All episode of the series were scheduled in a 12:05pm timeslot.
The series was announced in The Radio Times as being 15 episodes; in the end event it ran to 16. This is referenced in Episode #1.16 (1998) where Terry reads out a viewer's letter talking of "15 episodes" - voiceover man Alan Dedicoat gives a correction to "16".
Terry Wogan referred to the series in his 2006 autobiography "Mustn't Grumble", observing:
"A few years ago, two young producers, Angela Ferreira and Paul Smith, had the bright idea of exploiting the popularity of Wake Up to Wogan on the radio by making it into a daily mid-morning television show, Wogan's Web. Like the radio show, the idea was to keep it loose and fun, with my producer, Paul Walters, collating the emails live on the air, and generally putting himself about in a friendly, handsome manner. He bought a half-dozen new shirts on the strength of it. We had a team of Old Gals answering the phones, marshalled by a young lady so pretty she had to be known as 'Bag of Spanners'. The Voice of the Balls weighed in fruitily, there were guests, contributors, and it was fun. The cameraman, the sound guys, the crew all loved it. So did the public - it grabbed thirty per cent of the audience almost from the start. Not that it got much past the start. After a couple of weeks of success and public approval, it got reduced to three mornings, and then two, and then - zero. You see, a new Head of Daytime had taken over, and she wanted the slot for her friend and new discovery, Vanessa Feltz. The Feltz show didn't last long either, but they didn't ask Wogan's Web back. They tell me that the lady who made the decision has never forgiven me for her mistake . . ."
"A few years ago, two young producers, Angela Ferreira and Paul Smith, had the bright idea of exploiting the popularity of Wake Up to Wogan on the radio by making it into a daily mid-morning television show, Wogan's Web. Like the radio show, the idea was to keep it loose and fun, with my producer, Paul Walters, collating the emails live on the air, and generally putting himself about in a friendly, handsome manner. He bought a half-dozen new shirts on the strength of it. We had a team of Old Gals answering the phones, marshalled by a young lady so pretty she had to be known as 'Bag of Spanners'. The Voice of the Balls weighed in fruitily, there were guests, contributors, and it was fun. The cameraman, the sound guys, the crew all loved it. So did the public - it grabbed thirty per cent of the audience almost from the start. Not that it got much past the start. After a couple of weeks of success and public approval, it got reduced to three mornings, and then two, and then - zero. You see, a new Head of Daytime had taken over, and she wanted the slot for her friend and new discovery, Vanessa Feltz. The Feltz show didn't last long either, but they didn't ask Wogan's Web back. They tell me that the lady who made the decision has never forgiven me for her mistake . . ."