Children in Need

(Redirected from BBC Children in Need)

BBC Children in Need (also promoted as Plant mewn Angen in Wales)[2] is the BBC's UK charity. As of September 2023 and since 1980, it has raised over £1 billion for disadvantaged children and young people in the UK.[3]

Children in Need
Also known asBBC Children in Need
GenreCharity telethon
Created byBBC Studios
Presented by
Narrated byAlan Dedicoat
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
Production
Production locations
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time5 mins - 7 hours
Production companiesBBC Television
BBC Studios Entertainment Productions
Original release
NetworkBBC One
BBC Two
Release21 November 1980 (1980-11-21) –
present
Related
Comic Relief (1988–present)
Sport Relief (2002–2020)

One of the highlights is an annual telethon, held in November and televised on BBC One and BBC Two. Pudsey Bear has been BBC Children in Need's mascot since 1985, whilst Sir Terry Wogan was its long-standing host for 35 years. A prominent annual event in British television, Children in Need is one of two high-profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethon being Red Nose Day, supporting Comic Relief.

Following the closure of the BBC Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts took place at the BBC Elstree Centre from 2013 to 2020.[4] The telethon previously lasted for up to 7 hours, but since 2020, it has been reduced to a 3 hour programme from 7pm until 10pm.[5] In relation to the event having content designed for family viewing, the watershed is delayed until 11:30pm.

In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the telethon was reduced to a singular programme with only four presenters: Mel Giedroyc, Alex Scott, Chris Ramsey and Stephen Mangan.[6] As of November 2021, the annual telethon takes place at Dock10, MediaCityUK in Salford.[7] In October 2023, it was reported that, for the first time in Children in Need history, the BBC's 2023 appeal broadcast would have its first child co-presenter, with children's TV star and upcoming Doctor Who actor Lenny Rush taking on the role.[8]

History

Earlier BBC appeals

The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day.[9] It raised about £1,342, which was donated to four children's charities.[9]

The first televised appeal took place in 1955 and was called the Children's Hour Christmas Appeal, with the yellow glove puppet Sooty Bear and Harry Corbett fronting it. The Christmas Day Appeals continued on TV and radio until 1979.[9] During that time a total of £625,836 was raised. Terry Wogan first appeared during this five-minute appeal in 1978 and again in 1979.[9] Sometimes cartoon characters such as Peter Pan and Tom and Jerry were used.

BBC Children in Need

Pudsey Bear raising funds for BBC Children in Need 2009

In 1980, the first Children in Need telethon was broadcast. It was a series of short segments linking the evening's programming instead of the usual continuity. It was devoted to raising money exclusively destined for charities working with children in the United Kingdom. The new format, presented by Terry Wogan, Sue Lawley and Esther Rantzen, saw a dramatic increase in public donations: £1 million was raised that year.

The format was developed throughout the 1980s to the point where the telethon segments grew longer and the regular programming diminished, eventually being dropped altogether from 1984 in favour of a single continuous programme. This format has grown in scope to incorporate further events broadcast on radio and online. As a regular presenter, Wogan had become firmly associated with the annual event, continuing to front it until 2014. The following year, he started to endure ill health, from which he died in 2016.

In 1988, BBC Children in Need became a registered charity (number 802052) in England and Wales, followed by registration in Scotland (SC039557) in 2008. In 2020, BBC Children in Need attended a Formula one Race with Mclaren F1 Team to help support Children in Need in Turkey.

The current chief executive since 2016 is Simon Antrobus.

Sponsorships

Asda has been a part of the Children in Need charity. Other sponsorships include McDonald's, One Stop, Greggs, Enterprise, Welcome Break (which includes WHSmith, Waitrose, Subway, Burger King, Pret, Starbucks and Harry Ramsden's.), and Cineworld additionally joined the Children in Need charity.[citation needed]

Sir Terry Wogan Fundraiser of the Year Award

An award called the Sir Terry Wogan Fundraiser of the Year has been presented since 2016 to someone who has gone above and beyond to help raise money for Children in Need. The award was set up by Terry's family and was presented by Terry's son, Mark, at the 2016 telethon in memory of the late Sir Terry Wogan. Joanna Lumley awarded it to Ellie and Abbie Holloway during the 2017 telethon. In 2021 Michael Ball turned up to present the prestigious award to Amy Wright.

