Launch In November 2004,
E4 aired a British version of the German phone-in quiz show
9Live during its post hours for six weeks as part of a trial
Channel 4 held with the show's owners. After the trial proved a success, Channel 4 announced in June 2005 that its commercial subsidiary
4Ventures Limited would launch its own
participation television channel by the end of the year. The channel launched in August 2005 as Quiz Call, and was available on
Freeview and
NTL platforms, and launched on the
Sky Digital platform shortly afterwards. The show encourages viewers to enter by calling a
premium-rate telephone number or for free via their website to compete in quizzes and win cash prizes. By October, the channel had moved to Freeview channel 37. On 22 April 2006, Quiz Call began airing overnight on
Five, allowing analogue terrestrial television viewers to participate in the show. The show recrived a slight revamp with a graphics revamp and a purple/gold set in June, which was mainly used on Five. On 6 August, a new car was offered up as a prize. On 1 September, the channel celebrated its first birthday with a 41 Hour Marathon Live Broadcast, giving viewers the chance to play for a
jackpot of £100,000 by guessing a 4-digit combination.
Sale and physical channel closure On 19 October 2006, Channel 4 announced the sale of
Ostrich Media to iTouch Media. The sale included the rights to the program, the physical TV channel, and its slots on NTL and Sky, as well as the company's back room technology, including its customer relations management capability. The sale was closed on 3 November. The sale did not include its Freeview slot, which was retained by Channel 4 and was soon used to broadcast
Film4 +1 and subsequently Channel 4 +1. With its removal from Freeview, Quiz Call's schedule was reduced to airing from 19:00-1:00 instead of 12:00-3:00 like before. For a brief period, Quiz Call also broadcast on
Ftn, between 22:00 and 1:00 during the Christmas season of 2006. On 1 January 2007, the physical Quiz Call channel ceased operations on Sky and NTL/Telewest. The channel's slot initially showcased a caption that stated that the service would be back in Mid-January, but was shortly replaced with a test card reading that the service has ceased operations. The channel was removed from both platforms shortly afterward. The show returned later that month under a new deal with Five, which would see the show broadcast on Five,
Five US and
Five Life on most days of the week. This arrangement saw Five, which had trialled a run of
Quiz Call before switching to
The Great Big British Quiz in 2006 – drop
TGBBQ and revert to using
Quiz Call as their late-night quiz provider. On a number of occasions in 2008,
Quiz Call aired on Five US because of live sport being shown on Five.
Removal of the show On Thursday 10 September, presenter
Liz Fuller announced that Quiz Call would end on Five on 12 September 2009 after 3 years on Five. The decision to end
Quiz Call came after Five signed a deal with NetPlay TV to broadcast Live Roulette on Five three nights a week; these broadcasts, which were made possible due to the relaxation of the rules regarding such broadcasts on UK terrestrial TV, replaced
Quiz Call in the schedule. After the show ended, the official
Quiz Call website stated that the show intended to return at an unspecified point in the future. The show never returned in any form, and the show's website was taken offline in Mid-2010. ==Show format==