The BBC changed their main channel to BBC1 as soon as BBC2 launched. To have a channel labelled '2' without there being a '1' in existence strikes me as rather illogical, and is made even worse when you start adding '3' and '4' to the group.
You must lose so much sleep over Showcase TV, TCM, Movies4Men, Eurosport and Nick Jr, not to mention the channels where there is a 1 but no 2 or 3 etc such as Star One, VH1, Setanta Sports 1, Sahara One....
Not at all, and your examples are hardly major UK PSBs.
However, equally insignificant channels such as 'True Movies' managed to re-label their channels as 1 & 2. Don't Eurosport offer their channels on different platforms in various parts of Europe: in which case you can understand the reason why '1' isn't included in the name if many of their viewers have no access to '2'.
Calling a channel 'X One/1' on its own denotes some sort of priority. Sky Channel was changed to 'Sky One Entertainment', and also to later promote its prominence in their original Sky Multi-Channels subscription. There was briefly a Sky2 in 1996-7, before the later reincarnation.
As for ITVplc, their intention was to provide access to all their channels to as much of the UK population as possible. It seemed sensible to include that in the nomenclature as soon as a sufficient number were able to receive ITV2 (& later ITV3/ITV4).
The BBC initially went for 'Choice' and 'Knowledge' as the names for their additional main digital channels, but soon realised that '3' and '4' would be better received (but not launched in that order) and easier to market, although they retain non-numerical names for the children's, news, politics, and region specific channels.
Last edited by Stuart on 7 September 2011 8:49pm