YearWinner
2016Lauchlan Muir
2017Ellie and Abbie Holloway
2018Keeley Browse
2019Austin and Esther Atkins
2020Brian Pitt
2021Amy Wright
2022Aileen Kane

Telethon

Acts

The telethon features performances from many top singers and groups, with many celebrities also appearing on the 6+12-hour-long programme performing various activities such as sketches or musical numbers. Featured celebrities often include those from programmes on rival network ITV, including some appearing in-character, or from the sets of their own programmes. A performance by BBC newsreaders became an annual fixture. Stars of newly opened West End musicals regularly perform a number from their show later in the evening after "curtain call" in their respective theatres.

Broadcast

BBC Television Centre on the night of the 2008 telethon

The BBC devotes the entire night's programming on its flagship channel BBC One to the Children in Need telethon, with the exception of 35 minutes at 10 o'clock while BBC News at Ten, Weather and Regional News airs, and activity continues on BBC Two with special programming, such as Mastermind Children in Need, which is a form of Celebrity Mastermind, with four celebrities answering questions on a chosen subject and on general knowledge.

In recent years,[when?] before the telethon itself, the BBC has broadcast Children in Need specials including DIY SOS The Big Build, Bargain Hunt, The One Show, in which hosts Matt Baker and Alex Jones did a rickshaw challenge and a celebrity version of Pointless in which Pudsey assists hosts Alexander Armstrong and Richard Osman.

Unlike the other BBC charity telethon Comic Relief, Children in Need relies substantially on the BBC regions for input into the telethon night. The BBC English regions all have around 5–8-minute round-ups every hour during the telethon. This does not interrupt the schedule of items shown from BBC Television Centre as the presenters usually hand over to the regions, giving those in the main network studio a short break.

BBC Scotland, BBC Cymru Wales and BBC Northern Ireland, however, opted out of the network schedule with a considerable amount of local fundraising news and activities from their broadcast area. Usually they went over to the network broadcast at various times of the night, and usually they showed some network items later than when the English regions saw them. This was to give the BBC nations of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland a much larger slot than the BBC English regions because the "nations" comprise a distinct audience of the BBC. Usually BBC Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland handed back to network coverage from around 1:00 am on the telethon night. For the 2010 appeal this changed, with Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales deciding not to have their usual opt-outs and instead following the English regions' pattern of having updates every hour.

Children in Need Choir

Since 2011 one of the acts has been a choir where over 1000 children come together in the studio and in around 8-10 locations across the UK and sing one song live in unison from the various locations. These choirs are created by the BBC local news regions using local schools and theatre groups and usually sing from where the regional event takes place*. The performance usually starts in the studio and moving to the different locations throughout the performance before ending in the studio (2022 and 2023 do not start in the studio) with a short 20-30 second instrumental break to show a few clips from the night's appeal films. However, since 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic the choir there have been fewer singers and the choirs across the UK have been pre-recorded with only the studio choir singing live.

The locations for each year were:

2011.[10][11]The Children in Need Choir started by Gareth Malone featured the contestants on The Big Performance Series 2. They sang Keep Holding On by Avril LavigneThe choirs sang at:

The link up performance went: London, Glasgow, Kent, Weston-super-Mare, Salford, Cornwall, Cardiff, Pudsey, London, The Instrumental Section, Birmingham, Belfast, LondonHull, Hampshire, Colchester, County Durham and Loughborough were not shown in the link up performance and were instead shown on the highlights.

2012[26][27] the choir was led by Aled Jones and featured over 2000 singers in 15 locations. They sang Bridge Over Troubled Water by Simon and Garfunkel

The choirs were singing at:

The link up performance went: London, Aberdeen, London (for a short instrumental section no singing in this section), Northumberland, Swindon, Birmingham, Belfast, The Instrumental section, East Sussex, Cardiff, Scunthorpe, Winchester, LondonCambridge, Exeter, Leicestershire, Rotherham, and Salford were not shown as part of the main link up performance and were instead shown in the highlights.

In 2013 the main studio moved to Elstree Studios in Borehamwood just outside of London and had only 10 choirs and 1624 children instead of all of them having choirs and not showing some of them on the link up.The choirs sang at:

The link up performance went: Elstree, Bath, Belfast, Manchester, Falmouth, Glasgow, Birmingham, Kettering, Elstree, The Instrumental Section, Merthyr Tydfil, Hexham, Elstree.

