[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/blue_peter.png]]
[[SelfDemonstratingArticle Hey everyone, today we're going to learn how to write an article on TV Tropes using nothing but a keyboard, some sticky-back plastic and an empty washing-up bottle. But first, here's]] OneIPreparedEarlier:

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''Blue Peter'' is the longest running children's programme in the world, starting in 1958 and still going today. Usually aired on [[Creator/TheBBC BBC1]] for most of its run, but moved to [=BBC2=] during {{UsefulNotes/Wimbledon}}. Nowadays airs on Creator/{{CBBC}}.

The show is best described as a "magazine show". The presenters (anywhere between two and four at any one time; in the era where there were four presenters, the show would have three of them in the studio per episode on a rotating basis) do a variety of different activities:
* Craft demonstrations, such as a papier-mâché [[Series/{{Thunderbirds}} Tracy Island]].[[note]]When Tracy Island playset toys [[DemandOverload flew off the shelves at lightning speed]], the BBC received letters from ''over 100,000 people'' asking how to make the do-it-yourself Tracy Island model.[[/note]]
* Presenters doing rather insane challenges. This will involve stuff like painting the Forth Bridge, military assault courses, or climbing Nelson's Column.
* How stuff is made.
* Meeting celebrities.
* Acting in [[{{Pantomime}} panto(mime)s]], historical re-enactments and original tales.

(They once managed to do an entire edition on the ''Literature/YoungBond'' novels, complete with performances of ''Franchise/JamesBond'' songs, without showing a single movie clip).

There are often performances by various people. Everyone who appears on the show gets a Blue Peter Badge, which allows free admission to a number of UK attractions. There are other types of badges, the most famous being the Gold Badge, given to people who have done something very special (presenters are now getting them on departure).

Every year, the team go on a Summer Expedition abroad. There is also the annual charity appeal, with the "totaliser" and the attendant "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin bring-and-buy sales]]" - usually, the charity appeals run on a biannual schedule of these and 'collecting X' [[note]]in 2009 it was T-shirts, used to make hospital gowns for kids with cleft lips and palates from India[[/note]], often things which can be reused, or recycled for monetary gain.

The show has a number of resident pets. The most famous of these was a dog called Petra (actually a substitute after the first dog died), whose death became national news.

Creator/{{ITV}} tried to launch a knock-off imitator called ''Magpie'', but this faltered and failed after perhaps four years, despite the [[NippleAndDimed attractions of presenter Susan Stranks]].

The show has an extremely good relationship with ''Series/DoctorWho'':

* Presenter Creator/PeterPurves also played Steven Taylor, a companion to the First Doctor.
* Actress Creator/SophieAldred (who played Ace) was awarded two Blue Peter badges as a child, she later wore them as part of her costume (which caused something of a stir until it was confirmed that they were indeed Sophie's badges and not props). Oddly enough, the first one was for a design for a rocket launcher created from a washing up liquid bottle and a garden hose - ''very'' on-brand for a companion with a notable penchant for blowing stuff up!
* Creator/DavidTennant received a gold badge in 2009.
* A 1973 edition contains the only surviving broadcast footage of the First Doctor's regeneration in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS4E2TheTenthPlanet The Tenth Planet]]" and the show has made appeals for [[MissingEpisode lost footage]].
** There's a myth that the last episode of "The Tenth Planet" was lost by ''Blue Peter'' (it was conflated with an episode of "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E4TheDaleksMasterPlan The Daleks' Master Plan]]" which was loaned to them for use in a feature on the show's tenth anniversary and apparently never returned). However, what is true is the clip of the First Doctor's regeneration survives to this day without any loss of quality ''because'' of ''Blue Peter''.
* Also in 1973, the show had a nationwide 'manhunt' for a group of criminals who stole a set of Daleks from the BBC. The Daleks were returned within 24 hours, in varying degrees of misuse. In-character Daleks participated in the appeal and updates.
* The show was featured on screen in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E4AliensOfLondon "Aliens of London"]], and ''Series/TheSarahJaneAdventures'' episode "Invasion of the Bane", with the current presenters playing themselves.
* The show has ran numerous competitions for children to contribute to the series, including:
** A contest to design the MonsterOfTheWeek for [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E10LoveAndMonsters "Love & Monsters"]].
** A contest to win a small role in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E11Utopia "Utopia"]]. The winner, Creator/JohnBell, has since gone on to have a very successful acting career after the competition gave him his big break, appearing in ''Film/TheHobbit'' and as a regular in ''Series/{{Outlander}}''.
** A contest to design a TARDIS console for [[Recap/DoctorWhoS32E4TheDoctorsWife "The Doctor's Wife"]].
** A screenwriting contest. The winning script was developed into the mini-episode [[Recap/DoctorWho2012StSSGoodAsGold "Good as Gold"]].
** A contest to design gizmos for the Paternoster Gang in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS34E1DeepBreath "Deep Breath"]].
* There's been quite a few Who-related crafts.
* Bits of ''Blue Peter'' are often included on home video releases of classic series stories as bonus clips, often featuring interviews with the actors or displays of relevant Who-mania (for example, the aforementioned Dalek manhunt is included on the DVD and Season 10 Blu-Ray box set disc of the 1973 serial "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS10E4PlanetOfTheDaleks Planet of the Daleks]]").
** A full-blown documentary on the two shows' relationship was released in two parts: part 1 (covering the classic series) appeared on the DVD release of "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS17E5TheHornsOfNimon The Horns of Nimon]]"[[note]]An appropriate choice, as former presenter Janet Ellis had an acting role in that serial[[/note]] and the Season 26 Blu-Ray box set, and part 2 (which looks at the first Creator/RussellTDavies era) can be found on the Special Edition DVD reissue of [[Recap/DoctorWhoTVMTheTVMovie the 1996 TV movie]].

