Timeline of cable television in the United Kingdom
This is a timeline of cable television in the United Kingdom.
The first part of the timeline covers the development of cable across the country, including details of the cable-exclusive channels which launched in the 1990s as part of cable television's attempt to compete with BSkyB's satellite television.
The merger of NTL and Telewest effectively resulted in a single national network, covering just over half the country. The second part of the timeline covers Virgin Media.
Pre-Virgin Media
- 1928
- 1936
- Rediffusion, a supplier of cable radio services since 1928, starts providing "Pipe TV" to customers, to coincide with the BBC's launch of the world's first regular high-definition television service.[2]
- 1950
- A cable network is launched in Gloucester, to provide better television reception than is possible at the time via a roof-top aerial.[3] Further such systems were built in other cities over the next three decades and by the late 1970s, 2.5 million British homes received their television service via cable.[4]
- 1961
- A new cable network launches in Swindon to transmit television signals. As reception in the area is poor, take-up is high and by the end of the decade around 15,000 homes were paying to receive their pictures via cable television. However, only those channels available in the area are allowed to be carried on the system.
- 1972
- The UK's Minister for Posts and Telecommunications authorises five experimental community cable television channels.[5] The first to launch is Greenwich Cablevision.[6]
- 1973
- Sheffield Cablevision, The Bristol Channel and Swindon Viewpoint launch.[7]
- 1974
- March – The final community station, Wellingborough Cablevision, launches.
- 1975
- 14 March – After less than two years on air, The Bristol Channel closes.[8]
- 24 March – Wellingborough Cablevision closes.[9]
- 1976
- 2 January – Sheffield Cablevision closes when the funds run out.[10]
- Greenwich Cablevision closes as a full time service although programming made by volunteers keeps the station on air in a restricted form until the early 1980s.
- Swindon Viewpoint’s experimental phase ends when EMI decided to pull out of funding the service. However, the channel continues after it was sold to the public of Swindon for £1.
- 1977
- No events.
- 1978
- No events.
- 1979
- No events.
- 1980
- April – Regular programming on Swindon Viewpoint ends when funding dries up.[11] but continues intermittently for the next decade with programmes made by volunteers.
- 1981
- Radio Rental Cable Television launches the UK's first pay-per-view movie channel, 'Cinematel', for cable viewers in Swindon. The channel later expands to Chatham in Kent.
- 9 September – Following the Home Office granting several experimental licenses to broadcast subscription television. Rediffusion wins five of these licenses and one of the services it launches is a movie channel called Starview.[12]
- 1982
- Proposals to liberalise cable television in the UK are drawn up. Previously, apart from the 1981 experiments, the cable networks were only allowed to relay the over-the-air channels.[13] This led to the Cable and Broadcasting Act 1984 which allowed cable companies to offer as many channels as they liked, and also allowed cable companies to offer a telephone service in competition with British Telecom.
- 1983
- Ahead of the enacting of the forthcoming liberalisation, the Government licences eleven interim franchises for broadband systems. Each covers an individual town or city of around 100,000 homes.
- 16 October – Satellite Television Ltd launches in the UK on Swindon Cable and is renamed Sky Channel. The channel initially broadcasts for five hours each night and as more operators start to carry the channel, its broadcast hours slowly expand.[14][15]
- 1984
- Thorn EMI, which operates Swindon Cable, launches four channels – movie channel The Entertainment Network, music channel Music Box, sport channel Screensport and The Children's Channel. Despite being delivered by satellite, they are created with the planned roll-out of cable across the UK in mind. All had closed down by the end of the decade, apart from Screensport which merged with Eurosport in 1993.
- 1 December – The Cable Authority comes into existence and on 1 January 1985 takes on the functions granted to it by the Cable and Broadcasting Act 1984, paving the way for fully commercial cable franchises to be awarded on a city-by-city basis.
- 1985
- The Performance Channel launches. It broadcasts arts programming each night from 7pm until the early hours. It remained as a cable-exclusive channel until 2003 and ended broadcasting in July 2008.[16]
- September – HVC launches. Showing movies, the channel is created by Ealing Cable and is subsequently rolled out to other cable operators by sending them tapes of the programmes and a copy of the programme schedule so that HVC could be played out locally.[17]
- 31 December – United Artists Programming launches Bravo.[18] It shows mainly black & white B-movies from the 1950s and 1960s. The channel remains a cable-exclusive service until it launches on satellite in July 1993.
