The presentational package featured numerous people of various backgrounds dancing in a predominantly red background to a soundtrack based around an upbeat central jingle. The BBC One logo is now located in a red box, similar in style to
BBC Two's idents of the time, with the BBC logo stacked on top of an upper case 'ONE'. The music for all idents was written by
Peter Lawlor of Water Music Productions in London. The look was also the first one not to feature a station clock. It has been reported that a station clock was designed for the new look, however BBC Marketing decided not to use it. The concerns with this stemmed around a lack of a serious ident to link into the news, and indeed this problem famously occurred one day into the new look upon the
death of The Queen Mother. Promotional style originally consisted of the BBC One box placed in the lower left corner of the screen throughout the promotion and an end board consisting of a translucent white strip along the bottom containing the box logo. This end board style was recreated for the, less frequently seen, static captions. This style was changed on 1 May 2004 to a plain red background that would close shut over the end of a promotion to contain the programme title. The static slide was also updated, with the space for the programme image reduced to the top quarter of the screen.
Idents Special Idents The BBC continued its long tradition of using special idents at
Christmas time throughout this branding period. The first ident,
Snowflakes featured children dressed as snowflakes falling to earth and running around against a red sky background. This ident was used on 20 December 2002 and, for the first time in its history, was reused again on 19 December 2003.
BBC Two also followed suit the same year, although rather than reusing an ident, they were used alongside that year's newer one. This reusing of the previous years ident caused public controversy and, as a result a new ident, entitled
Christmas Puddings, was created the following year. The ident featured children dressed in red and bouncing on
Space Hoppers that looked like
Christmas puddings against a red background. The ident was designed by a young viewer of the children's programme
Blue Peter, as part of a competition. A new ident was commissioned for 2005 entitled
Christmas Tree. In this one included children, again dressed in red, walking round a giant
Christmas tree, carrying brightly coloured balls. The background this time was green, and the look and music has often been compared to the 2005 film
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory directed by
Tim Burton. Each ident also featured a variation used to introduce news and other serious programmes, a practice which was carried through to the Christmas variations of the "Circles", "Oneness" and "Lens" idents. On BBC One Wales, on 15 May 2002, the day following an international friendly between the Welsh and German national football teams, whose result was 1-0 with a Welsh victory, two special idents were broadcast one featuring footage of the only goal in the match and the other, the "Festival" ident both of which featuring a visual pun where a white "BBC NIL Germany" logo appeared. Later in February 2005, an ident was shown to celebrate Wales' win in the
2005 Six Nations Championship. Played to the "Festival" music, it featured Wales supporters celebrating in a
public house. The ONE in the BBC ONE box in the bottom-left corner of the screen was replaced with WON after Wales' victory, between 19 and 21 March. This look was unusual in that no special idents were produced for events or programmes. However, a way used to promote the third series of
Little Britain was for the shows announcer,
Tom Baker to provide the continuity announcements for the evening over the normal idents. ==Parodies==