The National Lottery Draws

The National Lottery Draws

Graphics used from 2006–13
Also known as The National Lottery Live
Narrated by Alan Dedicoat
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
Production
Location(s) BBC Television Centre (1994–2005)
Arqiva Chalfont Grove Studio
(2006–2012)
Pinewood Studios (2013–)
Running time 10–60 minutes
Production company(s) Endemol (2006–14)
Princess Productions (2014–)[1]
Release
Original network BBC One
Picture format 4:3 (1994–98)
16:9 (1998–present)
Original release 19 November 1994 (1994-11-19) – present (present)

The National Lottery Draws (previously The National Lottery Live) is the television programme that broadcasts the drawing of the National Lottery in the United Kingdom. Since January 2013, the programme, usually broadcast by BBC One, airs only on Saturday nights.

Presenters

The first show was presented by Noel Edmonds. After the first show, it was either co-presented by Anthea Turner and Gordon Kennedy, or Bob Monkhouse, all of them assisted by the psychic Mystic Meg. Carol Vorderman had a segment during the early years of the show whereby, she would use mathematical techniques to predict the winning numbers. When Gordon left, Anthea remained as solo host.

Current presenter is Gaby Roslin with Kate Garraway and Ore Oduba as occasional presenters.

The voice-overs are provided by Alan Dedicoat, In the event of Alan Dedicoat being unavailable, commentary is provided by fellow BBC Radio 2 announcer Charles Nove.

Current presenters

Former presenters

Stand-in presenters

Current shows

Saturday night draws

The Saturday night draws are usually presented as part of a game show that is shown to be associated with the lottery branding. The game shows were previously broadcast live, with the game show host also presenting the lottery draws. Since 2006, the game shows are now pre-recorded, with the live lottery draws included as a separate segment with a different presenter. The draws on Saturday night consist of "Thunderball" followed by "Lotto" a few minutes later. Since 2014, "Lotto Raffle" is no longer featured during the draws.

Saturday night game shows

Since 1998, eighteen National Lottery game shows have aired.

Show Start date End date Series
(to date)
Presenter(s)
Big Ticket 28 March 1998 11 July 1998 1 Patrick Kielty & Anthea Turner
We've Got Your Number 27 February 1999 15 May 1999 1 Brian Conley
Winning Lines 12 June 1999 16 October 2004 6 Simon Mayo (1999–2000)
Phillip Schofield (2001–04)
Red Alert 13 November 1999 8 April 2000 2 Lulu & Terry Alderton
On the Spot 29 July 2000 2 September 2000 1 Des O'Connor
Jet Set 13 January 2001 8 August 2007 8 Eamonn Holmes
In It to Win It 18 May 2002 Present 17 Dale Winton
Wright Around the World 25 October 2003 8 January 2005 2 Ian Wright
Come and Have a Go If You Think You're Smart Enough 3 April 2004 25 June 2005 2 Nicky Campbell (2004)
Julian Clary (2005)
Millionaire Manor 3 December 2005 4 March 2006 1 Mark Durden-Smith
1 vs. 100 30 September 2006 23 May 2009 4 Dermot O'Leary (2006–07)
Ben Shephard (2008–09)
The People's Quiz 24 March 2007 23 June 2007 1 Jamie Theakston
Who Dares Wins! 17 November 2007 Present 7 Nick Knowles
This Time Tomorrow 5 July 2008 23 August 2008 1 Tess Daly
Guesstimation 11 July 2009 29 August 2009 1 Nick Knowles
Secret Fortune 12 February 2011 29 December 2012 3
Break the Safe 27 July 2013 30 August 2014 2
Win Your Wish List 27 December 2014 Present 2 Shane Richie
5-Star Family Reunion[2] 25 July 2015 Present 1 Nick Knowles

Former shows

Wednesday night draws

The Wednesday night draws were usually broadcast at 22:35 and present the Thunderball and Lotto draws. Until 2006, the draw was presented by the game show host and would often include a challenge for the winner of the previous Saturday's game show, offering a chance to win more prizes. From January 2013, the Wednesday draws are available to watch exclusively on the National Lottery's website. There is still a results update on BBC One at 22:35.

Wednesday night presenters

Friday night draws

The Friday night draws showed the Euromillions results and the Thunderball draw and are usually broadcast at 23:15. The Friday night draws were the only draws not to be broadcast live. From January 2013, the Friday draws are available to watch exclusively on the National Lottery's website. There is still a results update on BBC One at 22:35.

Friday night presenters

Lottery update

On BBC One on Saturday nights straight after Match of the Day, a segment known as Lottery update is broadcast showing the results of the day's Lotto and Thunderball draws and also how many winners there are. The same thing is also broadcast on BBC One on Tuesday nights after the local news opt-out showing the results of the Tuesday Euromillions draw and UK millionaire raffle.

Studios

The National Lottery draws were originally filmed at BBC Television Centre in London. From 2006 to 2012, it was filmed at Arqiva Chalfont Grove studios in Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire in a set known as Lottery HQ. From January 2013, it has been filmed from Pinewood Studios. The Euromillions draw takes place in a dedicated studio in Paris, France. The draw is occasionally shown at other locations for special events such as The National Lottery Awards ceremony.

Broadcasting

The programme is usually broadcast on BBC One, although it is occasionally shown on BBC Two if BBC One is unable to show it. BBC were granted the rights in 1994 after defeating a rival bid from ITV. The programme was also broadcast on BBC Radio 1 (or Radio 1 FM as it was then known) and later, it was broadcast on BBC Radio 5 Live.

Following their defeat, ITV quickly created a rival as they launched their Bingo-based game show Lucky Numbers which was one of the first UK game shows which allowed viewers to take part at home and win. Sponsored by national tabloid The Sun, each week the viewers who had purchased a copy of The Sun were supplied with a game-card. They had to cross off numbers that appeared on that week's show and those that crossed off all their numbers by the time the 'big hooter' sounded on the show would win (or share if there was more than one winner) a prize of £20,000. Whilst it lasted three series from January 1995 until July 1997, it was not as popular as The National Lottery Draws. Unlike the latter show it never aired on Saturdays, with its inaugural series airing on Mondays and the two successive series airing on Fridays. In 2001, ITV would air a single series of The Biggest Game in Town which was similar in its bingo-based interactive style to Lucky Numbers.

Incidents

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, May 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.