- 1986
- No events.
- 1987
- No events.
- 1988
- United Cable of Denver purchases Croydon Cable and subsequently merges with United Artists Cable International.
- 1989
- 5 February – Satellite television service Sky Television launches. The new channels – Sky News, Sky Movies and Eurosport – are carried on cable.
- 1990
- 25 March – British Satellite Broadcasting (BSB) launches its five-channel service. As well as launching on satellite, the channels are carried by cable providers. However, the company merged in November with Sky TV and a month later two of the five BSB channels were closed down.
- In its final annual report, published at its demise, the Cable Authority stated that by the end of 1990, even though almost 15 million homes had been included in franchised areas, only 828,000 of these had been passed by broadband cable and only 149,000 were subscribing.[19]
- 1991
- 1 January – The Independent Television Commission takes over the licensing and regulation of cable from The Cable Authority.
- 8 June – United Artists merges with its largest shareholder Tele-Communications Inc. (TCI).[20]
- United Artists Programming initiates a trial project to provide coverage of Yesterday in the Commons to cable networks across the UK.[21]
- 1992
- The major cable companies join together to form 'Cable Programme Partners One (CPP1)', to try to provide alternative content to the satellite-dominated multi-channel environment of the time.
- 13 January – Following on from the success of Yesterday in the Commons, United Artists Cable launches a full time channel providing live and recorded coverage of the British Parliament called The Parliamentary Channel.[22]
- April – On-demand music video channel The Box launches. Initially launched in four cable areas, it slowly rolls out on a regional basis across the entire cable network before getting its first berth on satellite in 1998.
- May – Wire TV launches. Branding itself as 'The Cable Channel', this is the flagship channel of CPP1. The channel broadcasts a mix of entertainment, lifestyle and sport from 1pm until 11pm and includes two hours each day of regional programming.
- October – Country music channel CMT Europe launches on cable. The following year it also starts part-time broadcasts on Astra and it doesn't get a full-time berth on satellite until later in the 1990s.
- Following the merger of TCI and United Artists, they launch a joint venture called Telewest Communications.
- 1993
- Barclay Knapp and George Blumenthal, the founders of the cellular network company Cellular Communications, Inc. (sold to Airtouch in 1996), establish International CableTel.
- 1994
- January – TCI acquires a 60.4% stake in Flextech[23] and Flextech acquires 100% of Bravo, 25% of UK Gold, 31% of UK Living, and 25% of The Children's Channel.[24]
- February – Travel launches exclusively on cable, broadcasting daily between midday and midnight.
- 2 March – Wire TV’s backers outbid BSkyB to the rights for the 1996 Cricket World Cup as part of a plan to set up a sports channel to take on Sky Sports.[25] Wire TV's evening programming is by now devoted to sport under the name Sportswire with the daytime entertainment programming called LiveWire.[26]
- November – Associated Newspapers launches Channel One, a network of city news channels. The first to launch is in London.
- 1995
- Bell Cablemedia is formed when a number of cable companies, including Jones Cable UK, merge.
- 16 January – Mirror Group plc launches Mirror Television by purchasing Wire TV. It plans to launch Sportswire as a full-time channel and replace Wire TV with a new channel called L!VE TV.
- May – Ahead of the planned launch of Sportswire as a full-time channel, Wire TV closes.[27]
- 1 June – SelecTV launches. It is a general entertainment channel which broadcasts each night from 5pm until midnight.
- June – TCI (owners of Telewest) and NYNEX, two of the main players of CPP1, do a deal with BSkyB which includes a clause that the cable operators do not launch any rival channels to those already operated by Sky. This marks the end of CPP1 and causes the collapse of sports channel Sportswire, days before its launch.
- 12 June – L!VE TV launches as Mirror Television's sole television channel.[28]
- June – Telewest merges with SBC Communications, adding franchises in the Midlands and North West serving 1.3 million homes.
- 1 October – The Sci Fi Channel launches in the UK but its full-time hours (8am to 4am) are only broadcast on cable due to a lack of space on satellite. It broadcasts on satellite for only three hours each evening, and viewers have to wait until the launch of Sky Digital to see the channel's full-time hours.