In 2014[39][40] the choir had a similar format to 2013 with 10 locations and 1685 and they sang "I'll Stand by You" by The Pretenders.

The choirs sang from:

The link up performance went: Elstree, Bradford, Norwich, Newport, Birmingham, Belfast, Plymouth, The Instrumental Section, Blackpool, Chatham, Glasgow, Elstree

In 2015[44] there were 1661 children in 10 locations and the choir sang The Climb by Miley Cyrus

The choirs sang from:

The link up performance went: Elstree, Gloucester, Belfast, Keswick, Great Yarmouth, Elstree, Llandudno, Elstree (short instrumental with no singing), Jersey, The Instrumental section, Blackpool, Glasgow, Arundel, Elstree

In 2016[46] they had 1580 children in 9 choirs and they sang Lean on Me by Bill Withers

The Choirs sang at:

The Link up performance went: Elstree, Liverpool, Swansea, Bridlington, Dudley, Glasgow, Milton Keynes, The Instrumental section, Salisbury, Swansea, Bridlington, Belfast, Glasgow, Elstree

In 2017 there were 1788 children in 10 choirs and they sang Over the Rainbow by Judy Garland

The choirs sang from:

The Link up performance went: Elstree, Manchester, Bristol, Glasgow, Newcastle, The Instrumental section, Newbury, Belfast, Halifax, Cardiff, Nottingham, Elstree

In 2018 the 1466 children in 9 choirs sang A Million Dreams from The Greatest Showman

The choirs sang from:

The Link up performance went: Elstree, Southampton, St Ives, Belfast, Chester, Lincoln, Glasgow, The Instrumental section, Cardiff and Wolverhampton, Belfast, Elstree

In 2019 there were 9 choirs and 1399 children and they sang True Colours by Cyndi Lauper

The Choirs sang from:

The link up wenr: Elstree, Hartlepool, Belfast, Maidstone, The Wirral, Cardiff, Mountsorrel, The Instrumental Section, Larkhill and Glasgow, Cardiff, Elstree

In 2020 due to the Covid-19 Pandemic The choir was altered to fit guidelines so instead of mass 150+ person choirs it was reduced to around 4-5 singers in each location and it was pre-recorded except for the studio choir which had 12 members and were there live on the night and instead of an instrumental it went to a montage of all the choirs together before returning to showing the locations as usual. Instead of Museums or Theatres more of the locations were landmarks with their on screen labels being the landmark name instead of just the city/ town. It was also the last year to be in Elstree Studios. They sang Fix You by Coldplay

The singers sang from:

The nationwide performance went: Elstree, Bronte Parsonage - West Yorkshire, National Maritime museum - Falmouth, Pacific Quay - Glasgow, Coventry Cathedral, Stonehenge - Wiltshire, The Harmonies of Hope Choir, The Montage section, Ely Cathedral, Portmeirion - North Wales, Cardiff Castle, Titanic - Belfast, Elstree

In 2021 The Choir followed a similar format to 2020 with most locations having 4-6 singers and 12 in the live studio choir. However, it did include the instrumental section. This was the first year to use Salford for the Main Studio. They sang Rise Up by Andra Day. The on-screen name labels followed the same format as 2020.

The singers sang at:

The nationwide performance went: MediaCity UK - Salford, Stirling Castle, Scarborough Spa, Housesteads - Hadrian's Wall, Smeaton's Tower - Plymouth Hoe, Mumbles Pier, Abbey Pumping Station - Leicester, Beaumaris Castle, Vision Signing Choir - Kent, The Instrumental Section, Cutty Sark - London, Giants Causeway, MediaCity UK - SalfordFurther Clips can be found here:

In 2022 the choir was again pre-recorded with the studio choir live. The number of singers was upped to around 20 per location and. This year was the first year not to start and end with the studio choir's performance instead starting with a montage of the children preparing for singing and all of the choirs were shown before the instrumental with only the Studio and a montage of all the choirs shown after. They sang Somewhere Only We Know by Keane

The choirs this year were:

