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ITV News

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ITV News is the name of news programmes on the British television network ITV. It has been provided and produced by Independent Television News (ITN) from September 1955 to the present. Since its inception, news on ITV has gathered both accolades and praise for its heavy news coverage, as well as for its familiar team of reporters and newscasters - some of whom have included Alastair Burnet, Sandy Gall, Carol Barnes, Trevor McDonald, Julia Somerville, John Suchet, Mary Nightingale, Mark Austin, and latterly Julie Etchingham. Its news coverage has won much praise and accolades from such distinguished institutions as the Royal Television Society and BAFTA - notably, the ITV Evening News holding the title of "RTS News Programme of the Year" from 2004 to 2008, and numerous BAFTA wins for the flagship News at Ten, the latest awarded in April 2009.

ITV News has the second-largest television news audience in the United Kingdom, second only to BBC News. However, its news budget is dwarfed by that of the publicly-funded BBC, which spends £89.5 million annually on news-gathering, plus a further £23.1 million on its rolling news channel.[1]

The main ITN bulletins on ITV are: the ITV Morning News at 05:30; the ITV Lunchtime News at 13:30; the ITV Evening News at 18:30; and the main nightly news bulletin, the flagship News at Ten at 22:00.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] 1955-1967

ITN was set-up by the Independent Television Authority to provide a new type of news service for the upcoming commercial television service Independent Television (ITV). Both ITN and ITV were launched on 22 September 1955, and the news service immediately broke new ground by introducing in-vision newscasters and reporter packages (incidentally, the first roster of regular ITN newscasters and reporters included marathon runner Christopher Chataway, Robin Day, and Reginald Bosanquet). The unique, probing reporting style of Robin Day caused shock among politicians, finding themselves questioned continually for information - this had never been the case with the BBC. ITN also boasted the first British female newsreader, Barbara Mandell, in 1956. Into the 1960s, reporters such as George Ffitch, Alastair Burnet, Gordon Honeycombe, Huw Thomas and Sandy Gall emerged as aspiring newscasters, under the leadership of editor Geoffrey Cox.

The original ITN logo, featuring the letters "I" and "N" with an oversized "T" (all in the centre of a circle), was used from 1955 up to 1969 and the advent of colour television. The original ITN theme tune was an excerpt of Non-Stop, a piece of light music composed by John Malcolm, used from 1955 up to 1982. By its end it was only used on generic bulletins, with each of the other regular ITN bulletins - First Report (which became News at One), News at 545 and News at Ten - having its own look and feel.

[edit] 1967-1991

In 1967, ITN editor Geoffrey Cox suggested launching a half-hour news bulletin for ITV, every weeknight. ITV executives, however, were skeptical of that idea, because it was thought that viewers would not want a full 30 minutes of news every Monday to Friday (there had only been one half-hour news programme in Britain previously - BBC2's Newsroom, launched in 1964). However, the idea was approved on the condition it ran for a 13-week trial, and News at Ten was born on 3 July 1967. ITN's head newscasters - Alastair Burnet, Andrew Gardner, and George Ffitch - presented the first News at Ten, and the bulletin became so popular with viewers that it was kept in the schedules after its initial 13 weeks. The programme's titles utilised an excerpt of The Awakening, a piece of dramatic music composed by Johnny Pearson. The famous chimes of the Westminster Clock Tower - affectionately known as the bongs - separated each headline as it was read out. The early opening title sequences were simplistic; a (live) night-time camera pan across London and the Houses of Parliament, followed by a sharp zoom into the face of "Big Ben" showing the time of 22:00. The text "Independent Television News" was shown at the start of the sequence, followed by the individual words "NEWS", "at" and "TEN", all in time to the title music.

1969 saw the beginning of colour television. As such, a new ITN logo was introduced - it was simply a sans-serif outline of the phrase "ITN" (the basic concept of the logo remains today). On 16 October 1972, a twenty-minute lunchtime bulletin was introduced into the ITV schedule - First Report, which was hosted by Robert Kee and ran from 12:40 to 13:00. This was followed on September 6, 1976 by the introduction of a new evening bulletin, the ITN News at 545, which ran from 17:45 to 18:00; Michael Nicholson and Leonard Parkin alternated in the newscaster chair. By this time, with three regular ITN bulletins throughout the day - and each having their own look and specially-composed music - the original ITN Non-Stop theme music was only seen on generic summaries and weekend bulletins. In 1982, it was finally replaced with a synthesised alternative.

