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The Money Programme

British TV finance and business affairs series (1966–2010)


Summary

British TV finance and business affairs series (1966–2010)

FieldValue
imageMoney programme 2008.png
captionThe Money Programme logo as of 2008
genreFinance and business affairs
presenterMax Flint and Libby Potter
openthemeMain Title from The Carpetbaggers
countryUnited Kingdom
languageEnglish
networkBBC2
first_aired
last_aired

The Money Programme is a finance and business affairs television programme on BBC Two which ran between April 1966 and November 2010. It was first broadcast on 5 April 1966 and presented by "commentators" (financial journalists) William Davis, Erskine B. Childers and Joe Roeber.

The programme's theme tune was a version of the main title theme from The Carpetbaggers (1964) (which appeared on an album by jazz organist Jimmy Smith). By 1989, the programme was updated with a new theme by George Fenton, but an updated version of the original theme tune was reused again later on.

The programme used a magazine style starting in the 1980s, but changed to a single subject documentary in 2001. More recently, the programme has formed a partnership with the Open University Business School. The Open University provides input into programmes and supplementary materials written by OU Business School academics.

On 1 June 2007, an episode of the Money Programme called "Virtual World / Real Millions" became the first full BBC programme to have been broadcast inside the virtual world Second Life. That episode featured an interview with Second Life founder and CEO Philip Rosedale amongst others.

This programme was parodied in Series 3 of Monty Python's Flying Circus as the opening sketch of the third episode in that series first airing on the BBC on 3 November 1972.

| episode-link = List_of_Monty_Python%27s_Flying_Circus_episodes#3._The_Money_Programme | series-link = Monty Python's Flying Circus

Presenters

  • Max Flint
  • Libby Potter

Former presenters

  • James Bellini
  • Michael Charlton
  • Erskine B. Childers
  • Adrian Chiles
  • Nick Clarke
  • Rajan Datar
  • William Davis
  • Maya Even
  • Peter Hobday
  • Peter Jay
  • Donald MacCormick
  • Michael Robinson
  • Joe Roeber
  • Valerie Singleton
  • Hugh Stephenson
  • Alan Watson
  • Brian Widlake

Interviewees

  • Jeff Bezos
  • Lord Black of Crossharbour
  • Tony Blair
  • Michael Bloomberg
  • Sir Richard Branson
  • Lord Browne of Madingley
  • Shiatzy Chen
  • Stuart Lowry
  • Michael Dell
  • Michael Eisner
  • Larry Ellison
  • Sir Rocco Forte
  • Bill Gates
  • Sir Chris Gent
  • Sir James Goldsmith
  • Sir Philip Green
  • Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou
  • Robert Maxwell
  • Alexander McQueen
  • Lakshmi Mittal
  • Rupert Murdoch
  • Peter Oakley
  • Bernd Pischetsrieder
  • Sir Paul Smith
  • George Soros
  • Sir Alan Sugar
  • Björn Ulvaeus

References

References

  1. Holmwood, Leigh. (3 September 2008). "BBC's Money Programme series to become one-off specials". The Guardian.
  2. [https://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2007/05_may/24/money.shtml BBC – Press Office – Money Programme is first BBC show to broadcast in Second Life]
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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