There have been 42 presenters over the years; the show is currently presented by Joel Mawhinney and Abby Cook (who is the first wheelchair-using presenter on thw show). Notable former presenters include:
* Valerie Singleton
* John Noakes, the longest serving presenter (serving over 12 years), remembered for his collie and associated CatchPhrase ("Get down, Shep!") [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vzasI7ZWUe0 This]] sums up John Noakes/Shep quite well.
* Peter Purves, a companion of the [[Series/DoctorWho Doctor]], as mentioned above. Another long-serving presenter, lasting for just over 10 years.
* Janet Ellis, who also made a minor appearance in ''Doctor Who'' ("[[Recap/DoctorWhoS17E5TheHornsOfNimon The Horns of Nimon]]"). Is the mother of pop singer Sophie Ellis Bextor. Left the series when she was denied a new contract for getting pregnant while unmarried. (The baby wasn't Sophie).
* Sarah Greene. Also known from SaturdayMorningKidsShow ''Going Live'', and yet another ''Doctor Who'' actor (one of the [[HumanoidAliens Cryons]] in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS22E1AttackOfTheCybermen Attack of the Cybermen]]").
* Simon Groom, later a successful documentary filmmaker. Was well known in his day for his ability to sneak things past the censors.
* Richard Bacon. For all the wrong reasons - see below.
* Mark Curry, a man who epitomized all that was tackiest about 1980's style and fashion. Once demonstrated some life-size human sculptures in lego bricks and in a PricelessMingVase moment, succeeded in breaking the head off one, which rolled off across the studio floor.
* Konnie Huq ("Huck") - having been on the show for a decade, she's apparently a major draw for students, for the rather obvious reason of her looks. On ''Series/MockTheWeek'' Dara Ó Briain implied she was attractive and got mocked for it for the rest of the episode. Left in 2008.[[note]]She is married to DeadpanSnarker deconstructionist presenter Creator/CharlieBrooker[[/note]]
* Gethin Jones. Appeared on ''Series/StrictlyComeDancing'' in 2007.
* Matt Baker - Deemed as being the male equal to Konnie in the looks department. After leaving, he's mainly presented on factual programs including ''Countryfile'' and ''The One Show'' (from 2011 until 2020). He was also a finalist in ''Series/StrictlyComeDancing 2010''.
* Helen Skelton - Well known for her charity-raising challenges on and off the show. She has become quite a successful daytime and factual presenter after leaving the show, mainly on Channel 5's ''...on the Farm'' but has been on other networks as well.
* Simon Thomas - After leaving the show and joining Sky Sports, he has been one of their most popular faces.
* John Leslie, who's become something of a punchline due to losing a later job on ''This Morning'' over rape allegations and admitted drug use.
* Caron Keating, who sadly died young of breast cancer and left the presenting team having to explain the concept of death to a child audience. Not easy.
* Anthea Turner, whose TV career went stratospheric after leaving the show - the completely opposite trajectory to most ex childrens' TV presenters. Less frequently seen in recent years.
* Yvette Fielding, now involved in paranormal reality TV.
* Katy Hill, notable among the TheNineties crowd due to wearing miniskirts and the related camerawork attempts to avoid showing anything too inappropriate as a result.
* Zöe Salmon, an ex Miss Northern Ireland. Her moment of notoriety came when she expressed on-air fury about a graphic of the British Isles that showed Ireland as a united whole and did not adequately convey [[UsefulNotes/TheTroubles the separateness]] of UsefulNotes/NorthernIreland. Worse, UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}} was coloured ''green''. By way of punishment, Zoe was sent to do a report on Irish traditional dancing - the sort which does not attract Protestants for long-established historical reasons - to indicate that the show was not and would never be sectarian.
* Michael Sundin, a former dancer who left BP very abruptly when tabloids outed him as not only gay, but a former porn performer and occasional rent-boy. He has since died of AIDS-related complications. His death was completely ignored, compared to the lengthy eulogy and obituary that Caron Keating deservedly received from the show, and how the long-departed (about 20 years before) original host Christopher Trace got a tribute on his passing.
* Tina Heath, who was asked to leave the show because she had become pregnant outside wedlock and had no intention of marrying the man involved.
* Diane Louise-Jordan, the first non-white Blue Peter presenter. Having joined some years after Tina Heath, her being an unmarried single mother was less of an issue.
* HRH Princess Anne, the Princess Royal, was a guest presenter on the show between 1970-74, although she is not usually counted as one of the "official" thirty-two. A friend and fan of the show, Anne Windsor accompanied the then presenters out to Africa on a summer safari, generally enjoying herself in the company of the presenters, and being very good PR for the Royals. Princess Anne also reported on horsey matters for the show and very graciously gave riding lessons to BP presenters hitherto innocent of the charms of equine contact. Her association with the show diminished after marriage in 1974, but she has returned at intervals.