First Report was moved to 13:00 and retitled News at One in 1976; Leonard Parkin and Peter Sissons alternated in the presenter's chair. Michael Nicholson continued as main newscaster of the News at 545, with Martyn Lewis replacing Parkin as the relief presenter. In 1986, Nicholson left newscasting to return to war reporting and was replaced by Alastair Stewart. Leonard Parkin retired in 1987, and Peter Sissons became a main newscaster for ITN's Channel 4 News (before moving to the BBC in 1989) - it was at this point that the programme revamped. It was moved to 12:30, and appropriately became the News at 12:30. Julia Somerville joined ITN from the BBC's Nine O'Clock News to host the new programme, with John Suchet and Jon Snow acting as relief presenters. In 1988, the programme returned to its original slot and once again became the News at One; the presenting line-up remained unchanged. In 1989, Somerville left the programme to become a main presenter of News at Ten, leaving Suchet to become the main lunchtime newscaster - the programme was revamped once more. In 1991, the programme moved back to the 12:30 slot, but retained the studio setting. In 1992, graphics were relaunched to bring it in line with other ITN news bulletins.

News at 545 was replaced by the News at 540 in 1989 (following the introduction of the ITV National Weather forecast), and a new presenting team was formed comprising Carol Barnes, Nicholas Owen, Trevor McDonald, Fiona Armstrong, and Alastair Stewart. The programme lasted until 1992 when it was renamed and relaunched, in line with other ITN bulletins.

News at Ten continued to rate as the most popular news programme on television. In 1987, the programme launched specially-made opening titles featuring a computer generated travel through London, up the River Thames until the camera stops at the "Big Ben" clockface.

ITN's regular newscasting team in the 1980s now included Alastair Burnet, Sandy Gall, Leonard Parkin, Alastair Stewart, Trevor McDonald, Julia Somerville, Carol Barnes, Fiona Armstrong, John Suchet, Nicholas Owen, and a host of well-known reporters and correspondents.

[edit] 1991-2004

In 1991, ITN moved into its new building at Gray's Inn Road, London (previously owned by The Sunday Times). From this year, ITN news programmes revamped and moved to be presented from the ITV newsroom, foremostly to show the impressive atrium in the newly-purchased headquarters (with the exception of the lunchtime programme which continued with its own studio and music, but took on elements of the new revamp - such as the serif font style newly-introduced for ITN bulletins).

News at 12:30 was renamed the Lunchtime News in 1992. The main newscasters were Nicholas Owen and Carol Barnes. Dermot Murnaghan, Sonia Ruseler and Julia Somerville would also co-present the bulletin at times.

News at 540 was renamed the Early Evening News in 1992 and presented, like all of the other bulletins (except the lunchtime programme), from the ITV newsroom in the ITN atrium. John Suchet was the main newscaster for the Early Evening News, and relief presenters included Carol Barnes and Dermot Murnaghan.

News at Ten underwent a revamp in November 1992 (following the retirement of head presenter Alastair Burnet in August 1992). A new studio was specially created for the programme, featuring television monitors, a video screen, and a large oval-shaped desk with the "News at Ten" name written into the desk. Trevor McDonald became the sole newscaster of the programme; his inimitable style and authority ensured he became Britain's most popular newscaster. John Suchet, Dermot Murnaghan, and Julia Somerville were relief presenters for the bulletin.

In 1995, all ITN programmes (with the exception of News at Ten) relaunched with a unified look, using blue colours (the corporate colour of ITN at the time). A special studio was created in the atrium, next to the ITV newsroom. A large oval desk (inspired by News at Ten) with a coloured light strip (red/yellow) was the main feature; the glass walls were coated in semi-transparent blue perspex. The left wall showed an impressive look into the lobby of ITN's building, whilst the right showed the busy atmosphere of the ITV newsroom. The programme's theme music separated each bulletin. Design firm Lambie-Nairn devised the new look, which saw special arrangements of the famous News at Ten music being used for the other bulletins.

1999 saw the biggest and largest (to date) change to news bulletins on ITV. On 8 March 1999, all ITN programmes were rebranded under the name ITV News. Under the leadership of Granada chairman Charles Allen, the channel also controversially decided to axe the flagship News at Ten bulletin.[2] Replacing the 22:00 bulletin (and in turn the old 17:40 Early Evening News) as the flagship ITN programme was the ITV Evening News at 18:30 (fronted by Trevor McDonald). The ITV Nightly News (anchored by Dermot Murnaghan) aired for 20 minutes every night at 23:00. However, viewing figures for all ITV News bulletins had dropped radically by the start of the year 2000 (in sharp contrast to the ITN-branded bulletins), and after a long battle with the regulating ITC, a half-hearted ITV News at Ten returned (with McDonald again hosting) in 2001, although only for 3 days a week in order to accommodate other programming. The programme returned with a massive 8 million viewers, but figures soon fell drastically due to its much-shorter 20 minute length. Another blow to this incarnation of News at Ten was the BBC's moving of the Nine O'Clock News to 10pm, to cash in on the loss of the ITV bulletin. Also in 2001, the ITN name was removed from the voiceovers at the start of bulletins and reporter name-checks. The ITN name and logo is now only seen on the production slide, and is only used in ITV bulletins when referring to footage shot by ITN camera teams working for other clients (for example: the ITN name is used when both News at Ten and Channel 4 News broadcast the same piece of footage).

