The
National Television Awards is a
British television awards ceremony, broadcast by the
ITV network and initiated in 1995. The National Television Awards are the most prominent ceremony for which the results are voted on by the general public. Because of the way the awards are decided, winners are not given the title "Best", but rather "Most Popular". The ceremony was traditionally held annually in October and hosted by Sir
Trevor McDonald. However, after no ceremony was held in 2009, McDonald stepped down from the role, which passed to
Dermot O'Leary. The January 2010 ceremony was hosted at the
O2 arena.
Categories at the 2006 Awards ceremony, which was held on the evening on 31 October were: Entertainment Presenter, TV Contender, Entertainment Programme, Reality Programme, Drama, Serial Drama (
soap opera), Newcomer, Actor, Actress, Quiz Programme, Daytime Programme, Comedy and Factual Programme. Viewers can vote for the short-list of nominees from an initial long list prepared by ITV, and then later can vote by
text message, the official
website and
phone for which of the nominees in each category should win. The awards ceremony, held at the
Royal Albert Hall, (until 2010 when it moved to the
O2 Arena) is shown in full by ITV. This is sometimes live, but has also been the evening after it takes place, by which time the results have usually been widely reported in the British media.
Unlike the BAFTAs and other similar awards ceremonies, the National...
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