Britain's Best Sitcom


Britain's Best Sitcom is a 12-episode documentary series that BBC Two transmitted from 10 January to 27 March 2004. It was part of a nationwide media campaign and opinion poll conducted by the BBC in 2003 and 2004.
The BBC asked television viewers to select their favourite British situation comedies from a list of 100, with the option to supply one write-in candidate. In the first poll, conducted in August 2003, viewers could vote via telephone or the BBC's website; the second, conducted January–March 2004, added the option of voting by text message. This second poll coincided with the television programme, which celebrated the top 50 sitcoms from the first poll, and urged viewers to vote their preference from the top 10.
In the three-hour premiere episode, Jonathan Ross summarised the progress of the poll, and presented video clips from the bottom 40 of the 50 sitcoms that received the most votes. Each of the next ten weekly episodes, one hour in length, focused on one sitcom. In each episode, a different presenter advocated a particular sitcom, delivering 20 reasons why it deserved viewers' votes. The sitcom's writers and actors, as well as celebrity viewers, also shared their own perspectives and memories. In the 90-minute finale, transmitted live, Jonathan Ross announced the top sitcom to be Only Fools and Horses.
Britain's Best Sitcom was preceded by the BBC Two programmes Great Britons and The Big Read, each of which was also based on national opinion polls.

Structure of the polls

Round one: Selecting the top 50

Before the opening the poll, the BBC compiled a list of 100 "top sitcoms" based on input from "sitcom writers and TV comedy experts". This list constituted the nominees for the first of the two rounds of votes solicited from the public.
The BBC posted a homepage and ballot web page for the Britain's Best Sitcom poll to the BBCi website on 28 July 2003. In August, they advertised the poll in the Radio Times magazine, on the BBCi website, and via the national teletext service Ceefax, inviting the public to "have your say" and "play part in a major television event".
The ballot required voters either to select 10 sitcoms from the list, or to select nine and then nominate a write-in candidate. Voters could not rank their 10 selections by preference. Votes by telephone incurred a charge of 10 pence per minute. On 30 December 2003, the BBC published a press release promoting the forthcoming Britain's Best Sitcom series on BBC Two, and listing the 50 sitcoms that received the most votes. The list was alphabetical; it did not reveal the number of votes that any sitcom received, or its rank in the list. It contained no write-in candidates.

Round two: The top 10

The launch

On 10 January 2004, the BBC published another press release to promote the series, which was to begin that night on BBC Two. The press release provided more details about the programme and the vote, including an alphabetical list of the 10 finalists, and a ranked list of the rest of the top 50 sitcoms. The premiere episode of Britain's Best Sitcom began at 9 PM and concluded at midnight. From Goodnight Sweetheart to Father Ted, it counted down the 40 highest-ranked sitcoms that did not receive enough votes to place it in the top 10.

The vote

Each of the next 10 episodes of Britain's Best Sitcom was one hour long, and devoted to one of the 10 finalists. The "celebrity advocate" in each episode gave 20 reasons why their sitcom was the best. Their arguments were illustrated by video clips from the sitcom. On-screen messages in the episodes, as well as web pages in the BBC's website, and listings in the Radio Times—informed viewers and readers that they could vote by telephone, by text message, or online. Voting by text message was only possible in this final round of voting. Votes by telephone were less expensive than in the first round, because they lasted no more than one minute. A vote by telephone cost 10 pence; a vote by text message incurred a charge of 10–12 pence, depending on the mobile network operator. For each of the finalists, online voters had access to an essay about the sitcom, a selection of quotes from the advocate's arguments and from online comments, and an annotated video clip of a scene from one episode.
The poll opened at 9 PM on 10 January 2004. The voting rules allowed up to five people per household to vote. After the transmission of each weekly episode, viewer's had an opportunity to change their vote. The BBC collected demographic profile data as part of the poll. It required online voters to answer three market segmentation questions: whether they are male or female; which region of the UK they live in, and which age group they belong to. Voting closed on the night of 27 March 2004.

The result

Near the end of the live, final episode of Britain's Best Sitcom, Jonathan Ross announced Only Fools and Horses to be the top sitcom by popular vote. After the programme's conclusion, the BBC published a ranked list of all 100 sitcoms on their website, along with the official vote tally for the top 10.

