–2002 |
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|- |
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|[[Liza Tarbuck]] |
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|1999–2000 |
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|- |
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|[[Richard Bacon (broadcaster)|Richard Bacon]] |
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|1999–2002 |
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|- |
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|[[Kelly Brook]] |
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|1999 |
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|- |
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|[[Denise van Outen]] |
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|1997–2001 <!-- Please do not add 2022 to this date range; Van Outen appeared as a guest in 2022, not as a presenter --> |
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|- |
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|[[Johnny Vaughan]] |
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|1997–2001 |
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|- |
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|[[Sharron Davies]] |
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|1996–1997 |
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|- |
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|[[Rick Adams (television presenter)|Rick Adams]] |
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|1996–1997 |
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|- |
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|[[Zoe Ball]] |
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|1996 |
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|- |
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|[[Keith Chegwin]] |
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| 1995–1996 |
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|- |
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|[[Mark Little (Australian actor)|Mark Little]] |
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|1994–1996 |
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|- |
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|[[Paul Ross]] |
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|1994–1995 |
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|- |
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|[[Gaby Roslin]] |
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|1992–1996 |
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|- |
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|[[Chris Evans (presenter)|Chris Evans]] |
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|1992–1994 |
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|} |
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===Co-presenters=== |
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''[[RI:SE]]'' eventually replaced ''The Big Breakfast'' as [[Channel 4]]'s morning programme, following its axing on the 29th of March 2002, although there was some time between ''The Big Breakfast'' ending and ''RI:SE'' beginning. ''RI:SE'' went on to take increasingly low ratings, and despite undergoing a revamp, was shortly axed.[[ Channel 4]] has since not had a studio-based morning programme per se, although a [[Dermot O'Leary]] fronted show, ''[[Morning Glory (TV series)|Morning Glory]]'', was given a short run in early 2006 but not picked up. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|+ On the Bed Interviewer |
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|- |
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|[[Judi Love]] |
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|2021–2022 |
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|- |
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|[[Johnny Vegas]] |
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|2001–2002 |
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|- |
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|[[Sara Cox]] |
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|1998–2000 |
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|- |
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|[[Vanessa Feltz]] |
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|1996–1998 |
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|- |
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|[[Paul O'Grady]] (as Lily Savage) |
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|1995–1996 |
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|- |
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|[[Paula Yates]] |
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|1992–1995 |
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|} |
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===Newsreaders=== |
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Channel 4 have since replaced ''Morning Glory'' with ''[[Freshly Squeezed]]'', which was recommissioned in August 2007 after ''Big Brother 8''. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|+ Main anchor |
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|- |
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|[[Phil Gayle]] |
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|1997–2000, 2002, 2021–2022 |
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|- |
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|[[Jasmine Lowson]] |
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|2000–2002 |
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|- |
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|Peter Smith |
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|1992–1996 |
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|} |
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==Spin-offs and related programming== |
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==Main Presenters== |
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===''The Big Breakfast'' and ''The Bigger Breakfast''=== |
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* [[Chris Evans (presenter)|Chris Evans]] 1992-1994 |
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Between 1997 and 2000, during most nationally recognised UK school holiday periods, ''The Big Breakfast'' would run beyond its typical 9{{nbsp}}am finish to provide continuity into and out of unrelated shows aimed primarily towards children. This would last throughout the morning, usually until around midday. Although typically presented to the viewer as simply a programme on Channel 4, most of ''The Bigger Breakfast'' is perhaps better classified as an informal style of in-vision [[continuity (broadcasting)|continuity]]. |
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* [[Gaby Roslin]] 1992-1996 |
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* [[Keith Chegwin]] 1995-1996 |
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* [[Mark Little (Australian actor)|Mark Little]] 1994-1996 |
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* [[Paul Ross]] 1994-1995 |
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* [[Richard Orford]] 1995/1996/1997 |
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* [[Zoe Ball]] 1996 |
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* [[Rick Adams]] 1996-1997 |
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* [[Sharron Davies]] 1996-1997 |
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* [[Johnny Vaughan]] 1997-2001 |
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* [[Denise Van Outen]] 1997-1998 / 2000-2001 |
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* [[Kelly Brook]] 1999 |
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* [[Liza Tarbuck]] 1999-2000 |
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* [[Amanda Byram]] 2001-2002 |
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* [[Richard Bacon (television presenter)|Richard Bacon]] 2001-2002 |
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* [[Paul Tonkinson]] 2001 |
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* [[Donna Air]] 2001 |
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* [[Mike Mclean]] 2001-2002 |
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* [[Lisa Rogers]] 2001-2002 |
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The strand also acted as an [[umbrella brand]] for the programming which it linked to, by use of ''Big Breakfast'' style break-bumpers and Digital On-Screen Graphics.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/series/28289 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071221180544/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/series/28289 |url-status=dead |archive-date=21 December 2007 |title=BFI | Film & TV Database | The BIGGER BREAKFAST |publisher=Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk |access-date=12 November 2012}}</ref> The expanded format always featured the regular content of The Big Breakfast from 7{{nbsp}}am to 9{{nbsp}}am. The first run of ''The Bigger Breakfast'' during the summer of 1997 was titled as such all the way from its 7{{nbsp}}am start, presented throughout by Richard Orford and Denise van Outen. Future editions would see slight separations made from the 7{{nbsp}}am to 9{{nbsp}}am content, by way of this portion of the show being branded and scheduled as'' The Big Breakfast'', with all content after 9{{nbsp}}am taking on the expanded Bigger Breakfast name. After a while, a further distinction was made by using a different set of presenters from that of ''The Big Breakfast''. Presenters of ''The Bigger Breakfast'' included [[Josie D'Arby]], [[Ben Shephard]], [[Melanie Sykes]] and [[Dermot O'Leary]]. |
