TV
Channel 4 unveils Spring / Summer lineup
Published Wednesday, Mar 6 2002, 18:22 GMT | By Neil Wilkes
Channel 4 has unveiled its Spring and Summer programming lineup.
Top of the bill is Graham Norton's as-yet unnamed weeknightly chat show, which will begin a 13-week run in May, followed by a second series in the Autumn.
Daisy Donovan will get a new weekly show Daisy Daisy, whilst former co-presenter Iain Lee will host a new celebrity confession show, The First Television Show.
Friends, South Park, Will & Grace and Peter Kay's Phoenix Nights will all return for new series, whilst new US imports include medical comedy Scrubs and Star Trek spinoff Enterprise.
A special season of programmes will focus on football, to coincide with the World Cup in June, featuring a series of Football Stories and specials Top Ten Football Songs and The 100 Greatest World Cup Moments.
Two programmes will mark New Labour's fifth anniversary of coming to power in May, and a season of "Indian" programmes will air in August to coincide with the visit of the Indian cricket team.
The Edwardian Country House is a sequel to The 1900 House and The 1940s House, whilst To Live and let Die follows ten terminally ill patients through the last stages of their lives.
For an in-depth look at C4's Spring and Summer programming, see news extra ,here.
Top of the bill is Graham Norton's as-yet unnamed weeknightly chat show, which will begin a 13-week run in May, followed by a second series in the Autumn.
Daisy Donovan will get a new weekly show Daisy Daisy, whilst former co-presenter Iain Lee will host a new celebrity confession show, The First Television Show.
Friends, South Park, Will & Grace and Peter Kay's Phoenix Nights will all return for new series, whilst new US imports include medical comedy Scrubs and Star Trek spinoff Enterprise.
A special season of programmes will focus on football, to coincide with the World Cup in June, featuring a series of Football Stories and specials Top Ten Football Songs and The 100 Greatest World Cup Moments.
Two programmes will mark New Labour's fifth anniversary of coming to power in May, and a season of "Indian" programmes will air in August to coincide with the visit of the Indian cricket team.
The Edwardian Country House is a sequel to The 1900 House and The 1940s House, whilst To Live and let Die follows ten terminally ill patients through the last stages of their lives.
For an in-depth look at C4's Spring and Summer programming, see news extra ,here.
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