The ''Britain's Best Sitcom'' Top 100

RankTitleYears transmitted
ChannelNumber of votes
1Only Fools and Horses1981–1993, 1996, 2001–2003BBC1342,426
2Blackadder1983–1989, 1999BBC1282,106
3The Vicar of Dibley1994–2000BBC1212,927
4Dad's Army1968–1977BBC1174,138
5Fawlty Towers1975–1979BBC2172,066
6Yes Minister1980–1982, 1984BBC2123,502
6Yes, Prime Minister1987–1988BBC2123,502
7Porridge1974–1977BBC193,902
8Open All Hours1976–1985BBC167,237
9The Good Life1975–1978BBC140,803
10One Foot in the Grave1990–2000BBC131,410
11Father Ted1995–1998Channel 4
12Keeping Up Appearances1990–1995BBC1
13'Allo 'Allo!1982–1992BBC1
14Last of the Summer Wine1973–2003BBC1
15Steptoe and Son1962–1974BBC1
16Men Behaving Badly1992–1998ITV
BBC1
17Absolutely Fabulous1992–1996, 2001–2003BBC1
18Red Dwarf1988–1999BBC2
19The Royle Family1998–2000BBC1
20Are You Being Served?1972–1985BBC1
21To the Manor Born1979–1981BBC1
22Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em1973–1978BBC1
23The Likely Lads1964–1966BBC1rowspan="2"
23Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?1973–1974BBC2-
24My Family2000–2003BBC1
25The Office2001–2002BBC2
26Drop the Dead Donkey1990–1998Channel 4
27Rising Damp1974–1978ITV
28dinnerladies1998–2000BBC1
29As Time Goes By1992–2002BBC1
30Hancock's Half Hour1956–1961BBC1
31The Young Ones1982–1984BBC2
32Till Death Us Do Part1965–1975BBC1
33Butterflies1978–1983BBC2
34The Thin Blue Line1995–1996BBC1
35The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin1976–1979, 1982BBC1
36Phoenix Nights2001–2002Channel 4
37Waiting for God1990–1994BBC1
38Birds of a Feather1989–1998BBC1
39Bread1986–1991BBC1
40Hi-de-Hi!1980–1988BBC1
41The League of Gentlemen1999–2002BBC2
42I'm Alan Partridge1997–2002BBC2
43Just Good Friends1983–1986BBC1
442point4 children1991–1999BBC1
45Bottom1991–1995BBC2
46It Ain't Half Hot Mum1974–1981BBC1
47The Brittas Empire1991–1997BBC1
48Gimme Gimme Gimme1999–2001BBC2
BBC1
49Rab C. Nesbitt1988–1999BBC2
50Goodnight Sweetheart1993–1999BBC1
51Up Pompeii!1969–1970, 1975, 1991BBC1
ITV
52Ever Decreasing Circles1984–1989BBC1
53On the Buses1969–1973ITV
54Coupling2000–2002BBC2
55George and Mildred1976–1979ITV
56A Fine Romance1981–1984ITV
57Citizen Smith1977–1980BBC1
58Black Books2000–2002Channel 4
59The Liver Birds1969–1996BBC1
60Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps2001–2003BBC2
BBC Choice
BBC Three
61The New Statesman1987–1994ITV
BBC1
62Sykes1972–1979BBC1rowspan="2"
62Sykes and a...1960–1965BBC1-
63Please Sir!1968–1972ITV
64Dear John1986–1987BBC1
65Barbara1995–2003ITV
66Spaced1999–2001Channel 4
67Bless This House1971–1976ITV
68Love Thy Neighbour1972–1976ITV
69Man About the House1973–1976ITV
70Desmond's1989–1994Channel 4
71Duty Free1984–1986ITV
72All Gas and Gaiters1966–1971BBC1
73Happy Ever After1974–1979BBC1rowspan="2"
73Terry and June1979–1987BBC1-
74Only When I Laugh1979–1982ITV
75Brass1983–1990ITV
76The Rag Trade1961–1978BBC1
ITV
77Sorry!1981–1988BBC1
78Kiss Me Kate1998–2000BBC1
79Doctor in the House1969–1970ITVrowspan="6"
79Doctor at Large1971ITV-
79Doctor in Charge1972–1973ITV-
79Doctor at Sea1974ITV-
79Doctor on the Go1975–1977ITV-
79Doctor at the Top1991BBC1-
80I Didn't Know You Cared1975–1979BBC1
81Shelley1979–1992ITV
82Nearest and Dearest1968–1973ITV
83Fresh Fields1984–1986ITVrowspan="2"
83French Fields1989–1991ITV-
84The Army Game1957–1961ITV
85Robin's Nest1977–1981ITV
86The Dustbinmen1969–1970ITV
87Whoops Apocalypse1982ITV
88My Wife Next Door1972BBC1
89Never the Twain1981–1991ITV
90Nightingales1990–1993Channel 4
91Early Doors2003BBC2
92Agony1979–1981ITV
93The Lovers1970–1971ITV
94Father, Dear Father1968–1973ITV
95Hot Metal1986–1989ITV
96...And Mother Makes Three1971–1973ITVrowspan="2"
96...And Mother Makes Five1974–1976ITV-
97Life with the Lyons1955–1960BBC1 / ITV
98Marriage Lines1961–1966BBC1
99A Sharp Intake of Breath1977–1981ITV
100No Problem!1983–1985Channel 4

Background

Britain's Best Sitcom was BBC Two's third television programme based on nationwide opinion polls between 2002 and 2004. It was preceded by the The Big Read and Great Britons. The Big Read was based on a poll asking for readers' favourite novels; Great Britons was based on the 100 Great Britons poll, which asked members of the public to nominate people who were born in or lived in the British Isles, and who "played a significant part in the life of the British Isles."
All three polls were conducted during the tenure of Jane Root as controller of BBC Two. Root served as the channel's controller from 1999 until 2004, when she left the BBC to head Discovery Networks in the United States.