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==Features Presenters== |
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* [[Bob Geldof]] 1992 Interviewer |
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* [[Paula Yates]] 1992-1995 On the bed Interviewer |
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* [[Zig and Zag (puppets)|Zig & Zag]] 1992-1998 / 2002 The Crunch / Alien Alarm |
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* [[Ben The Boffin]] 1992-1994 Master Blaster |
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* [[Lily Savage]] 1995-1996 On the bed Interviwer |
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* [[Vanessa Feltz]] 1996-1998 On the bed Interviewer |
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Programming was primarily composed of reruns of Channel 4 shows and US imports. The line-up changed frequently. The list below is of some of series featured on ''The Big Breakfast and the Bigger Breakfast'' over the years: |
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===News=== |
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{{Div col|colwidth=15em}} |
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*[[Peter Smith (newsreader)|Peter Smith]] 1992-1996 |
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*''[[Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' |
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*[[Phil Gayle]] 1996-2000 |
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*[[ |
*''[[Babylon 5]]'' |
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*''[[Batman (TV series)|Batman]]'' |
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*''[[Bewitched]]'' |
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*''[[Biker Mice from Mars]]'' |
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*''[[Boy Meets World]]'' |
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*''[[Bug Juice]]'' |
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*''[[California Dreams]]'' |
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*''[[CatDog]]'' |
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*''[[City Guys]]'' |
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*''[[The Crystal Maze]]'' |
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*''[[Dennis the Menace (1986 TV series)|Dennis]]'' |
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*''[[Earthworm Jim (TV series)|Earthworm Jim]]'' |
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*''[[Eerie Indiana]]'' |
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*''[[Fantastic Four (1994 TV series)|Fantastic Four]]'' |
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*''[[Inspector Gadget (1983 TV series)|Inspector Gadget]]'' |
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*''[[Hang Time (TV series)|Hang Time]]'' |
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*''[[Hangin' with Mr. Cooper]]'' |
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*''[[Johnny Bravo]]'' |
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*''[[Madison (TV series)|Madison]]'' |
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*''[[Moesha]]'' |
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*''[[The Monkees (TV series)|The Monkees]]'' |
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*''[[Mr. Bogus]]'' |
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*''[[Popworld|Planet Pop]]''<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/series/29937 |archive-url=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20100122135646/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/series/29937 |url-status=dead |archive-date=22 January 2010 |title=BFI | Film & TV Database | PLANET POP |publisher=Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk |access-date=9 September 2013 }}</ref> |
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*''[[Pugwall's Summer]]'' |
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*''[[Renford Rejects]]'' |
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*''[[Rocko's Modern Life]]'' |
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*''[[The Adventures of Sam & Max: Freelance Police|Sam & Max]]'' |
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*''[[Saved by the Bell]]'' |
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*''[[Sister, Sister (TV series)|Sister Sister]]'' |
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*''[[Sonic the Hedgehog (TV series)|Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' |
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*''[[The Secret World of Alex Mack]]'' |
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{{Div col end}} |
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''The Bigger Breakfast'' was discontinued after Christmas holidays in 2000. The block of programming provided within ''The Bigger Breakfast'' was retained, with Channel 4's youth strand [[T4 (Channel 4)|T4]] taking over the continuity role. |
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==Games and features== |
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===Pun Down=== |
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A look at the best puns in the headlines of that day's newspapers, especially popular in the [[Johnny Vaughan]] era. On Fridays this became the 'Pun of the Week' when the best pun from the whole weeks newspapers was revealed. |
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===''Snap''=== |
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Snap Cackle Pop, a regular and recurring feature throughout the history of ''The Big Breakfast'', was briefly retitled as simply Snap, in 1997. As well as continuing as a short, daily entertainment news feature within ''The Big Breakfast'', ''Snap'' also became a show in its own right. Airing once weekly at 6.00pm on Channel 4, the half hour show was a light hearted round-up of recent news stories concerning popular entertainment in the UK. |
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Presented by Denise van Outen, the show was intentionally recognisable as being closely related to ''The Big Breakfast'', from which it originated and continued to be part of. ''Snap'' contained a number of elements synonymous with ''The Big Breakfast'', such as using the very same boudoir set and on-the-bed interviewing of guests. However, care was generally taken not to alienate viewers who were not so familiar with ''The Big Breakfast''. |
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===The Big Breakfast End of the Year Show 1992=== |
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Three months after first appearing, Chris Evans, Gaby Roslin and Paula Yates hosted a live edition of the show, seeing in the new year of 1993. [[Zsa Zsa Gabor]] featured as a special guest. |
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===The Biggest Breakfast Ever=== |
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On 1 January 2000, ''The Big Breakfast'' aired an extended [[New Year's Day]] edition entitled ''The Biggest Breakfast Ever'', celebrating the arrival of the year 2000. Written by John Mann and Ged Parsons and broadcasting from 12:30 a.m. to just past 9:00 a.m., the special featured various retrospective features and the competition "Owe? No You Don't!"—where contestants competed in classic ''Big Breakfast'' games (concluding with the new game "Wonga") for a chance to have their debts paid off. |
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===Talking Bowlocks=== |
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In January 2021, members of ''The Big Breakfast'' production team launched a podcast in which they discussed their experiences working on the series.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://podcast24.co.uk/podcasts/talking-bowlocks|title=Talking Bowlocks|publisher=Podcast24.co.uk}}</ref> |
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==Revival== |
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===2021 "Black to Front Day" special=== |
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In September 2021, it was announced that the show would return for a one-off event known as "Black to Front Day", which would feature and celebrate the talents of those with black heritage. The show was presented by [[Mo Gilligan]] and [[AJ Odudu]] and had many guests from African American and Black heritages in celebration. The show was broadcast once again from the show's original home at Lock Keepers' Cottages.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2021-09-10 |title=Channel 4: Big Breakfast returns for Black To Front day |language=en-GB |work=BBC News |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-58506168 |access-date=2023-07-02}}</ref> |
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===2022 relaunch=== |
