There is one word to sum up 2010: endings.
It was a year we said goodbye to a host of TV shows - The Bill, Last of the Summer Wine, Big Brother, Lost and 24, to name just a few.
There was a mass exodus of GMTV and The One Show presenters, while a number of high-profile stars quit their long-standing hosting jobs.
Cheryl Cole, Kate Winslet and Lenny Henry were also some of the celebrities who called time on their marriages.
But there were also some new beginnings with the arrival of a new Doctor, Daybreak replacing the long-running GMTV and Take That finally being reunited with Robbie Williams.
Here is a look back at some of the highlights of the year.
JANUARYThe year of endings kicked off as David Tennant bowed out of Doctor Who and the Time Lord regenerated into Matt Smith, the youngest Doctor yet at 27 years of age.
Other top stories:
Ellie Goulding tops Sound of 2010 Evans in Radio 2 breakfast debut Glory for Avatar at Golden GlobesWe said goodbye to: Love Story author Erich Segal, Hollywood actress Jean Simmons, author JD Salinger.
FEBRUARYFebruary saw awards season get into full swing with its usual host of film and music ceremonies.
Other top stories:
ITV fined over jungle rat killingWhitney Houston gig 'dreadful'Violinist waltzes to pop historyWe said goodbye to: Saxophonist Sir John Dankworth, designer Alexander McQueen, author Dick Francis, actor Lionel Jeffreys, Bagpuss creator Oliver Postgate.
MARCHThe success of the Hurt Locker continued at the Oscars with Kathryn Bigelow becoming the first female director to win an Academy Award.The estate of Michael Jackson agreed the biggest recording deal in history, worth more than $200m (£126m) with Sony Music. The deal was said to involve 10 album projects over seven years - including one of previously unreleased material.And a 115m tall spiralling sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Anish Kapoor was chosen to mark the London 2012 Olympic Games. The £19.1m ArcelorMittal Orbit will be placed in the Olympic Park and will be 22m higher than New York's Statue of Liberty.We said goodbye to: Lost Boys actor Corey Haim, tenor Philip Langridge, singer Jean Ferrat, BBC Radio 3 presenter Charlie Gillet.
APRILThe BBC announced in April that Chris Evans was to join The One Show on Fridays, replacing Adrian Chiles. A week later, a "disappointed" Chiles quit the BBC for a four-year ITV deal and comedian Jason Manford was named as his replacement. One Show host Christine Bleakley also defected to join Chiles on new ITV breakfast show, Daybreak.
Other top stories:
French and Henry granted divorce Modern twist for Shakespeare tale Poison's Bret Michaels 'critical'We said goodbye to: Dynasty actors John Forsyth and Christopher Cazanove, jazzman Herb Ellis, British actor Corin Redgrave, punk pioneer Malcolm McLaren, author Alan Sillitoe.
MAYMay could only mean one thing - the Eurovision Song Contest.
Other top stories:
Lost finale nets 13.5m US viewers EastEnders dominates soap awards Show finds new West End DorothyWe said goodbye to: Actor Dennis Hopper, actress Lynn Redgrave, Diff'rent Strokes actor Gary Coleman, US singer and actress Lena Horne, singer Ronnie James Dio.
JUNEPenny Smith bade a teary farewell to GMTV in June after 17 years on the morning show. Fellow host Ben Shephard later left for Sky and Andrew Castle and Emma Crosby also announced they were quitting the sofa.
Other top stories:
Dandelion building wins top prize Heartbeat is axed after 18 yearsThick of It dominates TV BaftasWe said goodbye to: Golden Girls actress Rue McClanahan, singer Jimmy Dean, artist Sebastian Horsley
JULYJuly saw Jonathan Ross host his last chat show for the BBC with David Beckham, Jackie Chan, Mickey Rourke and Roxy Music appearing at his request. Ross then announced he signed a new four-year chat show deal with ITV.
Other top stories:
Cheryl Cole treated for malaria Turner painting makes £30m record Strictly professionals quit showWe said goodbye to: Author Dame Beryl Bainbridge, stage and TV actor Geoffrey Hutchings, Five Live presenter Allan Robb, conductor Sir Charles Mackerras.
AUGUSTAnother month of endings in August as two long-running series broadcast their final episodes - The Bill and Last of the Summer Wine.
Other top stories:
Dan Brown novel sets sales record Actor Douglas has throat tumour Mad Men wins third top Emmy prizeWe said goodbye to: Oscar-winning actress Patricia Neal, screenwriter and director Tom Mankiewicz, Gap Band singer Robert Wilson, director Alain Corneau, Slipknot bassist Paul Grey
SEPTEMBERSeptember saw singer George Michael given an eight-week sentence for crashing his car into a branch of photographic store Snappy Snaps while under the influence of cannabis in July.
Other top stories:
New American Idol judges revealed Mercury Prize goes to trio The xx Explosive end for EastEnders' Peggy MitchellWe said goodbye to: Hot Hot Hot singer Arrow, Invasion of the Body Snatchers actor Kevin McCarthy, director Claude Chabrol.
OCTOBEROctober was dominated by the government's Spending Review which announced it was cutting Arts Council England's budget by almost 30%. The Arts Council - which distributes money to hundreds of arts venues, theatre groups and galleries - said the cuts would have "a significant impact on the cultural life of the country".
Other top stories:
TV licence frozen for six years Vargas Llosa awarded Nobel Prize Banksy creates new Simpsons introWe said goodbye to: Comic Norman Wisdom, opera singer Dame Joan Sutherland, actors Simon MacCorkindale, Tom Bosley and James MacArthur, writer Harry Mulisch, Pink Floyd's Richard Wright, director George Hickenlooper.
NOVEMBERHarry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 burst into cinema screens in November, breaking UK box office records in its first week. It now holds the record for the biggest three-day opening, biggest single day in ticket sales and biggest Friday, Saturday and Sunday openings.
Other top stories:
Spider-Man actors left dangling Take That's Progress tops chart Rimington to chair Booker panelWe said goodbye to: Airplane! actor Leslie Nielsen, Hammer horror actress Ingrid Pitt, director Dino De Laurentiis, actress Shirley Verrett.
DECEMBERDecember saw Coronation Street mark its 50th anniversary with a week of special episodes and an explosive tram crash storyline.
Other top stories:
Dame Judi named best stage actor Naughtie slips up on Today show McIntyre and Hasselhoff to judge ITV Talent showWe said goodbye to: Director Blake Edwards, musician Captain Beefheart, US actor Steve Landesberg.
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