- 1996
- A number of cable companies drop CMT Europe. This dents its reach and the channel closes 18 months later.
- 1 September –
- Carlton Food Network launches. It broadcasts on weekday afternoons and shares space with SelecTV.
- The Weather Network and The Weather Channel launch on various cable networks. They use the regional nature of cable to provide regional weather forecasts. However both channels are gone within two years due to low viewership.
- 1997
- 14 February – SelecTV is rebranded Carlton Select following Carlton Television’s purchase of Pearson Television.
- Bell Cablemedia, NYNEX and Videotron merge to become Cable & Wireless Communications.[29]
- 9 November – As part of its foray into digital television, the BBC launches BBC News 24. However, the channel launches almost a year prior to the launch of digital television in the UK and is only available 24 hours a day on cable, with all other viewers only able to watch the channel overnight on BBC One.
- Front Row is created to provide a near on-demand pay-per-view movies service for cable television. However, Cable & Wireless chooses not to carry the service, instead opting for Sky Box Office.
- 1998
- March – Telewest and General Cable merge.
- Telewest also acquires the outstanding interest in Birmingham Cable, adding a further 1.7 million franchise homes in Yorkshire, west London and Birmingham.
- 19 May – CableTel adopts NTL as its new name.
- 2 September – The BBC purchases The Parliamentary Channel and relaunches it as BBC Parliament. The channel launches early due to a recall of Parliament,
- 25 September – Local news channel Channel One closes at 6pm.[30]
- 1 October – Sky Digital launches, becoming the UK's first digital television service.[31] Consequently, a number of channels which had only been available full-time on cable are now able to broadcast their full schedule on satellite.
- 15 November – Rival digital television service OnDigital launches.[32] Two of the channels – Carlton Food Network and Carlton Select – had been available exclusively on cable since the mid-1990s.
- 1999
- ntl buys Cambridge Cable, which over its 11-year history had expanded to cover all of Cambridgeshire and Essex.[33]
- 1 May – After 14 years on air, HVC closes.
- August – Telewest purchases the remaining 50% stake in Cable London from NTL, adding 400,000 franchise homes in North London.[34]
- 5 November – LIVE TV closes.[35][36]
- Towards the end of 1999, Cable & Wireless Communications launches its digital television service.
- Following its launch on satellite, The Box closes its regional versions in favour of a single national channel.
- 2000
- March – Following the closure of Carlton Select, Carlton Cinema launches in its place on cable. Carlton Select had shared space on cable with Carlton Food Network and this arrangement continues meaning that on cable, Carlton Cinema is only available during the evening.
- 19 April – Telewest and Flextech merge.[37]
- 1 August – The ITN News Channel launches. It is a joint venture between ITN and NTL, which owns 35% of the channel.
- 2 November – Telewest acquires Eurobell, taking the total number of homes passed to 4.9 million.[38]
- NTL acquires the domestic cable business of Cable & Wireless Communications.
- Telewest and NTL launch their digital television services.
- 2001
- January – Cable television comes to the Isle of Wight when operator Isle of Wight Cable and Telephone Company launches. The island remains the only part of the UK's cable network not to be owned by Virgin Media.
- 1 February – NTL launches movie channel The Studio in conjunction with Vivendi Universal.[39]
- 2002
- May – Less than a year after being founded and less than six months after launching,[40] Omne Communications enters administration.
- June – Carlton Television and Granada Television purchase ITN's 65% stake in the ITN News Channel and on 30 September it is renamed as the ITV News Channel. NTL retains its 35% stake.
- Following the purchase of Isle of Wight Cable and Telephone Company by CLS Holdings, the service is renamed WightCable.
- 2003
- 1 January – The Studio closes.[41]
- 1 February – CLS Holdings, owners of WightCable, acquires a 76% stake in Omne Communications for £4.1 million, saving it from closure[42] and later in 2003, Omne is rebranded WightCable North.
- 29 December – Ofcom replaces the Independent Television Commission as the UK's television regulator.[43]
- 2004
- April – The newly created ITV plc purchases NTL's 35% stake in the ITV News Channel.
- 2005
- January – Both NTL and Telewest start rolling out video-on-demand services.[44]
- CLS Holdings sells the assets of Wightcable to private investors in 2005, who formed WightCable (2005) Ltd and in 2012 WightCable was rebranded as WightFibre.
