The Scotsman

Sleep well, Crimewatch, as BBC pulls plug

● Landmark show which helped solve major crimes axed after 33-year run

- By MARTYN MCLAUGHLIN

It was once an institutio­n which gripped viewers and was feted by the authoritie­s for its ability to help bring some of the country’s most notorious criminals to justice.

But after 33 years, the BBC has announced that Crimewatch, one of the longest running shows in its history, has served its time.

The corporatio­n yesterday signalled an end to the prime time programme credited with helping to solve cases such as the murders of toddler James Bulger and eightyear-old Sarah Payne.

At its peak, Crimewatch drew as many as 14 million viewers, but in an age when channel choice has exploded and viewing habits are undergoing a seismic shift, it now attracts an average audience of around three million.

A spokesman for the BBC said that although it was “incredibly proud” of Crimewatch and the “great work” it had achieved over the years, its place in the evening schedules was no longer an ideal fit and it would now make way for “new innovative programmes”.

He said the spin-off daytime strand, Crimewatch Roadshow, would continue, with an increase in the number episodes allowing for two series to be broadcast a year.

However, police and crime campaigner­s expressed sadness and disappoint­ment at the decision to end the flagship show, which was only relaunched last September, featuring Jeremy Vine and Tina Daheley as hosts.

Among the crimes featured on the programme was the murder of chef Claudia Lawrence, 35, who disappeare­d on her way to work at the University of York in 2009.

Martin Dales, a friend and spokesman for Miss Lawrence’s father Peter, said: “The number of times we have been involved with Crimewatch, it has always been helpful. It is the exposure that is important.”

He argued the programme fits into the work of a public service broadcaste­r, adding: “It is disappoint­ing and it strikes me that it is a huge loss in expertise in linking the relevant police forces and the public to a number of channels.”

Sue Cook and Nick Ross hosted the first show in 1984.

It featured the murder of 16-year-old Colette Aram, who disappeare­d as she walked to her boyfriend’s house in Keyworth, Nottingham­shire, in October 1983.

The launch was fraught with tension and mistrust. Mr Ross said elements of the media were opposed to its concept, believing the programme makers to be “a bunch of coppers’ narks”.

At the same time, he reflected, the police, bar one chief constable, thought the production team were “a bunch of left-wingers.”.

However, the public response to the programme soon dispelled those early doubts.

Ms Cook was replaced by Jill Dando in 1995, with the latter’s murder in 1999 featuring on the programme a month later. As a result of calls from viewers, police pursued a new line of inquiry that resulted in the arrest of Barry George. George was wrongly conviction ed of the killing and acquitted in 2008. Ms Dando’s killer has never been found.

Other crimes to have featured on the show over the past 33 years have included the murders of Rhys Jones and Damilola Taylor, as well as the disappeara­nces of Madeleine Mccann and Suzy Lamplugh.

Andrea Macdonald, chair of the Scottish Police Federation, said: “Crimewatch provided something very different when it was launched and it has become an institutio­n over the past three decades.

“In the world before social media it allowed the police to reach large numbers of the public to ask for assistance. It was undoubtedl­y instrument­al in helping to solve some very high profile crimes.”

Mark Hallas, chief executive of the charity Crimestopp­ers, said: “Like us, the Crimewatch TV programme helps the public to solve crimes. We worked with them over many years and are sad to hear this news.”

He added that people can contact the charity online or over the phone “to pass on informatio­n about crime 100 per cent anonymousl­y”.

Mr Ross, who was part of the programme for 23 years and ended every show with the phrase “don’t have nightmares, do sleep well”, welcomed the decision to end Crimewatch’s run.

The veteran broadcaste­r said he did not feel “huge emotion” about its demise, explaining: “I’m just astonished it’s lasted this long. It was something that was revolution­ary when it began. It ran out of puff a long time ago. They did pretty damn well to keep it going so long.”

Mr Ross also cast doubts over the ability of the Crimewatch Roadshow series to have a major impact due to its transmissi­on time.

He added: “If half the population were watching the programme, you were pretty likely to find somebody. Once you start getting daytime audiences and you’re talking hundreds of thousands, or at most very low millions, your chances are very low.”

The demise of BBC programme Crimewatch is a timely reminder of the shifting sands of how television is watched and perceived these days.

A groundbrea­king show, first launched 33 years ago, Crimewatch could lay claim to helping solve a plethora of crimes most notably the murder of James Bulger in 1993 after it aired the grainy CCTV footage of two ten-year-old boys with the toddler at a shopping centre in Bootle, Merseyside.

The show was certainly educationa­l and informativ­e in the best principals of the BBC’S Reithian traditions and was entertaini­ng in a macabre fashion as the presenters signed off with a “Don’t have nightmares” warning to the troubled viewers. However, despite being an early forerunner of the digital age using techniques such as crowdsourc­ing informatio­n, Crimewatch has succumbed to the trend for recording shows and the greater control given to the viewers through on-demand services.

So, it will be sorely missed by a generation who thanks to its warnings – always made sure they double checked the locks before going to bed.

 ??  ?? Presenters Sue Cook and Nick Ross in 1989, top; Ross with Jill Dando, left, and James Bulger whose case was helped along by the show
Presenters Sue Cook and Nick Ross in 1989, top; Ross with Jill Dando, left, and James Bulger whose case was helped along by the show
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