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CBBC @ R1's Teen Awards; CBBC does Fame Academy; CBBC Official Chart Show; CBBC Visits the Wizarding World of Harry Potter and Fantastic Beasts [22] CBeebies Bedtime Stories; Chigley; Children of Fire Mountain; The Children of Green Knowe; The Chinese Puzzle; Chip 'n' Dale; Chipmunks Go to the Movies; Chock-A-Block; Christopher Crocodile; The ...
This is a list of notable CBBC and CBeebies presenters from when in-vision presentation was launched in September 1985. Presenters. CBBC. Phillip Schofield;
Prior to the launch of Children's BBC on 9 September 1985, BBC1 used some specialist branding for its children's strand. The origins of CBBC can be found in the "Children's Hour" of the original BBC Television Service, but prior to 1984, children's programmes received no special idents and continuity was done out of vision by the duty continuity announcer.
From its launch in 1985 until 1994, Children's BBC was presented from the regular continuity announcer's booth in the BBC1 network control area (NC1), which had a fixed camera so that the presenter could appear in vision; as it remained an operational continuity booth, the presenter would partly direct their own links by way of vision and sound mixers built into the studio desk.
BBC Children's and Education – BBC's children's division that holds CBBC. CBeebies – BBC's children television channel; serves under-6-year-old children and is a sister channel of CBBC. CBBC idents – identities used by the channel. BBC Three – BBC's youth television channel; serves viewers aged 16–34.
Crackerjack is a British children's television series which was initially aired on the BBC Television Service between 14 September 1955 and 21 December 1984 (with no series in 1971). [3] The series was a variety show featuring comedy sketches, singers and quizzes, broadcast live with an audience. [4] Crackerjack returned in 2020.
Primarily a children's magazine programme featuring celebrity guests, the show also encouraged audience participation through competitions and games. It won an Indie Award for its interactivity, going on later to win two Children's BAFTAs. A number of cartoons and other programme acquisitions were transmitted during Smile on a rotational basis.
Stitch Up! is a surreal CBBC children's hidden camera show in which pranks are played on the general public. It was originally broadcast in early 2002 and was repeated until 2008 on the CBBC channel, when CBBC began to focus even more on their target audience of the under 12s.