- 1 December – Telewest launches its first personal video recorder TV Drive.[45]
- 2006
- At the start of 2006, Telewest becomes the first company in the UK to launch a high-definition service.[46] It provides between 10 and 30 hours of on-demand content in HD, and that summer it provides HD access to some 2006 FIFA World Cup matches to customers who have the TV Drive box.
- January – CLS Holdings sells WightCable North, at a loss of £2.1 million, to Netfonics[47][48] Just over a year later WightCable North is rebranded as Smallworld Media, then to Smallworld Cable (2009) and to Smallworld Fibre in 2013.[49]
- March – NTL and Telewest merge.
Virgin Media
- 2006
- 8 November – Virgin Media comes into being when NTL Telewest does a deal to licence the Virgin name.[50]
- 2007
- February – The Virgin Media brand is launched.
- 20 February – Virgin launches its new on-demand channel Virgin Central.[51]
- 1 March – The Sky Basics channels stop broadcasting on Virgin Media when the two companies cannot agree a new carriage deal.[52]
- 1 June – In a bid to increase take-up of its V+ personal video recorder, XL TV customers are given the V+ box free as part of their package.[53][54]
- 26 July – Virgin Media and Setanta Sports sign a deal to allow VM's XL customers free access to Setanta Sports.[55]
- 1 October – Virgin1 is launched amid the continued stand-off between Virgin Media and BSkyB. The channel is intended as a replacement for Sky One.[56]
- 29 November – Setanta Sports News launches. For Virgin Media customers this is a direct replacement for Sky Sports News.[57]
- 2008
- 30 April – The BBC iPlayer becomes available for the first time on Virgin Media.[58]
- 13 November – The Sky Basics channels return to Virgin Media.[59]
- 2009
- 23 June – Setanta Sports stops broadcasting.[60]
- 3 August –
- ESPN launches its UK television sports channel and is made available to all of Virgin's XL TV customers.[61]
- More than seven years after its launch on Sky Digital, ESPN Classic begins broadcasting on Virgin Media.
- 24 November – Virgin Media enters into a strategic partnership with TiVo.[62] Under the mutually exclusive agreement, TiVo will develop a converged television and broadband interactive interface to power Virgin Media's next generation, high definition set top boxes. Virgin Media will be the exclusive distributor of TiVo services and technology in the United Kingdom.
- 2010
- 1 February - Virgin Media switches off VHF/FM radio relays on analpgue cable in Manchester
- 1 March - Virgin Media switches off analuge cable service in Manchester
- 4 June – British Sky Broadcasting and Virgin Media announce that they have reached an agreement for the acquisition by Sky of Virgin Media Television.[63][64] The take-over is completed on 13 July.[65]
- 20 July – Film4 HD launches exclusively on Virgin Media[66][67] and remains exclusive to the platform until it launches on Sky in 2013.
- 3 September – Virgin 1 is rebranded as Channel One because the Virgin name was not licensed to Sky.
- December – Virgin Media releases its first TiVo co-branded product.[68]
- 2011
- 1 February – Sky Atlantic launches. However the channel does not launch on Virgin Media and to this day it is still not available on the cable platform.
- early 2011 – Video on demand content from ESPN Classic starts to appear on the Virgin Media platform.[69]
- May – Virgin Media carries Eurosport's 3D coverage of the French Open tennis tournament.
- July – BSkyB’s on demand service Sky Anytime becomes available on Virgin Media.[70]
- 15 August – Virgin Media agrees to sell its 50% stake in UKTV to Scripps Networks for £339m.[71]
- 19 December – Virgin Media signs a deal with BBC Sport allowing the cable company to provide extra coverage of sports events, including live video streams of the 2012 Olympic Games.[72]
- 2012
- January – Virgin Media shuts down its analogue service in Westminster. Due to a dispute with BT, which owns the cables, Virgin was not able to obtain the access required to launch its digital service in the area.[73]
- February – The V+ box stops being available to new customers as it starts to be phased out in favour of TiVo boxes.
