WHO REMEMBERS? The UK Nostalgia Podcast

The Most-Watched UK TV Broadcasts (1980–1999): World Cups, Soaps & Live Aid

43 min · 14 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Most-Watched UK TV Broadcasts (1980–1999): World Cups, Soaps & Live Aid

Descripción

Twenty-three and a half million people sat down to watch a Bond film on ITV. Thirty million watched Dirty Den deliver divorce papers on Christmas Day. If those numbers sound unreal in the age of streaming, that’s exactly why we wanted to dig into the most watched UK TV broadcasts of the 1980s and 1990s, year by year, and work out what was really going on in the living rooms of Britain. If you love UK nostalgia, 80s television, 90s television, and the stories behind the viewing figures, hit play. Subscribe, share it with a mate and leave us a review with the one broadcast you remember the whole country watching together.

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79 episodios

episode TV Finale's (From The Madeley Archives) artwork

TV Finale's (From The Madeley Archives)

A kids’ drama that ends with aliens, zombies, dinosaurs and a bomb. A sitcom that turns into a war memorial in slow motion. A sketch show that finishes on a moment about dementia so quiet it stings. We go hunting for the best TV finales and the worst TV endings, and we do it the only way we know how: arguing, laughing, and then getting properly caught off guard by how dark some of these “nostalgia” picks really are.  We start with the Biker Grove series finale, which might be one of the most baffling tonal swerves British television has ever attempted, then move through the emotional send-off of Richard and Judy’s This Morning. From there, we talk about why the final Mitchell and Webb sketch works as drama, why Life on Mars still splits viewers, and why Quantum Leap’s ending feels like the cold reality of cancellation landing on your lap.  Then it is the heavy stuff: Blackadder Goes Forth, Dinosaurs somehow killing everyone in a family sitcom, One Foot in the Grave opening with its own main character already dead, and MASH delivering a reveal that explains why its finale is always near the top of “greatest TV series finales” lists. We finish by defending, and questioning, The Office Christmas specials as one of the neatest pieces of UK comedy closure ever put on screen, plus a run of honourable mentions and a few dream-ending rants.  Subscribe for more UK nostalgia deep dives, share this with the mate who always bangs on about finales, and leave us a review if you want us to cover more full shows like The Office. What TV ending do you still think about years later?

5 de jul de 20261 h 26 min
episode The Summer of 1998 | France '98, The Ladettes, the Birth of Google & the Death of Cool Britannia artwork

The Summer of 1998 | France '98, The Ladettes, the Birth of Google & the Death of Cool Britannia

We go back to the summer of 1998 and start where so many UK memories start: France 98, England vs Argentina, and the David Beckham backlash that somehow became bigger than the match itself. From there, things spiral into a perfect little time capsule of late-90s Britain, right down to the unhinged tabloid “Beckham dartboard” that turned national frustration into something nastier. We also dig through what was on telly and what was starting to take over: Graeme Norton’s early rise, South Park’s UK debut on Channel 4, Soccer Saturday becoming a weekend fixture, SMTV Live pulling everyone in, and Telly Addicts quietly bowing out. Add in a sweep of the summer 1998 music charts (Boyzone, B*Witched, Three Lions 98, and Billie) and a detour through the films of 1998, including a proper Truman Show “what happens next?” debate, and you get a portrait of a year that feels oddly in-between. If you like UK pop culture history, 90s telly, and honest nostalgia that remembers the rough edges as well as the bangers, hit subscribe, share it with a mate, and leave us a review. What single thing from summer 1998 do you still remember most clearly

30 de jun de 202640 min