, Headquarters of the BBC in Northern Ireland. BBC Northern Ireland operates two television stations:
BBC One Northern Ireland and
BBC Two Northern Ireland. BBC Northern Ireland funds an opt-out service with the majority of this output being made in the independent sector. Some output that originates in London (so-called 'network' programmes) are time-shifted to create appropriate slots for programming that is more appealing to the BBC audience in NI. Prior to 27 October 2006,
BBC Two NI was a digital only service while BBC Two Northern Ireland was available on analogue transmission. Since 28 October 2006,
BBC Two Northern Ireland has been the on-air name for both services which have been merged. BBC Northern Ireland has its own team of
continuity announcers which introduce the vast majority of programmes on
BBC One and
BBC Two in Northern Ireland.
Regional television •
BBC Newsline is the regional news service. The main bulletin is from 18.30 to 19.00 with shorter bulletins at 13.30 and 22.30 and during the weekend, with summaries on
BBC Breakfast. BBC NI produces some regional political programmes, notably
Spotlight,
The View and
Nolan Live.
Network output As well as programmes intended purely for an audience in NI, BBC Northern Ireland also funds or often co-funds output for pan-UK consumption on both the player and other BBC channels. in 2021 network output is principally in drama. It was announced in June 2019 that the BBC quiz show
Mastermind would now be produced from BBC NI. BBC Northern Ireland also engages in co-productions with other broadcasting networks, including with the Irish broadcasters
RTÉ and
TG4.
Republic of Ireland • BBC One Northern Ireland and BBC Two Northern Ireland are widely available across the border in the
Republic of Ireland. These channels are carried on pay-TV platforms in the Republic including
Sky Ireland,
Virgin Media Ireland,
Magnet Networks, SCTV and Crossan Cable. BBC One NI and BBC Two NI are also available in the Republic via
signal overspill by
Freeview in counties near the Northern Ireland border. Similarly, prior to the digital switchover in 2012, they were available in these areas via
analogue television. • Additional BBC channels such as
BBC Three,
BBC Four,
BBC News,
BBC World News and
children's television channels
CBBC and
CBeebies, are also available within the Republic of Ireland via a
free-to-air satellite receiver or, in some areas near the border, via overspill from the Freeview service. Leading subscription TV providers also carry these channels. == Radio ==