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On 26 May 2022 it was confirmed that the series would return part time for four Saturdays in a two and a half hour slot from 13 August 2022, with Gilligan and Odudu again returning to host from a new house, revealed to be in [[Potters Bar]], [[Hertfordshire]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://metro.co.uk/2022/05/26/the-big-breakfast-officially-returning-with-aj-odudu-and-mo-gilligan-16716157/|title=The Big Breakfast officially returning with AJ Odudu and Mo Gilligan|last=Miller|first=Adam|date=26 May 2022|work=Metro}}</ref> Denise van Outen returned as a guest to "hand over the reins" of the show to the two new presenters.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/denise-van-outen-appear-big-27682191|title=Denise van Outen to appear on the Big Breakfast to hand over presenting reins|last=Johnson|first=Alan|date=8 August 2022|work=[[Daily Mirror]]}}</ref> In June 2023, a Channel 4 spokesman announced that there were no plans to commission any further episodes, but did not rule out the possibility of it returning at some point in the future.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.express.co.uk/showbiz/tv-radio/1782343/Channel-4-the-big-breakfast-reboot-axed|title=Channel 4 scraps The Big Breakfast reboot after one series over 'bloodbath' spending cuts|last=Corbin|first=Tianna|date=19 June 2023|work=[[Daily Express]]}}</ref> |
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==Features== |
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===Question About the Clip=== |
===Question About the Clip=== |
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Before most advertisement breaks a clip from an upcoming TV show or movie would be shown, a question being asked by one of the hosts about it; the answer would be revealed after the advert break, along with details of the show or film. |
Before most advertisement breaks a clip from an upcoming TV show or movie would be shown, a question being asked by one of the hosts about it; the answer would be revealed after the advert break, along with details of the show or film. This feature would result in the production team chorusing "Don't phone, it's just for fun!" which was a Chris Evans creation, initially used on his radio shows before he shot to fame on ''The Big Breakfast''. |
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===Question of the Day=== |
===Question of the Day=== |
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A phone-in feature encouraging viewers to provide humorous answers throughout the morning to a pertinent (or occasionally inane) question. |
A phone-in feature encouraging viewers to provide humorous answers throughout the morning to a pertinent (or occasionally inane) question. At one point it was accompanied by a fanfare, apparently played on the trumpet by "little Ted" beneath the camera (in fact a member of the team waving a toy trumpet in shot). One morning's question was "What should the [[BBC]] do to improve ''[[EastEnders]]''?", and one viewer suggested adding [[Barbara Windsor]] to the cast; this actually occurred shortly afterwards. |
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===Super Hints=== |
===Super Hints=== |
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"Your indispensable guide to a ''better'' life!", this feature appeared during the early years of the show; in it celebrities would give various simple but useful hints for such issues as cleaning or keeping food fresh. |
"Your indispensable guide to a ''better'' life!", this feature appeared during the early years of the show; in it celebrities would give various simple but useful hints for such issues as cleaning or keeping food fresh.<ref name="independent1">{{cite news |first=Maggie |last=Brown |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/smiles-and-chaos-as-programme-focuses-on-launch-channel-4s-big-breakfast-starts-next-week-with-paula-yates-and-bob-geldof-the-attractions-maggie-brown-reports-1553141.html |title=Smiles and chaos as programme focuses on launch: Channel 4's Big Breakfast starts next week with Paula Yates and Bob Geldof the attractions |work=The Independent |date=23 September 1992 |access-date=9 September 2013 |location=London}}</ref> |
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===Streaky Bacon=== |
===Streaky Bacon=== |
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"Streaky Bacon" became a regular feature, in which Richard Bacon would get a member of the public out of their house to 'streak' along their street wearing nothing but bacon-covered underwear in order to win their weight in bacon from their local butcher. |
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===Vital Statistics=== |
===Vital Statistics=== |
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"Vital Statistics" was another common feature, particularly in the Johnny Vaughan era. These would often relate to a news story, a guest or a topic they had discussed, such as ''[[Doctor Who]]'' on their Doctor Who Special. |
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===On the Bed=== |
===On the Bed=== |
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A key feature for the first five years was the "On the Bed" interview. [[Paula Yates]] (then wife of Bob Geldof, whose company produced the show), and later [[Paul O'Grady]] (as [[Lily Savage]]) and [[Vanessa Feltz]] assumed the role of interviewer. One of the most infamous on-air moments was Paula Yates' open flirting during an interview with [[Michael Hutchence]] as a prelude to their affair. |
A key feature for the first five years was the "On the Bed" interview. [[Paula Yates]] (the then wife of Bob Geldof, whose company produced the show), and later [[Paul O'Grady]] (as [[Lily Savage]]) and [[Vanessa Feltz]] assumed the role of interviewer. One of the most infamous on-air moments was Paula Yates' open flirting during an interview with [[Michael Hutchence]] as a prelude to their affair. |
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===More Tea, Vicar=== |
===More Tea, Vicar=== |
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A repeating feature in the |
A repeating feature in the Vaughan and Van Outen era, in which an erratically filmed, sped up video clip of a line of tea cups was shown to a call-in viewer. Vaughan, dressed as an Anglican vicar, and Van Outen, dressed as a nun replete with false teeth and an inferiority complex, then explained the rules. The caller guessed the number of tea cups shown in the video lead in, with Vaughan responding "More tea, vicar" if the number is too low; "Less tea, vicar" if too high. If the contestant guessed the correct number within the time limit, a prize was awarded. |
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===From Me Shed, Son=== |
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The lyrics to "More Tea, Vicar" were as follows: |
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The inventor of the wind-up radio, [[Trevor Baylis]], would join Johnny Vaughan in the shed to discuss innovative new products. Vaughan tended to make fun of Baylis for being older. |
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===Wonga=== |
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:''More tea, vicar''<br /> |
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A [[Jenga]]-style game, followed by various shouting and anarchy, with fans and the Wonga Lawyer. The show famously went over 27 minutes for a game once, with the ''Millennium Big Breakfast'' actually being commissioned with extra time for Wonga. |
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:''More tea, vicar''<br /> |
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:''More tea, vicar''<br /> |
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:''Guess how many cups''<br /> |
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=== |
===Wonga money=== |
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''The Big Breakfast'' used to give out "wonga money" to people when they won money because they didn't want to give it to them on the show. They would give the real thing to them later. |
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The inventor of the wind-up radio, [[Trevor Baylis]], would join Johnny Vaughan in the shed to discuss innovative new products. Vaughan tended to make fun of Baylis for being in his late fifties/early sixties and was a traditional grey-haired man in London. |
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===The Friday Song=== |
===The Friday Song=== |
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Each Friday the two main presenters and the whole crew would gather in the hallway for The Friday Song. The song would look back at events that happened on the show each week |
Each Friday the two main presenters and the whole crew would gather in the hallway for The Friday Song. The song would look back at events that happened on the show each week |
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The lyrics to the chorus went as follows |
The lyrics to the chorus went as follows: |
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''Singing, wakey, wakey, wakey rise and shine,''<br /> |
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''The |
''The big breakfast is the only way to dine,''<br /> |