The nationwide performance went: Introduction Montage, Framlingham Castle - Suffolk, Aberystwyth, Laxey Wheel - Isle of Man, Bristol, The Kelpies - Falkirk, Hull Marina, MediaCityUK in Salford, Blists Hill Victorian Town - Telford and The Tropical Ravine - Belfast, The Instrumental Section, MediaCityUK in Salford, Montage of all the choirs, MediaCityUK in Salford

In 2023 the choir went down to around 7-10 singers per location and was still mostly pre-recorded and though it did not start with the studio choir and again a montage its format was more similar to 2021 or the live choirs. The onscreen labels were done in the 2011-2019 fashion of just naming the city/town. They sang You Raise Me Up

The choirs sang from:

The nationwide performance went: Intro Montage, Slough, Rotherham, Salford, Sunderland, Edinburgh, Cardiff, The Instrumental Section, Northampton, Guernsey, Antrim, Salford

  • The studio choirs are made of children from the region they are in but created by the main studio team not the region's team.

Previous Link Ups

In 1996 children around 150 in the studio and another 500 across the country sand the 1989 charity single If You Want To Help led by Gary Wilmot.

The children around the UK sang from.

In 2000 choirs, bands and music groups from all over the UK performed a medley of some of the most popular ABBA songs led by Martine McCutcheon.

They performers were:

In 2007 Lee Mead led 8 choirs across the UK in a performance of Any Dream Will Do

The Choirs sang from:

Presenters

Name of presenter(s)Year Began HostingYear Finished HostingLength of Service
Sir Terry Wogan1980201435 Years
Sue Lawley19823 Years
Esther Rantzen
Gloria Hunniford19831 Year
Sue Cook1984199512 Years
Joanna Lumley19882 Years
Andi Peters199219943 Years
Gaby Roslin1995200410 Years
Fearne Cotton20052008
20102015
Natasha Kaplinsky200520062 Years
Matt Allwright20051 Year
Chris Moyles2006
Tess Daly2008201912 Years
Alesha Dixon20093 Years
2011
Peter Andre200920102 Years
Nick Grimshaw201220154 Years
Zoe Ball20131 Year
Shane Richie201320153 Years
Rochelle Humes201420196 Years
Marvin Humes20164 Years
Dermot O'Leary20151 Year
Ade Adepitan MBE201620194 Years
2021PresentOngoing
Greg James20161 Year
Graham Norton201620195 Years
2021
Russell Kane20161 Year
Mel Giedroyc2017PresentOngoing
Matt Edmondson20171 Year
Rob Beckett2018
Tom Allen2019
Alex Scott MBE2020PresentOngoing
Chris Ramsey
Stephen Mangan20201 Year
Jason Manford2022PresentOngoing
Lenny Rush2023