There have been a number of very notable moments:
* An elephant defecating on camera and walking out of the studio, stepping on John Noakes' foot in the process. (Noakes later claimed that he only shouted "Get off my foot!" for comic effect, and that if the elephant had really stepped on his foot he'd have ended up walking on crutches.)
* Richard Bacon's [[RoleEndingMisdemeanor sacking for taking cocaine]] on October 1998, which resulted in a senior BBC official reading a live on-air apology and [[SeriousBusiness him being stripped of his Blue Peter badge]] (he went on to have a successful presenting career despite this; 20 years later, they buried the hatchet and reinstated his badge).
** A 2008 ChristmasEpisode ReunionShow, casting various current and past presenters in a musical, featured an [[TheGhost unseen]] villain named "Richard". Following his defeat the male lead said to the camera "I've cooked ''his'' bacon."
** Shortly after Bacon's sacking, Creator/MichaelPalin was a guest on BP, there to talk about his latest globetrotting TV series. In true Creator/MontyPython style, Palin, invited to help with "the make", was seen on camera experimentally holding the glue-pot to his nose and taking a long, deep, investigative sniff.
* Vandals breaking into the Blue Peter Garden and wrecking it, which was treated on-air by the hosts with all the gravitas of a ''murder''. (An American equivalent would be slashing [[Creator/FredRogers Mr. Rogers]]' tyres. You just don't ''do'' it.) The ''Doctor Who'' Literature/EighthDoctorAdventures novels feature a HistoricalInJoke in "Interference: Book Two" where {{arc villain}}s Faction Paradox committed the crime. The series ''Series/AshesToAshes2008'', about a cop who wakes up in the 1980s, posited [[spoiler:Gene Hunt]] as the vandal, destroying it while apprehending a suspect.
* In 2007 there was a handful of scandals about "rigged" audience participation events (which many other shows across several channels were caught up in), including a child who was backstage apparently winning a phone-in competition when the lines went down; the decision to ignore an internet vote on the name of the new cat; and two actors being amongst the kids interviewing impressionist Jon Culshaw, to ensure the right sort of questions got asked.

In 2012, the BBC announced the end for ''Blue Peter'' on mainstream BBC TV. The show left its long-time home on the [=BBC1=] network (along with the last of the childrens' shows in their traditional slot) and was moved to the CBBC children's network, one of the BBC's many digital channels. This decision has caused comment and criticism, especially as the BBC, like ITV, proposes to fill the gap left by the departure of children's TV with quizzes and game shows with much lower production values. This follows on from the decision that after forty years, there will no longer be an annual tie-in book.

