Future of The Voice UK confirmed after kids' spin-off series axed by ITV
The future of the well-known ITV singing contest The Voice UK has been confirmed after the kids' version of the show was axed.
The programme, which was originally launched on the BBC all the way back in 2012, moved to rival broadcaster ITV in 2016.
In 2017, The Voice Kids was launched but has since been shelved, leading to a great deal of concern around the future of the original version of the programme.
The winner of The Voice 2024 is... 👀 #TheVoiceUK pic.twitter.com/uI4dyHL2dj
— The Voice UK (@thevoiceuk) October 26, 2024
It has been revealed that The Voice UK will continue for another series on ITV, with the next set of blind auditions set to take place in the summer and the live final potentially happening in October.
According to TV Zone, audience tickets are now available, and Danny Jones is set to return to hosting the coaching panel.
The Voice Kids was reportedly cancelled in 2023, with an insider telling The Sun newspaper that talent shows have been in decline in recent years.
New Coronation Street star breaks silence after backlash to 'affair'
Sky axe legendary children's channel today after 17 years - did you watch it?
Hollyoaks star breaks silence amid exit from Channel 4 soap after 12 years
They said: 'The show had a good run and had its own fanbase, but execs are keen to free up scheduling space for other new programming to keep ideas as fresh as possible.
'The cast have great memories from the series, but have plenty of other projects to keep them busy. '
At the time of the hiatus reveal, an ITV spokesman said: 'The Voice Kids is taking a break in 2024.
"We're working with Lifted Entertainment on The Voice UK for 2024 and development of The Voice-branded specials.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sony's Wayne Garvie Roasts 'Ridiculous' Channel 4 In-House Plan: 'It Could Be Potentially Disastrous'
The new Channel 4 in-house productions biz is 'preposterous,' 'ridiculous' and 'potentially disastrous' for the nation's irreverent public broadcaster, according to Sony international boss Wayne Garvie. Garvie did not hold back at the Deloitte Conference this morning when queried over the future in-house biz, which is currently seeking a boss. More from Deadline BBC Director General Floats Concerning Vision Of Future Where "People Don't Care" About Nation's Oldest Public Broadcaster Sky Boss Dana Strong Raises Artificial Intelligence Copyright Concerns: "I Can't Fathom How A Small Producer Keeps Up" A24 Teaming With 'How To Have Sex's Molly Manning Walker On Women's Soccer Series For Channel 4 Instead of focusing on owning new IP via in-house, he said Channel 4, which is soon to be without a CEO and a Chair, should concentrate on a future where it comes together with the BBC. 'Those of us who run in-house production businesses know how difficult it is,' said Garvie, who oversees the likes of Doctor Who, Industry and Sex Education via Sony labels. 'If you're starting out and you don't own IP and have no institutional knowledge of how to run a production business it could be potentially disastrous for Channel 4.' Garvie variously described the plan, which came in after Channel 4 avoided privatization and will allow it to own IP for the first time in its 40-year history, as 'ridiculous' and 'preposterous.' Last month, Channel 4 said it plans to take majority stakes in third-party production companies as part of the plan to move into in-house production. Jonathan Allan, Channel 4's COO and incoming interim CEO, declined to reveal the value of the company's indie investment war chest. Channel 4 has cash reserves of £111M ($150M). 'You lose money after the first three years,' added Garvie today. 'Maybe you make money in five years if you have great people but not money that will help Channel 4 really grow.' Instead, he said Channel 4 should be thinking in a blue sky way about how it can combine with the BBC. 'We have five PSBs here in Britain, most other countries have one,' added Garvie. 'The future surely is the BBC and Channel 4 coming together and that should be focus of the new chair of Channel 4 and its CEO.' Garvie was speaking at the Deloitte and Enders Media & Telecoms 2025 and Beyond Conference after Sky boss Dana Strong and before Netflix EMEA chief Larry Tanz and UK Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy. Best of Deadline 2025-26 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Tonys, Emmys, Oscars & More Everything We Know About 'Nobody Wants This' Season 2 So Far List Of Hollywood & Media Layoffs From Paramount To Warner Bros Discovery To CNN & More