Overview

No.Broadcast dateBroadcast totalTotal raisedMain presenterCo-presentersBBC One rating
(millions)
121 November 1980£1,200,000Sir Terry WoganSue Lawley
Esther Rantzen
220 November 1981£508,625£1,008,697Esther Rantzen
326 November 1982£603,440£1,050,000Gloria Hunniford
Fran Morrison
425 November 1983£839,429£1,158,737
523 November 1984£1,459,283£2,264,398[57]Sue Cook
Joanna Lumley
622 November 1985£2,431,085£4,476,780[57]Sue Cook
John Craven
Joanna Lumley
721 November 1986£5,264,655£8,687,607[57]Sue Cook
Joanna Lumley
827 November 1987£8,735,657£13,916,326[57]Sue Cook
918 November 1988£13,099,246£17,563,458[58]Sue Cook
Joanna Lumley
1017 November 1989£17,213,664£21,671,931Sue Cook
1123 November 1990£17,547,227£20,921,929Sue Cook
Dave Benson Phillips
1222 November 1991£17,182,724£20,819,508Sue Cook
Andi Peters
1320 November 1992£11,549,490£16,700,000
1426 November 1993£12,386,866£17,300,000
1525 November 1994£12,012,524
1624 November 1995£11,843,385Sue Cook
Gaby Roslin
1722 November 1996£11,847,168[59]£18,700,000[59][60]Gaby Roslin
1821 November 1997£12,034,235[61]£20,900,000[62]
1920 November 1998£11,380,888[63]£17,900,000
2026 November 1999£11,639,053[64]£16,700,0006.61
2117 November 2000£12,244,764[65]£20,000,0006.8[66]
2216 November 2001£12,895,853[67]£25,900,000[68]7.12
2315 November 2002£13,501,375[69]£26,200,000[70]7.56
2421 November 2003£15,305,212[71]£31,400,000[72]10.49
2519 November 2004£17,156,175[73]£34,200,000[74]8.48
2618 November 2005£17,235,256[75]£33,200,000[76]Fearne Cotton
Natasha Kaplinsky
Matt Allwright[a]
9.07
2717 November 2006£18,300,392[77]£33,600,000[78]Fearne Cotton
Natasha Kaplinsky
Chris Moyles[a]
7.72
2816 November 2007£19,089,771[79]£37,500,000[80]Fearne Cotton9.56
2914 November 2008£20,991,216[81]£38,500,000[82]Fearne Cotton
Tess Daly
Alesha Dixon[a]
9.83
3020 November 2009£20,309,747[83]£40,200,000[83]Tess Daly
Alesha Dixon
Peter Andre[a]
10.08
3119 November 2010£18,098,199[84]£36,600,000[84]Fearne Cotton
Tess Daly
Peter Andre[a]
9.36
3218 November 2011£26,332,334[85]£46,100,000[86]Fearne Cotton
Tess Daly
Alesha Dixon
10.01
3316 November 2012£26,757,446[85][87]£43,300,000[88]Fearne Cotton
Tess Daly
Nick Grimshaw
8.22
3415 November 2013£31,124,896[89]£49,600,000[88]Fearne Cotton
Tess Daly
Nick Grimshaw
Zoe Ball
Shane Richie[a]
9.99
3514 November 2014£32,620,469[90]£49,100,000[91]Fearne Cotton
Tess Daly
Nick Grimshaw
Rochelle Humes
Shane Richie[a]
8.54
3613 November 2015£37,100,687[92]£55,000,000[93]Dermot O'Leary7.95
3718 November 2016£46,624,259£60,000,000[94]Tess DalyRochelle Humes
Greg James
Graham Norton
Ade Adepitan
Marvin Humes
Russell Kane
6.60
3817 November 2017£50,168,562£60,750,000[95]Rochelle Humes
Graham Norton
Ade Adepitan
Marvin Humes
Mel Giedroyc
Matt Edmondson[96]
7.12
3916 November 2018£50,595,053£62,072,000[97]Graham Norton
Mel Giedroyc
Rochelle Humes
Marvin Humes
Ade Adepitan
Rob Beckett
6.44
4015 November 2019£47,886,382£57,346,000[97]Graham Norton
Mel Giedroyc
Rochelle Humes
Marvin Humes
Ade Adepitan
Tom Allen
6.13
4113 November 2020£37,032,789£63,443,000[98]Mel GiedroycAlex Scott
Chris Ramsey
Stephen Mangan[99]
5.12
4219 November 2021£39,389,048£50,991,355 [100]Ade Adepitan
Graham Norton
Chris Ramsey
Alex Scott
4.56
4318 November 2022£35,273,167£43,400,000[101]Ade Adepitan
Jason Manford
Chris Ramsey
Alex Scott
3.96
4417 November 2023£33,513,325Ade Adepitan
Jason Manford
Chris Ramsey
Alex Scott
Lenny Rush
3.77

Children in Need Rocks

YearDateBroadcast dateLocationOrganised byPresentersBBC One rating (millions)
200912 November 200919 November 2009Royal Albert HallGary BarlowChris Moyles
Fearne Cotton
Sir Terry Wogan
6.50
201117 November 2011Manchester ArenaChris Moyles
Fearne Cotton
David Tennant
4.50
201312–13 November 201314 November 2013Hammersmith ApolloFearne Cotton
Chris Evans
4.41
20158 October 201512 November 2015The SSE Arena, WembleyBBC StudiosSir Tom Jones
Rob Brydon
TBC
20161 November 201614 November 2016Royal Albert HallBBC StudiosFearne Cotton
Greg James
201719 October 201713 November 2017The SSE Arena, WembleyFearne Cotton
Sara Cox
Roman Kemp (backstage)
20187 November 2018[102]15 November 2018Fearne Cotton
Clara Amfo

Pudsey Bear

The original logo, used from 1980 to 1984
The very first Pudsey bear and logo, used in 1985