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''It's your number one big breakie''<br /> |
''It's your number one big breakie''<br /> |
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''So get it down your neckie,''<br /> |
''So get it down your neckie,''<br /> |
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''And stick with us from seven until nine!'' |
''And stick with us from seven until nine!'' |
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===Others=== |
===Others=== |
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{{col-begin}} |
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{{col-2}} |
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* Guess The Mess |
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* One Lump or Two? |
* One Lump or Two? |
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* Sunny Side Up |
* Sunny Side Up |
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* |
* Pots Stop |
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* Telly Rellies |
* Telly Rellies |
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* Get Your Kit On |
* Get Your Kit On |
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Line 123: | Line 281: | ||
* Yanks for the Memories |
* Yanks for the Memories |
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* Bring Home The Bacon |
* Bring Home The Bacon |
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* Bowl The Vole |
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* Get Your Nobbly Nuts Out |
* Get Your Nobbly Nuts Out |
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* Egg On Your Face |
* Egg On Your Face |
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Line 128: | Line 287: | ||
* The Brian Moore The Merrier |
* The Brian Moore The Merrier |
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* Pushy Mum |
* Pushy Mum |
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* |
* Why |
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* Bun in the Oven (Bunny in the Oven was an Easter special) |
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* The Vincent Price Is Right |
* The Vincent Price Is Right |
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{{col-2}} |
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* Housey Housey |
* Housey Housey |
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* Wheel Of Fish |
* Wheel Of Fish |
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Line 136: | Line 297: | ||
* Moving The Goalposts |
* Moving The Goalposts |
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* My Lenny, Um, Gnome |
* My Lenny, Um, Gnome |
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* An Ostrich In Time |
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* Whose Washing Line Is It Anyway? |
* Whose Washing Line Is It Anyway? |
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* Ice One Cyril |
* Ice One Cyril |
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* Licence To Lurk |
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* Arrest The Vest |
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* Beat The Banger |
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* Game for a Bath |
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* Thatch of the Day |
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* Gaggin' for it |
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* Count-Down-Under |
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* Young Fogies |
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* Lost in Telly |
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* Vidal Balloon |
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* Who Wants to Win a Mini on-air |
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* More Tea Vicar? |
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* Whose shoes? |
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* Ohh what a lovely pair |
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{{col-end}} |
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== |
==Lock Keepers' Cottages== |
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{{unreferenced section|date=September 2021}} |
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Unusually for a live British TV show at the time of its creation, ''The Big Breakfast'' was broadcast entirely from a real house. Located alongside the [[River Lea]], in east London, the property became informally known as 'The Big Breakfast House'. Filming would frequently take place within the large grounds of the property and the closely surrounding area. The cottages are in the [[London Borough of Tower Hamlets]]. |
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In November 2002, eight months after ''The Big Breakfast'' was axed, a fire destroyed a significant proportion of the first floor of the cottage the show was filmed in. A large part of the roof was also destroyed in the blaze. The fire is especially suspicious as there was no gas or electrical supply to the building. |
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Built in 1947, the property originally comprised three cottages which housed the [[lock keeper]]s, toll takers, and navigation operators of the [[Old Ford Lock]]s in Bow. By the time of purchase by the programme-makers, [[Planet 24]], in 1992, the property had become [[listed building|Grade II listed]] and had remained unused for around 20 years. Extensive renovation work saw the transformation of the three cottages into one large three-bedroom property, specifically fitted for use as a TV studio. The exterior character of the property was largely unchanged. During the first four years of the show, the given address for the house was number 2, Lock Keepers' Cottages, Old Ford Lock, London E3 2NN. The '2' was later dropped. |
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Since the fire, extensive renovations have taken place to restore the house, and it is now used as a family home. The house was bought for little more than half the original asking price of £1 million, at a mere £550,000. The house was slashed in value due to the fire of November 2002. |
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In 1996, due to the declining popularity of ''The Big Breakfast'', the house was transformed in an [[art deco]]-style makeover. The original [[brickwork]] was virtually entirely covered over with a smooth rendered finish, painted white. Two large balconies now adorned the front and rear. The only untouched exterior features recognisable from the show's original styling were the four brick chimneys and the roof. The legality of this extensive makeover could be questioned as having broken the rules of its Grade II listed status. The work carried out is purported to have cost around £2million, largely funded by its sale to the show's broadcaster, Channel Four Television. |
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The house has now been fully renovated, but they maintain a high perimeter fence around the house. Some of the well recognised aspects of the house remain; the sun burst wall, the red brick paint effect and the white picket fence. |
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Structurally, the house largely remained in this style for the remainder of the series. The only notable structural alterations were the removal of the front balcony, the partial removal of the balcony to the rear and minor alterations to the styling of the doors and windows. |
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The newly renovated house features in the BBC TWO show "Neneh and Andi Dish It Up" and BBC THREE's 'Singing With the Enemy'. |
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However, the character of the house was altered through several artistic makeovers to both the interior and exterior. The exterior was painted bright yellow, later a light brown similar in shade to the original brickwork, followed by a faux red brickwork effect which was painted onto the render. The latter style became the final look of the house, during the original show's final three-and-a-half years. |
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The cottages are located about 200 metres from the planned site of the main Olympic Stadium, to be constructed for the [[2012 Olympic Games]]. In 2005, the cottages became part of the [[Compulsory Purchase Order]] for the Games (http://www.lda.gov.uk/server/show/ConMediaFile.1223 - item 239), giving rise to speculation that the building may be demolished. However, some outline plans have indicated the immediate location of the cottages and gardens as being unchanged. |
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===Cottages since ''The Big Breakfast''=== |
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==External links== |
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In November 2002, seven-and-a-half months after ''The Big Breakfast'' was axed, a fire destroyed a significant proportion of the first floor of the cottages. A large part of the roof was also destroyed in the blaze. The fire was deemed suspicious as there was no gas or electrical supply to the building. |
