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Soap opera
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===1980s=== Daytime soap operas were non-existent until the 1970s because there was virtually no daytime television in the UK. ITV introduced ''[[General Hospital (British TV series)|General Hospital]]'', which later moved to a prime time slot. In 1980, [[Scottish Television]] debuted ''[[Take the High Road]]'', which lasted for over twenty years. Later, daytime slots were filled with an influx of Australian soap operas such as ''[[The Sullivans]]'' (aired on ITV from 1977), ''[[The Young Doctors]]'' (from 1982), ''[[Sons and Daughters (Australian TV series)|Sons and Daughters]]'' (from 1983), ''[[A Country Practice]]'' (from 1982), ''[[Richmond Hill (TV series)|Richmond Hill]]'' (from 1988 to 1989) and eventually, ''Neighbours'' was acquired by the BBC in 1986, and ''Home and Away'' aired on ITV beginning in 1989. These achieved significant levels of popularity; ''Neighbours'' and ''Home and Away'' were moved to early-evening slots, helping begin the UK soap opera boom in the late 1980s. The day [[Channel 4]] began operations in 1982 it launched its own soap, the [[Liverpool]]-based ''[[Brookside (television programme)|Brookside]]'', which would redefine soaps over the next decade. The focus of ''Brookside'' was different from earlier soap operas in the UK; it was set in a middle-class new-build cul-de-sac, unlike ''Coronation Street'' and ''Emmerdale Farm'', which were set in established working-class communities. The characters in ''Brookside'' were generally either people who had advanced themselves from inner-city [[council estates]], or the upper middle-class who had fallen on hard times. Though ''Brookside'' was still broadcast in a pre-[[watershed (television)|watershed]] slot (8.00 p.m. and 8.30 p.m. on weekdays, around 5.00 p.m. for the omnibus on Saturdays), it was more liberal than other soaps of the time: the dialogue regularly included expletives. This stemmed from the overall more liberal policy of the channel during that period. The soap was also heavily politicised. [[Bobby Grant (Brookside)|Bobby Grant]] ([[Ricky Tomlinson]]), a militant trade-unionist anti-hero, was the most overtly political character. Storylines were often more sensationalist than on other soaps (throughout the soap's history, there were two armed sieges on the street) and were staged with more violence (particularly, [[rape]]) often being featured. In 1985, the BBC's ''EastEnders'' debuted and became a near instant success with viewers and critics alike, with the first episode attracting over 17 million viewers. The Christmas Day 1986 episode was watched by 30.15 million viewers and contained a scene in which [[divorce|divorce papers]] were served to [[Angie Watts]] ([[Anita Dobson]]) by her husband, [[The Queen Victoria|Queen Vic]] landlord [[Den Watts|Den]] ([[Leslie Grantham]]). A notable success in pioneering late-night broadcasting, in October 1984, [[Yorkshire Television]] began airing the cult Australian soap opera ''[[Prisoner (TV series)|Prisoner]]'', which originally ran from 1979 to 1986. It was eventually broadcast on all regions of the UK in differing slots, usually around 23:00 (but never before 22:30 in any region), under the title ''Prisoner: Cell Block H''. It was probably most popular in the Midlands where [[ITV Central|Central Television]] consistently broadcast the serial three times a week from 1987 to 1991. Its airing in the UK was staggered, so different regions of the country saw it at a different pace. The program was immensely successful, regularly achieving 10 million viewers when all regions' ratings per episode were added together. Central bowed to fan pressure to repeat the soap, of which the first 95 episodes aired. Then, rival station [[Channel 5 (British TV channel)|Channel 5]] also acquired rights to repeat the entire rerun of the program, starting in 1997. All 692 episodes have since been released on DVD in the UK.
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