- 8 February – For the first time, a UK cable company moves into profit when Virgin Media announces a small profit for 2011.[74]
- 13 September – Movies-on-demand service FilmFlex is renamed Virgin Movies.[75]
- 2013
- 6 February – Virgin Media is bought by Liberty Global at a cost of £15 billion.[76]
- 15 August – BT Sport starts broadcasting on Virgin Media, a month after the channel's launch. Virgin makes the channel available in its XL package as had been the case with Setanta Sports and with ESPN.[77]
- 25 October – Four years after launching, Premier Sports finally becomes available on Virgin Media. It launches one day prior to the start of the 2013 Rugby League World Cup and is available to all viewers until early 2014.[78]
- 28 November – Virgin Media shuts down its analogue service in Milton Keynes. As was the case in Westminster, BT and Virgin Media were not able to reach an agreement allowing Virgin the physical access needed to launch its digital service.
- 2014
- 3 February – Virgin Media acquires Smallworld Fibre.[79]
- 12 May – Virgin Media signs a new five-year agreement with Sky but the deal does not include Sky Atlantic.[80]
- 2015
- 5 January – The HD versions of Sky News and Sky Sports News HQ launch on Virgin Media.[81]
- 2016
- 12 January –
- Virgin Media launches four music channels but they are only available as an app to TiVo customers by pressing the red button on channel 345. This is the first time that Virgin Media has launched channels in this way. Later in 2016, one of the channels – Clubland TV – launches as a linear channel meaning that it can be viewed by non-Tivo customers with the other channels accessible by pressing red.[82]
- Virgin Media adds the Vevo streaming music service, again only for Tivo customers.[83]
- 24 August – Sky Sports Mix launches and is available from day one on Virgin Media. Also launching on the platform at around the same time are a number of channels already available on Freeview, including Spike, truTV and Movie Mix.[84]
- 12 January –
- 2017
- 10 April – Virgin TV Kids launches, replacing Tiddlers TV.[85]
- 1 June – Talking Pictures TV appears on Virgin Media, two years after it launched on other platforms.[86]
- 18 July – Sky Sports is revamped. The numbered services are dropped in favour of dedicated channels devoted to their core sports properties with all other sports moved to two new channels – Action and Arena.[87] Sky allows customers to subscribe to specific channels but Virgin Media customers have to take all the channels or none at all.
- 2018
- 8 February – Virgin Media signs its first deal with a US streaming service when it announces a partnership with Amazon to co-fund a sci-fi series The Feed.[88]
- 21 July – A number of channels start broadcasting on Virgin Media. These include FreeSports, Paramount Network, YourTV, Vice and Horse & Country TV which had all been available on other platforms for some time, and Now 80s, which had previously been available via the red button on Clubland TV, launches as a linear channel. Also, two channels from Canadian company Blue Ant Media – Love Nature and children's channel ZooMoo – launch. Both are exclusive to Virgin Media in the UK.[89]
- 22 July – The UKTV channels stop broadcasting on Virgin Media.[90] The dispute receives considerable media attention.[91]
- 27 July – Virgin Media agrees a new three-year deal with ITV after more than a year of discussions.[92]
- 30 July – BT Sport’s 4K HD channel launches on Virgin Media.[93]
- 11 August – The UKTV channels return to Virgin Media. The long term deal sees the HD versions of Dave and Gold launch on Virgin Media.[94]
- 17 September – Virgin Media launches a linear UHD channel, becoming Virgin's first linear television channel since it sold its channels to Sky in 2010. It broadcasts a mix of drama, documentaries and music to customers who have its premium V6 set-top box.[95]
- 25 September – For the first time, Virgin Media removes standard definition (SD) channels when Gold's SD channel is removed from the platform.
- 4 December – Virgin Media removes the SD versions of BT Sport.
- 11 December – BBC Two in SD is replaced on channel 102 by the high definition version although BBC Two continues to be available in SD as BBC Two England on channel 862.[96]
- 2019
- Virgin Media stops broadcasting many more channels in standard definition, including BBC Four, BBC News, CBBC and CBeebies (SD channels removed on 19 February),[97] Lifetime, History, H2 and Crime & Investigation (removed on 14 May),[98] the Sky Cinema channels (apart from Sky Movies Premier +1, removed on 1 August),[99] Eurosport and Discovery (removed on 26 September).[100]
- March – Now 90s, which had previously only been available via the red button on Clubland TV and Now 80s, launches on Virgin Media EPG. Sister channel Total Country also launches on the same day.[101]
- 18 July – Virgin Media signs what it describes as an "extended deal" with Sky but once again, Sky Atlantic is not included. However the deal will see Sky's UHD content launching on Virgin Media in 2020.[102]
- 2020
- 7 January – Almost a decade after it was removed, MTV Classic re-appears on Virgin Media. It relaunches on the platform following the closure of VH1.[103]
References
- Writer Russ J Graham. "A short history of Rediffusion by Russ J Graham". Transdiffusion.org. Archived from the original on 18 February 2012. Retrieved 12 February 2012.