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*[http://www.channel4.com/entertainment/tv/microsites/B/bigbreakfast/ ''The Big Breakfast''] at [[Channel 4#Channel4.com|Channel4.com]] |
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The house was slashed in value because of the fire of November 2002, and was bought for little more than half the original asking price of £1 million at £550,000. Since the fire, extensive work has taken place to restore the house but some of the well-recognised aspects of the house from its use during the run of ''The Big Breakfast'' remain. It is now used as a family home. |
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*[http://www.angelfire.com/ok/djrichieh/bbreak.html Bow Locks - A Big Breakfast fansite] |
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The newly renovated house features in the [[BBC Two]] show ''Neneh and Andi Dish It Up'', [[BBC Three]]'s ''Singing With the Enemy'', ''Too Fat To Toddle'' on ITV1, and the one-off revival of ''The Big Breakfast'' on Channel 4. |
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The cottages are located about 200 metres from the site of the main stadium used in the [[2012 Olympic Games]]. In 2005, the cottages became part of a [[compulsory purchase order]] for the Games,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.lda.gov.uk/server/show/ConMediaFile.1223|title=Home - Compulsory Purchase Order Sheet 9|publisher=London Development Agency|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071231034501/http://www.lda.gov.uk/server/show/ConMediaFile.1223|archive-date=31 December 2007}}</ref> giving rise to speculation that the building may be demolished. However, the cottages and gardens remain unchanged. |
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The house made a cameo appearance in a Channel 4 ident shown in the lead-up to the channel's coverage of the [[Paralympics]] in August 2012. |
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===Life after Lock Keepers' Cottages=== |
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''The Big Breakfast''<nowiki/>'s return on 13 August 2022 has been confirmed to be from a new house, leaving the original Lock Keepers' Cottages behind for the first time in the show’s history. The new house is located in [[Potters Bar]]. Filming takes place on The Villa mansion,<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.hoseasons.co.uk/cottages/the-villa-mansion-uk35190 | title=The Villa Mansion }}</ref> a seven-bedroom cottage set in ten acres of countryside. |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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==External links== |
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*''The Big Breakfast'' at [[IMDb]]: [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103363/ 1992], [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt20596750/ 2021] |
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{{UK Breakfast TV}} |
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*[http://photos.abandoned.org.uk/c523406.html Recent pictures of the house from Abandoned.org.uk] |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Big Breakfast, The}} |
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[[Category:1992 British television series debuts]] |
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[[Category:Breakfast television in the United Kingdom]] |
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[[Category:Channel 4 original programming]] |
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[[Category:British English-language television shows]] |
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[[Category:British television shows featuring puppetry]] |
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[[Category:Television shows filmed in England]] |
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[[Category:Television shows set in England]] |
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[[Category:Television shows set in London]] |
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[[Category:Television shows shot in London]] |
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[[Category:Television series by ITV Studios]] |
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[[Category:British television series revived after cancellation]] |
Latest revision as of 14:20, 28 December 2024
The Big Breakfast | |
---|---|
Created by | Charlie Parsons |
Presented by | Mo Gilligan AJ Odudu |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 2,486 |
Production | |
Running time |
|
Production companies | Planet 24 (1992–2002) Lifted Entertainment (2021–2022) |
Original release | |
Network | Channel 4 |
Release | 28 September 1992 29 March 2002 | –
Release | 10 September 2021 3 September 2022 | –
The Big Breakfast is a British breakfast light entertainment television programme that was broadcast on Channel 4 from 1992 to 2002, and as a revival from 2021 to 2022. The show had various presenters, starting with Chris Evans and Gaby Roslin at launch with the revival episodes presented by Mo Gilligan and AJ Odudu.
The programme was distinctive for broadcasting live from a real house (which had been lock-keepers' cottages), commonly referred to as "The Big Breakfast House", or more simply, "The House", located on Fish Island, in Bow in east London.[1] The original house on Fish Island in Bow has since been sold.
The show was a mix of news, weather, interviews, audience phone-ins and general features, with a light tone which was in competition with the maturer GMTV and BBC Breakfast programmes.[2][3]
History
[edit]The Big Breakfast was launched on 28 September 1992 to replace The Channel Four Daily, which was Channel 4's unsuccessful first foray into the breakfast television market. The Daily, which had focused on current affairs and news bulletins alongside bitesized magazine shows, a quiz show segment and a daily cartoon slot, had failed to attract enough viewers so Channel 4 opted to change direction and work towards a lighter style concentrating mainly on entertainment and humour[4] with news bulletins restricted to brief summaries every 20 minutes.
The first two presenters were Chris Evans (from 1992 to 1994) and Gaby Roslin (1992 to 1996). At its height in 1993, viewing figures reached around two million per edition, and it was the highest rated UK breakfast television programme. Along with Evans and Roslin, Bob Geldof presented a short-lived political interview slot. His wife Paula Yates interviewed people whilst lying on a bed, and the puppet characters Zig and Zag created morning mayhem in the bathroom with Evans in a slot called 'The Crunch'.
As part of his contract with The Big Breakfast, Evans was committed to developing a new show for Channel 4. Don't Forget Your Toothbrush began in early 1994, and Evans cut his involvement with The Big Breakfast to three days a week, Tuesday to Thursday. Neighbours actor Mark Little replaced Evans on Mondays and Fridays. When Evans left the show later that year, Little continued Thursdays, and Fridays while Paul Ross took over Mondays to Wednesdays. Richard Orford replaced Ross around Easter 1995 but was quickly dropped and exchanged with Down Your Doorstep presenter Keith Chegwin. In July 1995, the show reverted to using just one male presenter (Mark Little) throughout the week. Chegwin would cover for Little when he was on tour as a comedian or on holiday.
Roslin continued full-time until she made way for Zoe Ball in 1996. Audience figures dropped a little after Evans left, and a little further after Roslin departed. Mark Little left the programme in July 1996, following press reports that he and Ball had fallen out. Little was replaced by Keith Chegwin, who himself exited the programme in August 1996, just ahead of a relaunch. To stem the sliding viewing figures, the Big Breakfast house was refurbished at a cost of £2 million. New presenters Rick Adams and Sharron Davies were brought in but viewing figures fell dramatically. Davies left the programme in early 1997, to be replaced by Denise van Outen. Van Outen had initially been brought in as part of the September 1996 relaunch as a weather presenter, before being given a role based at the house as the phone room presenter and holiday relief for Davies. In June 1997, Johnny Vaughan covered for Adams for a fortnight alongside Van Outen, the pair forging a successful on-screen partnership. Adams left the programme shortly afterwards and, in September 1997, the Vaughan and Van Outen partnership was made permanent. Audience figures stabilised and the duo fronted the programme together until Van Outen's departure on 1 January 1999 (a New Year's Day pre-record). Kelly Brook was installed as Vaughan's new co-presenter despite an internet campaign for the role to be awarded to Liza Tarbuck, who had successfully covered for Van Outen in the summer of 1998. However, Brook struggled in the role and left the programme in early summer 1999. Liza Tarbuck, having again covered the co-presenter role alongside Vaughan prior to Brook's departure, was made permanent at the end of August 1999. She left the following summer and, following Vaughan's annual one-month summer break, Denise van Outen returned to co-host in September 2000 for Vaughan's final four months on the programme. Vaughan and Van Outen's final Big Breakfast was on 12 January 2001.