The mascot fronting the Children in Need appeal is called Pudsey Bear. He was created and named in 1985 by BBC graphic designer Joanna Lane, who worked in the BBC's design department. Asked to revamp the logo, with a brief to improve the charity's image, Lane said "It was like a lightbulb moment for me. We were bouncing ideas off each other and I latched on to this idea of a teddy bear. I immediately realised there was a huge potential for a mascot beyond the 2D logo".[103] The bear was named after her hometown of Pudsey, West Yorkshire, where her grandfather was mayor.[103]

A reproduction of the bear mascot (made of vegetation) is in Pudsey park, near the town centre.[104] Originally introduced for the 1985 appeal, Pudsey Bear was created as a triangular shaped logo, depicting a yellow-orange teddy bear with a red bandana tied over one eye. The bandana had a pattern of small black triangles. The mouth of the bear depicted a sad expression. The lettering "BBC" appeared as 3 circular black buttons running vertically down the front of the bear, one capital letter on each, in white. Perpendicular to the buttons, the words "children-in-need" appeared in all lower case letters along the base of the triangular outline. Accessibility for young readers, and people with disabilities including speech and reading challenges, were factors weighed by the designer Joanna Ball, specifically the "P" sound in "Pudsey" name, and the choice of all lower case sans serif letters for the logotype.

The second Pudsey bear and logo, used from 1986 to 2006

The original design was adapted for various applications for use in the 1985 appeal, both 2D graphics and three-dimensional objects. Items using the original 1985 design included a filmed opening title sequence, using cartoon cell animation, a postage stamp, and a prototype soft toy, commissioned from a film and TV prop maker (citation). The original prototype soft toy was orange and reflected the design of the logo, which was then adapted for approximately 12 identical bears, one for each regional BBC Television Studio. These bears were numbered and tagged with the official logo and auctioned off as part of the appeal. The number 1 Pudsey Bear was allocated to the Leeds region. Joanna Lumley appeared with one of the soft toys during the opening of Blackpool Illuminations and named Pudsey Bear the official mascot of the BBC Children in Need appeal.

In 1986, the logo was redesigned. Whilst retaining the concept of a teddy bear with a bandana over one eye, all other elements were changed. Specifically, the triangular elements of the underlying design were abandoned, and the corporate identity colour scheme was changed. The new bandana design was white with red spots, one of the buttons was removed and the logotype now appeared as building blocks, which spelled out "BBC CHILDREN IN NEED" in capital letters. Pudsey now had a smiling expression on his face rather than a sad one in the previous logo.

Third Pudsey bear and the previous Children in Need logo, used from 2007 to 2021

In 2007, Pudsey and the logo were redesigned again. This time, Pudsey's bandana had multicoloured spots, and all of the buttons were removed. By 2009, Pudsey had been joined by another bear, a brown female bear named "Blush". She had a spotty bow with the pattern similar to Pudsey's bandana pattern. In 2013, Moshi Monsters introduced Pudsey as an in-game item for 100 Rox.

The Children in Need 2015 campaign on 13 November 2015 marked the thirtieth birthday of Pudsey Bear, who has been the charity's mascot since 1985.

In 2022, as part of the corporate BBC rebrand, the logo was completely redesigned. The phrase "CHILDREN IN NEED" in capital letters appeared in a modified rounded version of BBC Reith Sans Bold, and Pudsey Bear was removed as part of the logo. Despite this, Pudsey Bear remained in use as a mascot and was also given a redesign.[105]