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Netflix EMEA Chief Puts ‘Mr Bates' Debate To Bed: 'We Absolutely Would Have Commissioned It In The UK'
Netflix EMEA boss Larry Tanz has put the Mr Bates vs the Post Office debate to bed. That debate over whether a streamer would have commissioned a local show like the ITV breakout hit has been raging for the past 18 months and Tanz, whose team has recently had success with Adolescence, strove to kill it off at today's Deloitte Conference in London. More from Deadline Sony's Wayne Garvie Roasts "Ridiculous" Channel 4 In-House Plan: "It Could Be Potentially Disastrous" BBC Director General Floats Concerning Vision Of Future Where "People Don't Care" About Nation's Oldest Public Broadcaster Sky Boss Dana Strong Raises Artificial Intelligence Copyright Concerns: "I Can't Fathom How A Small Producer Keeps Up" 'Maybe this is finally my chance,' said Tanz. '[Netflix UK boss] Anne Mensah and her team in the UK commissioned Adolescence, Baby Reindeer and Toxic Town for the UK audience first and foremost. Maybe I can finally put that to bed here and say we absolutely would have commissioned Mr Bates in the UK. We think our audience would love it.' Tanz's shutdown of the debate was unsurprising given that Netflix has found such success with local UK hits of late. Adolescence has been killing it and is now nearing Stranger Things in becoming Netflix's second most watched English-language series of all time. Ironically, top execs at the BBC and Channel 4 have recently said they could not have afforded Adolescence, which was made via an expensive one-take style and starred Stephen Graham, Erin Doherty and Ashley Walters. Since the BAFTA-winning Mr Bates aired to millions in early 2024, debate has raged over the death of truly local British programming. Earlier at the Deloitte Conf, ITV programs boss Kevin Lygo joked that the show has made 's***loads' of money via international sales. He has frequently said it made a loss even though the stars took paycuts. While Tanz confirmed Netflix would have commissioned Mr Bates, Amazon's ex-UK MD Chris Bird recently said the opposite, with Bird acknowledging that the ITV smash was 'too British' to have been commissioned by an American streamer. Tanz clearly disagrees. Tanz, who oversees thousands of hours of content across Netflix EMEA, was speaking at the Deloitte and Enders Media & Telecoms 2025 and Beyond Conference after BBC boss Tim Davie and alongside Sony international boss Wayne Garvie. Best of Deadline 2025-26 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Tonys, Emmys, Oscars & More Everything We Know About 'Nobody Wants This' Season 2 So Far List Of Hollywood & Media Layoffs From Paramount To Warner Bros Discovery To CNN & More
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Black Sabbath Founding Member Is Having Nightmares Ahead of Band's Final Live Show
Black Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler is losing sleep over the band's final show. In July, the four founding members of the legendary heavy metal group will reunite one last time for the Back to the Beginning concert in Birmingham, England. But Butler is already nervous about how it will play out. 'I'm already having palpitations,' Butler told The Guardian in an interview. 'In fact, I had a nightmare last night. I dreamed everything went wrong on stage and we all turned to dust. It's important that we leave a great impression, since it's the final time that people will experience us live. So it has to be great on the night.' On July 5, Butler will perform with frontman Ozzy Osbourne, guitarist Tony Iommi, and drummer Bill Ward for the first time in 20 years for the milestone concert that will also serve as Osbourne's final live performance ever. The Black Sabbath bandmates first formed the group in 1968. Nearly 50 years later, Osbourne, now 76, announced that he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. In an interview with the BBC, Osbourne's wife and manager, Sharon Osbourne, explained why it was important for her husband to properly close out this chapter of his career. 'Ozzy didn't have a chance to say goodbye to his friends, to his fans, and he feels there's no been no full stop. This is his full stop,' she said. 'He's so excited about this, about being with the guys again and all his friends, It's exciting for everyone.' The Back to the Beginning concert will take place at Villa Park in Aston, Birmingham. While Black Sabbath will headline the show with an abbreviated set, other heavy metal bands will appear, including Guns N' Roses, Metallica, Pantera, and Tool.,