Demise
[edit]The programme relaunched with a new logo and updated theme on 22 January 2001. The house had also been redecorated in more muted colours, echoing the ill-fated 1996 revamp. The programme moved to a lineup of three main presenters: Paul Tonkinson, Amanda Byram and Donna Air. However, Tonkinson was dropped from the programme at the end of March 2001 and Air left not long after. The programme reverted to two main presenters once more, with Byram and Richard Bacon. The living room, which had been repainted a dark red as part of the revamp, was changed to a bright yellow and pink design, while the main presenter chairs were also reinstalled in front of the living room's French windows. They replaced the bright-green sofa which had also been brought in as part of the revamp. The new logo was replaced with one more closely resembling the traditional Big Breakfast logo, albeit utilising a slightly different font. Mike McClean was given a role on the programme, as Down Your Doorstep presenter and cover for Bacon, most regularly on Fridays when Bacon would reprise his former Down Your Doorstep role alongside Johnny Vegas. During this time, a pilot[5] episode was filmed on a Saturday with Chris Moyles and Dominic Byrne (reading the news), with Andy Goldstein doing links from Los Angeles. This pilot episode was shown to bosses at Channel 4, after which Moyles was offered the role but declined.
Cancellation
[edit]In December 2001, it was announced that The Big Breakfast was to be axed the following March. In the programme's final months, former cover presenter Lisa Rogers was given a role as an extra presenter while Zig and Zag returned for the final six weeks in their former slot, The Crunch, for which a new bathroom set was installed in the house. The final Big Breakfast aired on 29 March 2002 and included a retrospective that included contributions from Evans, Roslin, Vaughan and Van Outen. Both Evans and Vaughan declared the cancelling of the show a bad idea, but the show ended with a tribute from the Prince of Wales before the last ever Friday song. When the show finished, the house reverted to a private residence, now known as The Cottage.[6] After renovation following a fire, it has also been used for a few television shows, including the one-off special edition of The Big Breakfast, which aired in 2021.
In total, 2,481 episodes were broadcast during the original run. Episodes were broadcast every weekday morning from 28 September 1992 to 29 March 2002, with exception of 12–14 September 2001, when it was replaced with news coverage of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States of America, for a total of 2,477. In addition to this, four extra episodes were broadcast on Christmas Day 1994 and Christmas Eve 1995 (both of which fell on the weekend), and the evenings of New Year's Eve 1992 and 1999.[7]
Innovations
[edit]Mark Lamarr, Keith Chegwin, Paul Ross, Richard Orford, Richard Bacon and Mike McClean were "down your doorstep" outside broadcasters, often turning up live and unannounced at an unsuspecting viewer's house, while rooms within the lock keepers' houses featured the puppets Zig and Zag and video games guru Ben the Boffin.
The show's style, with hand-held cameras moving around all of the set, meant that many of the crew members could be seen on screen. This led to them getting nicknames, such as 'Sturdy Girl', who was regularly asked to shake her head so that her hair would be hurled around whilst music played and the camera zoomed in and out.
Presenters
[edit]AJ Odudu | 2021–2022 |
Mo Gilligan | 2021–2022 |
Amanda Byram | 2001–2002 |
Paul Tonkinson | 2001–2002 |
Mike McClean | 2000–2002 |
Donna Air | 2000–2002 |
Lisa Rogers | 2000–2002 |
Liza Tarbuck | 1999–2000 |
Richard Bacon | 1999–2002 |
Kelly Brook | 1999 |
Denise van Outen | 1997–2001 |
Johnny Vaughan | 1997–2001 |
Sharron Davies | 1996–1997 |
Rick Adams | 1996–1997 |
Zoe Ball | 1996 |
Keith Chegwin | 1995–1996 |
Mark Little | 1994–1996 |
Paul Ross | 1994–1995 |
Gaby Roslin | 1992–1996 |
Chris Evans | 1992–1994 |
Co-presenters
[edit]Judi Love | 2021–2022 |
Johnny Vegas | 2001–2002 |
Sara Cox | 1998–2000 |
Vanessa Feltz | 1996–1998 |
Paul O'Grady (as Lily Savage) | 1995–1996 |
Paula Yates | 1992–1995 |
Newsreaders
[edit]Phil Gayle | 1997–2000, 2002, 2021–2022 |
Jasmine Lowson | 2000–2002 |
Peter Smith | 1992–1996 |
Spin-offs and related programming
[edit]The Big Breakfast and The Bigger Breakfast
[edit]Between 1997 and 2000, during most nationally recognised UK school holiday periods, The Big Breakfast would run beyond its typical 9 am finish to provide continuity into and out of unrelated shows aimed primarily towards children. This would last throughout the morning, usually until around midday. Although typically presented to the viewer as simply a programme on Channel 4, most of The Bigger Breakfast is perhaps better classified as an informal style of in-vision continuity.
The strand also acted as an umbrella brand for the programming which it linked to, by use of Big Breakfast style break-bumpers and Digital On-Screen Graphics.[8] The expanded format always featured the regular content of The Big Breakfast from 7 am to 9 am. The first run of The Bigger Breakfast during the summer of 1997 was titled as such all the way from its 7 am start, presented throughout by Richard Orford and Denise van Outen. Future editions would see slight separations made from the 7 am to 9 am content, by way of this portion of the show being branded and scheduled as The Big Breakfast, with all content after 9 am taking on the expanded Bigger Breakfast name. After a while, a further distinction was made by using a different set of presenters from that of The Big Breakfast. Presenters of The Bigger Breakfast included Josie D'Arby, Ben Shephard, Melanie Sykes and Dermot O'Leary.
