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I Love the '90s is a BBC television nostalgia series that examines the pop culture of the 1990s. It was commissioned following the success of I Love the '70s and I Love the '80s, with episodes being 60 minutes long, except for 1990 which was 90 minutes long. The series was executive produced by Alan Brown, with Stephen McGinn serving as series ...
Television portal; United Kingdom portal; 1990s portal; Television series which originated in the United Kingdom in the decade 1990s. i.e. in the years 1990 to 1999.Television shows that originated in other countries and only later aired in the United Kingdom should be removed from this category and its sub-categories
Madson (TV series) Maigret (1992 TV series) Making News; The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous (film) The Manageress; Martin Chuzzlewit (1994 TV series) McCallum (TV series) Melissa (1997 TV series) The Men's Room; Middlemarch (TV serial) A Mind to Kill; Miss Marple (TV series) Moon and Son; The Moonstone (1996 film) Mortimer's Law; Mosley (TV serial)
24 January–3 February – The BBC broadcasts the 1990 Commonwealth Games. BBC1 stays on the air all night to provide live coverage. BBC1 stays on the air all night to provide live coverage. This is the first time that BBC1 has provided full live coverage of an overseas Commonwealth Games with around 12 hours of live action broadcast each day.
The series was a huge success, and in 1989 a similar programme, Byker Grove, set in a youth club, was launched by the BBC's North-Eastern arm and screened on Children's BBC. From the 1990s onwards, in common with BBC programming in other genres, children's drama has often been commissioned from independent producers as well as being made in-house.
Chelsea Flower Show; Children in Need (BBC One & BBC Two 1980 – present) Comic Relief (BBC One & BBC Two 1985 – present) Edinburgh Festival; Eurovision Song Contest (Finals: BBC TV/BBC One 1956 – present, Semi-finals: BBC Three 2004 – 2015; 2022, BBC Four 2016 – 2021, BBC One 2023–present)
The closing credits refer to the films being "A BBC-tv production in association with the Arts and Entertainment Network, USA and the Seven Network, Australia". The first series consisted of four books adapted into ten episodes, each approximately 55–60 minutes in length and were broadcast between December 1984 and March 1985.
The 100 Greatest TV Series of the 21st Century is a list compiled in October 2021 by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), as part of their annual critics' poll, chosen by a voting poll of 206 television experts (critics, journalists, academics and industry figures) from 43 countries. [1]