With the outbreak of warfare in Iraq in 2003, ITV replaced the ITV News at Ten with a special 45-minute long ITV News at Nine every Monday to Friday, hosted by Trevor McDonald in Kuwait City and John Suchet in the ITV News studio in London. The News at Nine proved to be very popular, reaching 9.1 million viewers on the first night in comparison to the 5 to 6 million for the BBC's late evening news. The ITV Evening News was extended to 60 minutes, and various ITV news specials ran throughout the schedules. A simulcast of the ITV News Channel aired from 00:00 to 06:00 every night on ITV.

[edit] 2004-present

An example of the standing-up style of the ITV News bulletins discontinued from 2009 - Geraint Vincent presenting an edition of the ITV Evening News in late 2008.

Since 2004, ITV plc's 40% stake in ITN has been held as part of (and the company's ITV News operations integrated into) the ITV News Group. The ITV News Group also comprises the ITV regions in England and Wales, and ITV Sport. Its director is Michael Jermey, formerly a programme editor with ITN.

On 2 February 2004, ITV News unveiled a £1 million virtual studio, with a rounded green screen (the set is nicknamed the "Theatre of News") for presenters to stand up and host reports with. As part of the revamp, the ITV News at Ten was axed due to low ratings and replaced with the News at Ten Thirty, hosted once again by McDonald (from Monday-Thursday), and by Mark Austin on Fridays. The new programme did not fare any better in the ratings; News at Ten had once gained audiences of 10 million or more, though ITV News at Ten Thirty now struggled to reach 2 million viewers on any one night (though the flagship ITV Evening News regularly attracted audiences of around 6 million). In addition, ITV abandoned its 24-hour news channel towards the end of 2005, saying it was not "commercially viable".

Generic ITV News opening titles, in use from January 2006 to February 2009.

On 16 January 2006, to reflect the launch of the new ITV logo, ITV News revamped with a teal-coloured look. The music was remixed to become slightly 'heavier', and new opening titles were made based around the infamous clock face (see right). A specially-made VR view of the ITN atrium now adorned the "Theatre of News" screen (an earlier version had been used for ITV's Election 2005 a year previously). In November 2006, the teal-colours of the name-strap designs and other on-screen graphics (except the opening titles and stings) were replaced with blue; the atrium design was amended accordingly.

On 2 December 2007, ITV News and the ITV regional newsrooms (except Westcountry) switched from the traditional 4:3 format to 16:9 widescreen.[3]

In April 2007 ITN announced that ITV had awarded it a 6-year contract to produce ITV News, at a cost of £250 million.[4] However, ITN announced that the new budget meant it would have to cut staff despite already operating on a smaller budget that its two main rivals BBC News and Sky News.[5]

Trevor McDonald and Julie Etchingham presenting the reinstated News at Ten in January 2008. The studio setting was the basis for the February 2009 refresh of ITV News bulletins.

In 2007, ITV plc's newly-appointed chairman Michael Grade was reported as saying that the axing of the original News at Ten was "the worst mistake ITV ever made";[6] not long afterwards, plans were made for the famous bulletin to return to ITV. News at Ten returned on January 14, 2008, with a revised version of the original theme tune, presented by Trevor McDonald (temporarily, until November of that year, after which point Mark Austin took over) and former Sky News presenter Julie Etchingham. The studio contains a VR view over night-time London, with dark blue and black being the primary colour scheme; VR glass 'sheets' also provide News at Ten logos on them. The programme is presented behind a desk as opposed to standing up in a section of the studio.

In 2007, The Guardian reported that ITV planned to take its news output "back to basics" by paring back graphics and having newscasters adopt a more formal style of presenting from behind the desk instead of standing up.[7] This was confirmed when, on 9 February 2009, ITN revamped ITV News to bring it more in line with the News at Ten studio set. All news bulletins are now presented from behind a desk; a VR view over London appears as the backdrop (different versions are used, depending on the time of day). Continuing the cohesive look across all programmes, VR glass screens also appear in the studio to provide graphics and live links with correspondents and reporters.