Programming was primarily composed of reruns of Channel 4 shows and US imports. The line-up changed frequently. The list below is of some of series featured on The Big Breakfast and the Bigger Breakfast over the years:
- Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog
- Babylon 5
- Batman
- Bewitched
- Biker Mice from Mars
- Boy Meets World
- Bug Juice
- California Dreams
- CatDog
- City Guys
- The Crystal Maze
- Dennis
- Earthworm Jim
- Eerie Indiana
- Fantastic Four
- Inspector Gadget
- Hang Time
- Hangin' with Mr. Cooper
- Johnny Bravo
- Madison
- Moesha
- The Monkees
- Mr. Bogus
- Planet Pop[9]
- Pugwall's Summer
- Renford Rejects
- Rocko's Modern Life
- Sam & Max
- Saved by the Bell
- Sister Sister
- Sonic the Hedgehog
- The Secret World of Alex Mack
The Bigger Breakfast was discontinued after Christmas holidays in 2000. The block of programming provided within The Bigger Breakfast was retained, with Channel 4's youth strand T4 taking over the continuity role.
Snap
[edit]Snap Cackle Pop, a regular and recurring feature throughout the history of The Big Breakfast, was briefly retitled as simply Snap, in 1997. As well as continuing as a short, daily entertainment news feature within The Big Breakfast, Snap also became a show in its own right. Airing once weekly at 6.00pm on Channel 4, the half hour show was a light hearted round-up of recent news stories concerning popular entertainment in the UK.
Presented by Denise van Outen, the show was intentionally recognisable as being closely related to The Big Breakfast, from which it originated and continued to be part of. Snap contained a number of elements synonymous with The Big Breakfast, such as using the very same boudoir set and on-the-bed interviewing of guests. However, care was generally taken not to alienate viewers who were not so familiar with The Big Breakfast.
The Big Breakfast End of the Year Show 1992
[edit]Three months after first appearing, Chris Evans, Gaby Roslin and Paula Yates hosted a live edition of the show, seeing in the new year of 1993. Zsa Zsa Gabor featured as a special guest.
The Biggest Breakfast Ever
[edit]On 1 January 2000, The Big Breakfast aired an extended New Year's Day edition entitled The Biggest Breakfast Ever, celebrating the arrival of the year 2000. Written by John Mann and Ged Parsons and broadcasting from 12:30 a.m. to just past 9:00 a.m., the special featured various retrospective features and the competition "Owe? No You Don't!"—where contestants competed in classic Big Breakfast games (concluding with the new game "Wonga") for a chance to have their debts paid off.
Talking Bowlocks
[edit]In January 2021, members of The Big Breakfast production team launched a podcast in which they discussed their experiences working on the series.[10]
Revival
[edit]2021 "Black to Front Day" special
[edit]In September 2021, it was announced that the show would return for a one-off event known as "Black to Front Day", which would feature and celebrate the talents of those with black heritage. The show was presented by Mo Gilligan and AJ Odudu and had many guests from African American and Black heritages in celebration. The show was broadcast once again from the show's original home at Lock Keepers' Cottages.[11]
2022 relaunch
[edit]On 26 May 2022 it was confirmed that the series would return part time for four Saturdays in a two and a half hour slot from 13 August 2022, with Gilligan and Odudu again returning to host from a new house, revealed to be in Potters Bar, Hertfordshire.[12] Denise van Outen returned as a guest to "hand over the reins" of the show to the two new presenters.[13] In June 2023, a Channel 4 spokesman announced that there were no plans to commission any further episodes, but did not rule out the possibility of it returning at some point in the future.[14]
Features
[edit]Question About the Clip
[edit]Before most advertisement breaks a clip from an upcoming TV show or movie would be shown, a question being asked by one of the hosts about it; the answer would be revealed after the advert break, along with details of the show or film. This feature would result in the production team chorusing "Don't phone, it's just for fun!" which was a Chris Evans creation, initially used on his radio shows before he shot to fame on The Big Breakfast.
Question of the Day
[edit]A phone-in feature encouraging viewers to provide humorous answers throughout the morning to a pertinent (or occasionally inane) question. At one point it was accompanied by a fanfare, apparently played on the trumpet by "little Ted" beneath the camera (in fact a member of the team waving a toy trumpet in shot). One morning's question was "What should the BBC do to improve EastEnders?", and one viewer suggested adding Barbara Windsor to the cast; this actually occurred shortly afterwards.
Super Hints
[edit]"Your indispensable guide to a better life!", this feature appeared during the early years of the show; in it celebrities would give various simple but useful hints for such issues as cleaning or keeping food fresh.[15]
Streaky Bacon
[edit]"Streaky Bacon" became a regular feature, in which Richard Bacon would get a member of the public out of their house to 'streak' along their street wearing nothing but bacon-covered underwear in order to win their weight in bacon from their local butcher.
Vital Statistics
[edit]"Vital Statistics" was another common feature, particularly in the Johnny Vaughan era. These would often relate to a news story, a guest or a topic they had discussed, such as Doctor Who on their Doctor Who Special.
On the Bed
[edit]A key feature for the first five years was the "On the Bed" interview. Paula Yates (the then wife of Bob Geldof, whose company produced the show), and later Paul O'Grady (as Lily Savage) and Vanessa Feltz assumed the role of interviewer. One of the most infamous on-air moments was Paula Yates' open flirting during an interview with Michael Hutchence as a prelude to their affair.
More Tea, Vicar
[edit]A repeating feature in the Vaughan and Van Outen era, in which an erratically filmed, sped up video clip of a line of tea cups was shown to a call-in viewer. Vaughan, dressed as an Anglican vicar, and Van Outen, dressed as a nun replete with false teeth and an inferiority complex, then explained the rules. The caller guessed the number of tea cups shown in the video lead in, with Vaughan responding "More tea, vicar" if the number is too low; "Less tea, vicar" if too high. If the contestant guessed the correct number within the time limit, a prize was awarded.
From Me Shed, Son
[edit]The inventor of the wind-up radio, Trevor Baylis, would join Johnny Vaughan in the shed to discuss innovative new products. Vaughan tended to make fun of Baylis for being older.
Wonga
[edit]A Jenga-style game, followed by various shouting and anarchy, with fans and the Wonga Lawyer. The show famously went over 27 minutes for a game once, with the Millennium Big Breakfast actually being commissioned with extra time for Wonga.
