Amy
22-07-2004, 06:52 PM
Found this on Ananova..............
Big Brother makes it but Fawlty Towers doesn't - TV experts have compiled a list of the 50 most influential shows in British broadcasting history.
When the list of 100 programmes were whittled down to 50, stalwarts like Dad's Army and Only Fools and Horses did not make the cut.
But the likes of Blue Peter, Changing Rooms and even docu-soap Driving School have won a place in TV history.
A total of 33 of the 50 programmes are BBC shows, 12 are from ITV and four are from Channel 4. Sky also has a place for its 24-hour news channel.
The only sports programme to make it on to the list is the BBC's Match of the Day, while the children's shows are Teletubbies, Tiswas, featuring Spit the Dog, and Watch with Mother, which bought characters like the Flower Pot Men and Bagpus to the screen. Multicoloured Swap Shop does not get a mention.
The list, which was not ranked in order, was compiled by 16 judges, and 13 of them were media executives.
Axed Channel 4 soap Brookside secures a place, as does Coronation Street for setting "a template for soaps", but there's no room BBC rival EastEnders.
Judges describe Driving School as "the first and probably the best of the docu-soaps" while Steptoe and Son was "the first major sitcom to get the nation talking."
The Royle Family, starring Caroline Quentin, is also on there, with judges saying "it portrayed the humdrum nature of working-class life far more vividly than any docu-soap ever could and paved the way for shows like The Office".
The Generation Game, Have I Got News for You, The Morecambe and Wise Show, The Big Breakfast and Pop Idol have also made it. Dramas which have a place in the top 50 include Dennis Potter's The Singing Detective, BBC costume drama The Forsyte Saga and Dr Who. In the news and current affairs section, News at Ten gets a mention for changing "the face of television news".
Article Ananova (http://www.ananova.com/entertainment/story/sm_1031081.html?menu=entertainment)
Big Brother makes it but Fawlty Towers doesn't - TV experts have compiled a list of the 50 most influential shows in British broadcasting history.
When the list of 100 programmes were whittled down to 50, stalwarts like Dad's Army and Only Fools and Horses did not make the cut.
But the likes of Blue Peter, Changing Rooms and even docu-soap Driving School have won a place in TV history.
A total of 33 of the 50 programmes are BBC shows, 12 are from ITV and four are from Channel 4. Sky also has a place for its 24-hour news channel.
The only sports programme to make it on to the list is the BBC's Match of the Day, while the children's shows are Teletubbies, Tiswas, featuring Spit the Dog, and Watch with Mother, which bought characters like the Flower Pot Men and Bagpus to the screen. Multicoloured Swap Shop does not get a mention.
The list, which was not ranked in order, was compiled by 16 judges, and 13 of them were media executives.
Axed Channel 4 soap Brookside secures a place, as does Coronation Street for setting "a template for soaps", but there's no room BBC rival EastEnders.
Judges describe Driving School as "the first and probably the best of the docu-soaps" while Steptoe and Son was "the first major sitcom to get the nation talking."
The Royle Family, starring Caroline Quentin, is also on there, with judges saying "it portrayed the humdrum nature of working-class life far more vividly than any docu-soap ever could and paved the way for shows like The Office".
The Generation Game, Have I Got News for You, The Morecambe and Wise Show, The Big Breakfast and Pop Idol have also made it. Dramas which have a place in the top 50 include Dennis Potter's The Singing Detective, BBC costume drama The Forsyte Saga and Dr Who. In the news and current affairs section, News at Ten gets a mention for changing "the face of television news".
Article Ananova (http://www.ananova.com/entertainment/story/sm_1031081.html?menu=entertainment)