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!!This show contains examples of:
* BrandX: Enforced due to the ban on ProductPlacement in all BBC programming. The show ''invented'' the phrase "sticky-backed plastic" (for Fablon and Coveron) and used "sticky tape" for Sellotape until it was officially declared genericised. The show once did an entire feature on the production of Smarties, while never naming the product. They also nearly always used the distinctive cylindrically-shaped bottle from Fairly Liquid dish soap without ever actually mentioning the brand-name.
* [[UsefulNotes/TheBritishRoyalFamily By Royal Approval]] Princess Anne's involvement and engagement with the show in the latter part of TheSixties and the early part of TheSeventies demonstrated this ultimate seal of approval for the programme, although her involvement scaled back considerable after she married in 1974.
* CatchPhrase: "Here's one I made earlier" and "And now for something completely different". The former is rarely used now - it's that cliché - and the latter is [[ParodyDisplacement far better known]] for its use on ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus''.
* TheChristmasAnnual: The ''Blue Peter Book'', published from 1964 to 2011 with occasional gaps.
* ColourCodedForYourConvenience: There are several different varieties of Blue Peter badge, which are all different colours:
** The standard white badge with a blue ship, usually worn by the show's presenters, is awarded for appearing on the show (or submitting a piece of writing or drawing that appears on the show).
** The silver badge is awarded to anyone who already has a white badge who makes a further achievement that would ordinarily merit a white badge.
** The green badge is awarded for environmental-related accomplishments; the badge itself is made out of recycled materials.
** The orange badge is awarded to competition winners.
** The purple badge is awarded under the show's "Team Player" badge, where a group of children got the opportunity to work on the show for a day by submitting ideas for it (later changed to being awarded for writing a review of the show).
** The gold badge (actually a brooch in the shape of the Blue Peter ship) is awarded for "exceptional achievement"; holders of this badge include Creator/JKRowling, Queen UsefulNotes/ElizabethII, [[UsefulNotes/TheBritishRoyalFamily the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge]] and Creator/StevenSpielberg.
** There have been various other limited edition badges, most of which were to mark a MilestoneCelebration of the show (including a diamond badge for the 60th anniversary).
* CrossOver: With ''Literature/PaddingtonBear''. The series author Michael Bond [[WriteWhoYouKnow worked as a cameraman on the show]], and wrote two books in which Paddington meets the Blue Peter cast.
* DepravedKidsShowHost: Largely averted. There was a long-standing rumour that Valerie Singleton [[MistakenForGay was a lesbian]], but it was never proven. Speaking about it decades after her departure, Singleton pointed out that she did date her co-star Peter Purves and radio DJ Pete Murray, but nobody looked into that because of the rumours — but it ''was'' frustrating having to live with that rumor for over thirty years.
** Later presenter Michael Sundin got it far worse: he was subject to some serious homophobia for being a gay man presenting a children's show, which contributed to his sacking in a way that would never have been considered twenty years later.
** Downplayed with Richard Bacon. He was fired mid-season in 1998 for taking cocaine, and as a result, Head of Children's Programing Lorraine Heggessey [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEyQHA1zdNI read an on-air apology]].
* {{Metapuzzle}}: During the 2000s, ''Blue Peter'' had an annual miniseries starring the various presenters. Each installment, prior to the last one, had a puzzle for both the characters and the viewers to solve; invariably, the answers to those puzzles then had to be put together in a certain way during the finale (for example, taking the first letter of the first clue, the second letter of the second clue, and so on) to obtain a vital plot-relevant clue.
* MoodDissonance: The cast's response to [[spoiler:Katarina's]] death scene from ''The Daleks' Master Plan'' in the Tenth Anniversary of ''Series/DoctorWho'' episode.
* MuppetCameo: [[http://muppet.wikia.com/wiki/Blue_Peter A list.]]
* NippleAndDimed: Anthea Turner once did a feature about training with Great Britain's Olympic high-diving hopefuls. The camera man chose to shoot her in increasingly perverted and unflattering angles, including her being filmed shivering in the cold with both visibly erect nipples making a very obvious point about the air temperature.