Official singles

YearArtist(s)Song(s)UK Singles Chart
1985Clannad"Almost Seems (Too Late to Turn)"80
1986The County Line"Heroes"DNC[106]
Ray Moore"O' My Father Had A Rabbit"[107]24
1987"Bog Eyed Jog"[108]61
1988Spirit of Play with Paul McCartney"Children in Need"72
1989BBC Children in Need Choir"If You Want To Help"78
Bruno Brookes and Liz Kershaw featuring Jive Bunny and Londonbeat"It Takes Two"[109]53
1990Bruno and Liz and the Radio 1 DJ Possee"Let's Dance"[109]54
1995Patsy Palmer and Sid Owen"You Better Believe It (Children in Need)"60
1996Red Hill Children"When Children Rule The World"40
1997Lou Reed and Various Artists"Perfect Day"1
1998Denise van Outen and Johnny Vaughan featuring Steps"Especially for You"3
1999Martine McCutcheon"Love Me"/"Talking in Your Sleep"6
2000S Club 7"Never Had a Dream Come True"1
2001"Have You Ever"1
2002Will Young"Don't Let Me Down" / "You and I"2
2003Shane Richie"I'm Your Man"2
2004Girls Aloud"I'll Stand by You"1
2005Liberty X"A Night to Remember"6
2006Emma Bunton"Downtown"3
2007Spice Girls"Headlines (Friendship Never Ends)"11
2008McFly"Do Ya/Stay with Me"[110]18
2009Peter Kay's Animated All Star Band"The Official BBC Children in Need Medley"[111]1
2010JLS"Love You More"1
2011The Collective1[112]"Teardrop"24
2012Girls Aloud"Something New"[113]2
2013Ellie Goulding"How Long Will I Love You"[114]3
2014Gareth Malone's All Star Choir2"Wake Me Up"[115]1
2015Jess Glynne"Take Me Home"[116][117]6
2016Craig David"All We Needed"[118]42
2017Katie Melua"Fields of Gold"[119]29
2018Jamie Cullum"Love Is In The Picture"[120]DNC
2019Jodie Whittaker"Yellow"[121]DNC
2020BBC Radio 2's Allstars3"Stop Crying Your Heart Out"[122]7
2021Niall Horan and Anne-Marie"Everywhere"[123]23

Notes:

^1 The Collective includes Gary Barlow, Tulisa Contostavlos, Wretch 32, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite, Chipmunk, Mz Bratt, Dot Rotten, Labrinth, Rizzle Kicks and Tinchy Stryder.
^2 The All Star Choir includes Linda Robson, Jo Brand, Mel Giedroyc, Larry Lamb, Craig Revel Horwood, Alison Steadman, Alice Levine, John Craven, Fabrice Muamba, Margaret Alphonsi, Radzi Chinyanganya and Nitin Ganatra
^3 BBC Radio 2's Allstars consists of Bryan Adams, Izzy Bizu, Cher, Clean Bandit, Melanie C, Jamie Cullum, Ella Eyre, Paloma Faith, Rebecca Ferguson, Jess Glynne, Sheku Kanneh-Mason, Lenny Kravitz, KSI, Lauv, Ava Max, Kylie Minogue, James Morrison, Gregory Porter, Nile Rodgers, Jack Savoretti, Jay Sean, Anoushka Shankar, Robbie Williams and Yola

Criticism

In November 2006, Intelligent Giving published an article about Children in Need, which attracted wide attention across the British media. The article, titled "Four things wrong with Pudsey", described donations to Children in Need as a "lazy and inefficient way of giving" and pointed out that, as a grant-giving charity, Children in Need would use donations to pay two sets of administration costs. It also described the quality of some of its public reporting as "shambolic".[124]

In 2007, it was reported that presenter Terry Wogan had been receiving an annual honorarium since 1980 (amounting to £9,065 in 2005). This made him the only celebrity paid for his participation in Children in Need. According to Wogan's account, he would "quite happily do it for nothing" and had "never asked for a fee". The BBC stated that the amount, which was paid from BBC resources rather than from the Children in Need charity fund, had "never been negotiated", having instead increased in line with inflation.[125] Two days before the 2007 event, Wogan waived his fee.[126]

There has been concern about the type of groups receiving funding from Children in Need. Writing in The Spectator, Ross Clark noted that funding goes towards controversial groups such as Women in Prison, which campaigns against jailing female criminals. Another charity highlighted was the Children's Legal Centre, which provided funding for Shabina Begum to sue her school as she wanted to wear the jilbāb. Clark pondered whether donors seeing cancer victims on screen would appreciate "that a slice of their donation would be going into the pockets of Cherie Blair to help a teenage girl sue her school over her refusal to wear a school uniform".[127]

A former BBC governor said that Jimmy Savile was kept away from Children In Need. Sir Roger Jones who was also chairman of the charity said he had suspicions about Savile a decade before the news of Savile's sexual abuse scandal came to public light in 2012. His comments came on the day an inquiry began into whether the BBC's child protection and whistle-blowing policies were acceptable.[128]

See also

References

External links