- Writer Russ J Graham EMAIL MORE ARTICLES WEBSITE. "A short history of Rediffusion by Russ J Graham". Transdiffusion.org. Archived from the original on 6 January 2019. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
- "The Michael Aldrich Archive - Cable Systems". Aldricharchive.com. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
- 1982 Aldrich MJ co-author Cable Systems p18 HMSO London ISBN 0-11-630821-4
- Henwood, Flis; Miller, Nod; Senker, Peter; Wyatt, Sally (2002). Technology and In/equality: Questioning the Information Society. Routledge. pp. 52–53. ISBN 9780203134504.
- "OK for local tv". New Scientist. 27 January 1972. p. 205.
- Walker, John Albert (1993). Arts TV: A History of Arts Television in Britain. Indiana University Press. p. 167. ISBN 9780861964352.
- Fiddick, Peter (24 March 1975). "The truth implicit in Rediffusion's pull-out". The Guardian. p. 8.
- Fiddick, Peter (24 March 1975). "The truth implicit in Rediffusion's pull-out". The Guardian. p. 8.
- "Lack of funds closes local TV". The Guardian. 2 January 1976. p. 6.
- "Mixed or matched". The Guardian. 13 May 1980. p. 12.
- "Subscription tv by cable". Wireless World. November 1981.
- "The Michael Aldrich Archive - The Cable Story". Aldricharchive.com. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
- SKY Television launch in Swindon - News reports
- Sky Channel Swindon launch
- Broadcasting - News - Performance Channel to end after 23 years - Digital Spy
- From Tony Currie Controller of Programmes at the Cable Authority from 1987 – 1991
- Clover, Julian (16 September 2010). "Sky shuts Bravo after 25 years". Broadband TV News. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
- Cable Authority, Final Report and Accounts 1990
- "United Artists deal". The New York Times. 8 June 1991.
- TV Ark: The Parliamentary Channel
- "Broadcasting Select Committee Minutes of Evidence, 1997".
- "Merger Plans For Flextech". The New York Times. 3 January 1994. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
- "Flextech Set To Acquire TCI Programming". Telecompaper. 21 December 1993. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
- A cricket coup for UK cable Variety, 2 March 1994
- Sporting push for UK cable-only channel Screen Digest, 1 March 1994
- Mirror Group buys cable TV channel The Independent, 16 February 1995
- Short feature about L!ve TV
- Mercury's pounds 5bn merger with cable firms heralds huge telecoms indu stry shake-up The Independent {London}, Chris Godsmark and Mathew Horsman, 23 October 1996
- The last hour of Channel One London
- "BBC News – Edinburgh Festival – Digital TV makers plan cheaper packages". news.bbc.co.uk.
- "BBC News – The Company File – First shots in Digital TV war". news.bbc.co.uk.
- "Enquiries". Cambridge Cable. Archived from the original on 28 January 1997. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
- "Telewest buys Cable London". BBC News. 26 August 1999. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
- Gibson, Janine (22 October 1999). "£30m gimmick ends with death of Live TV". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
- Short feature about L!ve TV
- McIntosh, Bill (7 December 1999). "Telewest merger with Flextech would challenge Murdoch grip". The Independent. London. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
- Milmo, Dan (2 November 2000). "Telewest snaps up Eurobell". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
- Wilkes, Neil (29 September 2000). "Universal and ntl to launch film channel". Digital Spy. Retrieved 9 June 2012.
- Satchell, Luke (4 December 2001). "OMNE Communications set to launch local TV networks". Broadcast. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
- "Presentation to the Special Committee of the Board of Directors of NTL Europe, Inc". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. 30 September 2003. Retrieved 11 June 2012.
- Smith, Mark (1 February 2003). "Buy-out deal secures future of Omne Communications". The Herald. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
- "'Super-regulator' Ofcom launches". BBC News. 29 December 2003.