* NoOSHACompliance: John Noakes became a legendary figure in UK pop culture for his willingness to join in with stunts such as skydiving, bobsleigh runs, and scaling heights. All of these were done with a severe lack of safety equipment or any risk assessment to a level that would give later generations of safety consultants palpitations. Probably the most astonishing feat was climbing up a steeplejack's ladder on Nelson's Column in central London, ''without a safety harness''. This included an extraordinary moment as he had to climb up the overhang on the plinth where the ladders tilted backwards significantly. He was tied on by the crew at the top, but then had to climb into a bosun's chair to be lowered over the edge, at no point wearing a helmet or gloves. He even had to repeat the shot of climbing up over the edge because the sound hadn't recorded. Years later Noakes also learned that he (and his equally nerve-less cameraman) hadn't been insured either.
** He was also fairly badly knocked about when the bobsleigh thing went wrong, but still limped into the studio to show off his less intimate bruises and bashes, so as to reinforce the lesson that bobsleighing can be risky. Especially if it overturns, you fall out, and go down a long fast run with only two thicknesses of clothing between your backside and a lot of friction burns.
* NotWhatItLooksLike: When the BBC was serializing ''Literature/TheVoyageOfTheDawnTreader'', one host got zapped aboard the title ship and was mistaken for an intruder by Reepicheep.
* OneIPreparedEarlier: The TropeNamer, from the above CatchPhrase.
* ParentService: Lots and lots and lots. Lesley Judd, Sarah Ellis, Katy Hill, Connie Huq, Anthea Turner, Zoe Salmon, and (OK then) Gethin Jones or Matt Baker...
* PictorialLetterSubstitution: In 2021, ''Blue Peter'' got a new logo in which the "U" is a Blue Peter badge.
* ShoutOut:
** On ''Creator/MontyPython'', there was once a sketch featuring a spoof children's magazine programme, featuring Creator/JohnCleese and Creator/EricIdle in drag, called ''How to Do It'' (''"And now, how to play the flute: just blow down one end and run your fingers up and down the outside"'').
** At least one ad for Fairy Liquid riffed on the fact that the crafting segments often used one of their washing-up liquid bottles, to the frustration of a kid who needs an empty one thanks to their new long-lasting formula.
** A reboot of the ensemble comedy show ''Radio/ImSorryIllReadThatAgain'' spoofed the veteran BP presenter with the parody line
--> Hello, my name is Valerie Singlepersonwhatrumours.
* {{Sideboob}}: Zoe Salmon became the first BP presenter to go topless in the history of the show, and quite possibly the first presenter to do so in the entire history of BBC children's broadcasting. This wasn't even with any high-minded purpose, such as education or art. The presenters were reproducing iconic images from the Franchise/JamesBond movies and it fell to the blonde and pneumatic Zoe to do the one where the girl is covered in gold paint. The Blue Peter Annual no. 36 records the completed image, with a gold-painted Zoe clearly topless in sideboob pose and a combination of hair and right arm covering the contentious bits.
* ThreateningShark: Caron Keating dives with blue sharks off the coast of California. She is in a cage with an open front, and an experienced diver Terry bats the sharks away by punching them on the nose. She then finds that she has to swim out of the cage to return to the boat.
--> '''Caron:''' You'll tell me when I'm about to be eaten?
--> '''Terry:''' I'll give you a clue.
* TimeCapsule: Blue Peter has placed six time capsules so far throughout its long run. Typically the capsules contain not only several artifacts of the time, but also memorabilia from the show, including its famous badges, and photographs of the presenters, crew and mascots, along with videotapes/clips and scripts of recent or upcoming episodes and issues of the annual magazine. Typically, the contents aren’t very well-preserved.
** The first was buried in June 1971 in front of the BBC Television Centre in White City, London and intended for opening in January 2000. That was successfully carried out, though it had to be relocated twice, the first time some yards away a week later due to nearby tree root growth and the second instance to the show’s garden in 1984 when the original site was due to be developed.
** A second time capsule would be entombed in concrete in a multi-storey car park near the Television Centre in March 1981 with no recovery date in mind (it was found in 2022 and opened live on ITV).
** A third time capsule was buried in 1984 alongside the relocated 1971-2000 capsule.
** A fourth capsule, built for the show’s 40th anniversary, was buried beneath the Millennium Dome in East London in 1998 for opening in 2050, but it was accidentally uncovered and damaged in 2017, with the contents going on tour the following year.
** A fifth was buried in January 2000 in the same place as the 1971 and 1984 capsules that had been recovered three days earlier, and intended for opening in 2029, though it was relocated when the programme moved from London to Salford in 2011.
** The sixth, created in 2018 to commemorate the show’s 60th anniversary, is not buried, but contained in The National Archives for safekeeping, not to be opened until 2038.
* AWinnerIsYou: The 50th Anniversary of ''Blue Peter'' and what do we get? One very short montage and the other 44 minutes talking about Music/{{McFly}}. We did get a cool book about it though.
* YouWillBeSpared: The Daleks' reaction to ''Blue Peter''[='=]s role in the retrieval of the stolen Dalek props.
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