The first evening's BBC Four programmes were
simulcast on
BBC Two, BBC Four was also notable for first showing
Larry David's
Seinfeld follow-up,
Curb Your Enthusiasm,
Armando Iannucci's cutting
political satire,
The Thick of It, ''
The Chaser's War on Everything, Flight of the Conchords, Mad Men and Danish thriller The Killing''. The channel broadcasts a mixture of
art and
science documentaries, vintage
drama (including many rare
black-and-white programmes), and non-English-language productions such as
films from the
Artificial Eye catalogue, the French thriller
Spiral and the Swedish detective series
Wallander. BBC Four further supports foreign-language films with its annual
World Cinema Award which has been running since 2004. From the channel's launch in 2002 until the middle of 2020, BBC Four broadcast a global news bulletin on weeknights. Originally this was the
BBC Four News presented initially by
George Alagiah, which ran at 8pm. It was rebranded in January 2004 as
The World, and was axed in May 2007, replaced the following week by
World News Today, in a new 7pm timeslot. More recently BBC Four moved news programmes to 7pm with a simulcast of
Beyond 100 Days Monday–Thursday and an edition of
World News Today on Fridays which was produced by
BBC World News. As of autumn 2020, BBC Four no longer broadcasts a news bulletin. It screens a number of documentaries such as
The Century of the Self and
The Trials of Henry Kissinger. The channel is also home to many political travel shows such as
Holidays in the Axis of Evil which features investigative journalism.
Drama has given the channel some of its most popular programmes, with
The Alan Clark Diaries (2003) and
Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa! (2006) being among the highest rated, with over 800,000 viewers. The highly acclaimed
Hattie, broadcast in 2011, holds the record for BBC Four's best ever consolidated ratings, of 2m / 8%. Before that
The Curse of Steptoe brought the channel its highest audience figures, estimated as 1.41 million viewers, a 7% share of multichannel audiences between 21:00 and 22:05, based on overnight returns. The official audience figures for the broadcast, including time-shifting, were later published as 1,625,000. Another notable production was a live re-make of the 1953 science-fiction serial
The Quatermass Experiment, adapted from the original scripts into a single, two-hour version (though on the night it underran considerably, lasting less than 1 hour 40 minutes), broadcast on the evening of Saturday 2 April 2005. Discounting BBC Four's previous live relays of theatrical
William Shakespeare productions, this was the first live made-for-television drama to be broadcast by the BBC for twenty years. Another notable programme broadcast on BBC Four is ''
Charlie Brooker's Screenwipe which contains reviews of current shows, as well as stories and commentary on how television is produced. The show is presented by broadcaster Charlie Brooker. The show was very successful and spawned several spin-offs such as Newswipe with Charlie Brooker, Charlie Brooker's Gameswipe and Charlie Brooker's Weekly Wipe''. The channel is also curator and leader of the
BBC Archive project whose aim is that the BBC's television archive is re-broadcast as much as appropriate so that the Archive can be enjoyed again and not isolated. Some output from BBC Four (documentaries rather than foreign films) was for a time repeated on BBC Two in a 'BBC Four on Two' branded area, although this was often in a late night broadcast slot after
Newsnight and has since been discontinued. According to
BARB the comedy panel game
QI has the highest ratings of any show on BBC Four. At the
Edinburgh International Television Festival, BBC Four won the Non-Terrestrial Channel of the Year award in 2004, 2006 and 2012. In 2012
Dirk Gently became the first continuing drama series produced for the channel. During the period when BBC Three was not broadcasting as a linear TV channel, BBC Four was occasionally used to show live sports coverage. The channel aired games from the
UEFA Euro 2016 and
2018 FIFA World Cup football tournaments when the final round of matches in the group stages took place (when matches in each group kick-off simultaneously). It has also been used to broadcast England women's football matches, as well as some matches from the
2019 FIFA Women's World Cup. It also temporarily extended its broadcast hours to show live action from the
2016 Summer Olympics. As of 2023, BBC Four schedules still feature music programming (such as
Top of the Pops and
Neil Brand's documentaries) on a Friday night, with drama imports on a Saturday (but not always foreign-language productions like Italian crime drama
Inspector Montalbano) and usually an hour of 'archive' programmes (such as those by
Bob Ross and
Fred Dibnah) starting off the weekday schedule at 7pm. As well as programmes from the 1980s and 1990s, this early evening slot gives a chance for regional programmes to get a national airing with
Cy Chadwick's Walking with... productions and ''Gareth Edwards's Great Welsh Adventure'' (from BBC Wales) getting a repeat here and then again late night. In addition to these programmes, many hour long regional documentaries such as BBC Scotland's
Rigs of Nigg, about the 1970s North Sea oil drilling platform construction industry based around the
Cromarty Firth, also received their national debut on the channel. On 9 April 2021, BBC Four was suspended due to the
death of
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, in order to preserve
bandwidth for the broadcast of news coverage and tribute programming on BBC One and Two. This was done for the same reasons after the
death of Elizabeth II on 8 September 2022. ==Programmes==