- Tryhorn, Chris (18 January 2005). "NTL and Telewest launch on-demand services". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
- Norris, Ashley (15 December 2005). "Telewest TVDrive". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
- "Telewest beats Sky to HD launch". Broadcast Now.
- "CLS Holdings Plc Preliminary Financial Results 2006" (PDF). CLS Holdings. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
- "Wight Cable North – Operator Profile". Point Topic. Archived from the original on 11 October 2007. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
- Ferguson, Andrew (15 March 2007). "Wight Cable North re-branding to Smallworld". ThinkBroadband. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
- NTL rebrands as Virgin Media
- Virgin Central launches without ITV
- Virgin customers wake up to no Sky channels
- "Virgin Media sleighs price of V+". Virgin Media. 27 November 2007.
- "V+ bundles". Virgin Media. Retrieved 27 November 2007.
- Setanta signs Virgin Media sports deal
- Virgin to launch Sky One rival
- Setanta plans sports news channel
- BBC IPlayer launched on Virgin Media
- Sky and Virgin Media resolve distribution row
- Setanta goes off air with loss of more than 200 jobs
- ESPN football to be free for first month on cable
- "Virgin Media Selects Tivo For Next Generation Tv Platform". Virgin Media. 24 November 2009.
- "BSkyB and Virgin Media reach agreements on sale of VMtv and channel distribution". Virgin Media. 4 June 2010. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
- "BSkyB and Virgin Media Reach Agreements on Sale of VMtv and Channel Distribution". BSkyB. 4 June 2010. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
- BSkyB completes Virgin Media Television take-over
- "Film4 HD to launch exclusively on Virgin Media". Virgin Media. 8 March 2010. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- "Film4 HD". Film4. Archived from the original on 27 July 2016. Retrieved 7 July 2010.
- "Virgin Media's TiVo platform to go live". Digital Spy. 1 December 2010.
- "ESPN Classic VOD coming to Virgin Media". Digital Spy. 11 February 2011.
- "Sky Anytime on Virgin Media TV". Virgin Media. 11 October 2011.
- "Virgin Media sells £239m stake in UKTV". Financial Times. 15 August 2011.
- VM signs BBC sports coverage deal
- http://www.ispreview.co.uk/story/2011/04/04/bt-and-virgin-media-dispute-holds-back-faster-broadband-and-tv-in-milton-keynes-uk.html ISPreview – BT and Virgin Media Dispute Holds Back Faster Broadband and TV in Milton Keynes
- Virgin Media posts first ever profit
- "New look on demand movies unveiled by Virgin Media". 13 September 2012. Archived from the original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved 10 August 2018.
- Virgin Media bought by Liberty Global for £15 billion
- BT sport channels to be made available to VM TV customers
- "Premier Sports launches on Virgin Media". Virgin Media. 25 October 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
- "Virgin Media acquires Smallworld Fibre". Virgin Media. 3 February 2014. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
- VM extends BSkyB channels deal
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 68". Cable Forum. 5 January 2015. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 73". Cable Forum. 9 October 2016. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 71". Cable Forum. 14 January 2016. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 73". Cable Forum. 24 August 2016. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 74". Cable Forum. 10 April 2017. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 74". Cable Forum. 1 June 2017. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- Sky Sports to replace numbered channels
- VM signs deal to make sci-fi series with Amazon
- New Channel Line-up
- Four million Virgin Media customers lose UKTV channels
- Virgin Media Television and UKTV bosses go head-to-head live on BBC Breakfast
- Virgin Media reaches deal with ITV to retain access to its channels
- BT and Virgin Media deal: BT UHD channel coming to cable TV
- UKTV channels return to Virgin Media
- Virgin launches linear UHD TV channel
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 80". Cable Forum. 11 December 2018. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
- Virgin Media to move BBC HD channels to prime EPG slots
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 83". Cable Forum. 14 May 2019. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 83". Cable Forum. 14 May 2019. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
- "Channel Changes 26th September"
- Total Country [@TotalCountryTV] (8 March 2019). "It's the news that all @virginmedia customers have been waiting for! We are on channel 348 playing all your country favourites right now!" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- Extended partnership between Virgin Media and Sky to bring even more benefits to viewers and the industry
- "Virgin Media Changelog page 83". Cable Forum. 21 January 2020. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.