Wonga money
[edit]The Big Breakfast used to give out "wonga money" to people when they won money because they didn't want to give it to them on the show. They would give the real thing to them later.
The Friday Song
[edit]Each Friday the two main presenters and the whole crew would gather in the hallway for The Friday Song. The song would look back at events that happened on the show each week
The lyrics to the chorus went as follows:
Singing, wakey, wakey, wakey rise and shine,
The big breakfast is the only way to dine,
It's your number one big breakie
So get it down your neckie,
And stick with us from seven until nine!
Others
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Lock Keepers' Cottages
[edit]Unusually for a live British TV show at the time of its creation, The Big Breakfast was broadcast entirely from a real house. Located alongside the River Lea, in east London, the property became informally known as 'The Big Breakfast House'. Filming would frequently take place within the large grounds of the property and the closely surrounding area. The cottages are in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets.
Built in 1947, the property originally comprised three cottages which housed the lock keepers, toll takers, and navigation operators of the Old Ford Locks in Bow. By the time of purchase by the programme-makers, Planet 24, in 1992, the property had become Grade II listed and had remained unused for around 20 years. Extensive renovation work saw the transformation of the three cottages into one large three-bedroom property, specifically fitted for use as a TV studio. The exterior character of the property was largely unchanged. During the first four years of the show, the given address for the house was number 2, Lock Keepers' Cottages, Old Ford Lock, London E3 2NN. The '2' was later dropped.
In 1996, due to the declining popularity of The Big Breakfast, the house was transformed in an art deco-style makeover. The original brickwork was virtually entirely covered over with a smooth rendered finish, painted white. Two large balconies now adorned the front and rear. The only untouched exterior features recognisable from the show's original styling were the four brick chimneys and the roof. The legality of this extensive makeover could be questioned as having broken the rules of its Grade II listed status. The work carried out is purported to have cost around £2million, largely funded by its sale to the show's broadcaster, Channel Four Television.
Structurally, the house largely remained in this style for the remainder of the series. The only notable structural alterations were the removal of the front balcony, the partial removal of the balcony to the rear and minor alterations to the styling of the doors and windows.
However, the character of the house was altered through several artistic makeovers to both the interior and exterior. The exterior was painted bright yellow, later a light brown similar in shade to the original brickwork, followed by a faux red brickwork effect which was painted onto the render. The latter style became the final look of the house, during the original show's final three-and-a-half years.
Cottages since The Big Breakfast
[edit]In November 2002, seven-and-a-half months after The Big Breakfast was axed, a fire destroyed a significant proportion of the first floor of the cottages. A large part of the roof was also destroyed in the blaze. The fire was deemed suspicious as there was no gas or electrical supply to the building.
The house was slashed in value because of the fire of November 2002, and was bought for little more than half the original asking price of £1 million at £550,000. Since the fire, extensive work has taken place to restore the house but some of the well-recognised aspects of the house from its use during the run of The Big Breakfast remain. It is now used as a family home.
The newly renovated house features in the BBC Two show Neneh and Andi Dish It Up, BBC Three's Singing With the Enemy, Too Fat To Toddle on ITV1, and the one-off revival of The Big Breakfast on Channel 4.
The cottages are located about 200 metres from the site of the main stadium used in the 2012 Olympic Games. In 2005, the cottages became part of a compulsory purchase order for the Games,[16] giving rise to speculation that the building may be demolished. However, the cottages and gardens remain unchanged.
The house made a cameo appearance in a Channel 4 ident shown in the lead-up to the channel's coverage of the Paralympics in August 2012.
Life after Lock Keepers' Cottages
[edit]The Big Breakfast's return on 13 August 2022 has been confirmed to be from a new house, leaving the original Lock Keepers' Cottages behind for the first time in the show’s history. The new house is located in Potters Bar. Filming takes place on The Villa mansion,[17] a seven-bedroom cottage set in ten acres of countryside.
References
[edit]- ^ "Lockkeeper's Cottages, Old Ford Lock". Google Maps. 1 January 1970. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
- ^ Cassidy, Suzanne (30 August 1993). "THE MEDIA BUSINESS; Britain's Zany Way to Start the Day". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
- ^ Cassidy, Suzanne (30 September 1993). "America's 'Zoo' Radio Inspires British TV Hit". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
- ^ Brown, Maggie (5 March 1993). "Channel 4 'breaching its remit to win viewers'". The Independent. London. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
- ^ The Chris Moyles Show On Radio X (15 July 2024). The First 25 | 16th July 2024 | The Chris Moyles Show. Retrieved 16 July 2024 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Toasting the end of The Big Breakfast". BBC. 29 March 2002. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
- ^ "Channel 4 Press Packs 1982-2002". British Universities and Colleges Film and Video Council. Retrieved 19 March 2024.
- ^ "BFI | Film & TV Database | The BIGGER BREAKFAST". Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on 21 December 2007. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
- ^ "BFI | Film & TV Database | PLANET POP". Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on 22 January 2010. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
- ^ "Talking Bowlocks". Podcast24.co.uk.
- ^ "Channel 4: Big Breakfast returns for Black To Front day". BBC News. 10 September 2021. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
- ^ Miller, Adam (26 May 2022). "The Big Breakfast officially returning with AJ Odudu and Mo Gilligan". Metro.
- ^ Johnson, Alan (8 August 2022). "Denise van Outen to appear on the Big Breakfast to hand over presenting reins". Daily Mirror.
- ^ Corbin, Tianna (19 June 2023). "Channel 4 scraps The Big Breakfast reboot after one series over 'bloodbath' spending cuts". Daily Express.
- ^ Brown, Maggie (23 September 1992). "Smiles and chaos as programme focuses on launch: Channel 4's Big Breakfast starts next week with Paula Yates and Bob Geldof the attractions". The Independent. London. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
- ^ "Home - Compulsory Purchase Order Sheet 9". London Development Agency. Archived from the original on 31 December 2007.
- ^ "The Villa Mansion".
External links
[edit]- 1992 British television series debuts
- 2022 British television series endings
- Breakfast television in the United Kingdom
- Channel 4 original programming
- British English-language television shows
- British television shows featuring puppetry
- Television shows filmed in England
- Television shows set in England
- Television shows set in London
- Television shows shot in London
- Television series by ITV Studios
- British television series revived after cancellation