[edit] 'Big Ben' branding

Trademarks of ITN and ITV News are the inclusion of the Clock Tower of the Houses of Parliament in its programme titles, along with the chimes of Big Ben (known popularly as the "bongs") between headlines. These however were originally used only for News at Ten, with most ITN bulletins using different studios and individual graphic sets. In 1995, ITN adopted a unified look for all ITV bulletins (except News at Ten, which itself was relaunched a few years prior, in 1992), extending the use of the Big Ben clockface to all ITV bulletins. A re-arranged version of the News at Ten theme tune, The Awakening (by Johnny Pearson), was used for the other ITV bulletins (the Morning News and the Lunchtime News utilised the same theme, whilst the Early Evening News used a slightly different arrangement. A further update was made in 1998 when the Early Evening News titles - featuring the Big Ben clock face - were dropped, replaced by a studio shot and a small musical sting).

In March 1999, the "ITV News" brand was introduced and, with the loss of News at Ten, the "bongs" were extended to all ITN bulletins (despite all but one of them starting on the half-hour). The ITN name was dropped from the start of bulletins and, in 2001, from reporter sign-offs. "The Awakening" was re-arranged again in February 2004 as part of a major revamp of ITV News, and again in January 2006 with a further revamp of ITV News bulletins (due to the introduction of a new ITV logo. A computer-generated view of the ITN atrium was also introduced as the backdrop for the ITV News "theatre of news"). Despite the 2008 return of News at Ten, the other bulletins continue to use the "bongs".

The Guardian's report that ITV planned to bring its news output "back to basics" was confirmed in February 2009, when ITV News bulletins were revamped to be more cohesive with the branding and look of News at Ten. Newscasters present from behind a desk, with a VR view of London filling the "theatre of news" screen.

[edit] News broadcasts

ITV News has one of the largest television audiences for news in the UK, with its viewing figures for all of its main programmes counted in the millions. BBC News is the only other news provider that has higher audience figures. Other broadcasters such as Sky News, Channel 4 News and Five News count their audiences in hundreds of thousands.

[edit] Main bulletins

  • The ITV Morning News airs 05:30 - 06:00, Monday to Sunday. During the summer and Christmas holiday periods, the bulletin is replaced with a five-minute news summary to accommodate children's programming on early morning ITV (this summary runs at 05:55).
  • News at Ten airs 22:00 - 22:30, Monday to Friday. It is the channel's flagship news bulletin.

[edit] Other bulletins

  • The ITV Weekend News airs at various times, twice on each Saturday and Sunday.
  • The Late News airs at various times, in place of News at Ten on bank holidays or following extended football coverage.
  • A news summary airs during the magazine programme This Morning at 11:25; a summary also airs every morning at any time between 01:40 and 04:15. News summaries are also broadcast at lunchtimes at the weekend, though in no specific time slot.
  • A news report will interrupt normal ITV programming in the event of any major breaking news story, to explain and give details on the story and the time of the next national news bulletin on ITV. If the story is somewhat serious, the ITV schedule will be replaced by ongoing news coverage (in the absence of the ITV News Channel).

[edit] Newscasters

[edit] Awards

ITN has won many key industry awards for its news coverage on ITV during the past fifty years. It picked up both Royal Television Society (RTS) and Broadcast awards for coverage of the Beslan school siege, and Alastair Stewart won the RTS News Presenter of the Year award in 2006. The 18:30 ITV Evening News held the title of RTS News Programme of the Year for four years running, starting in 2004. News at Ten was nominated for the award in the RTS Journalism Awards 2007/2008, but lost out to the BBC News at 10. However, in the BAFTA Television Awards ceremony held on Sunday 26 April 2009, News at Ten won in the category News Coverage for their coverage of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. It was up against its ITN rival Channel 4 News and Sky News, who had two nominations.

Legendary editor Geoffrey Cox was the recipient of ITN's very first award - a BAFTA in 1962. Since then BAFTA has gone on to present ITN with a total of 26 awards, for coverage on ITV ranging from Francis Chichester's home-coming in 1967 to the Northern Ireland troubles, the Iranian Embassy siege, wars in the Falklands, Lebanon and the Gulf, the Zeebrugge ferry disaster, the discovery of the Serb camps, the genocide in Rwanda, the storming of the Moscow White House, and the conflict in former Yugoslavia.

There have been over 70 RTS awards for both domestic and international coverage, with the first coming for the 1969 Apollo moon landing. Home based issues including the miners' strike, the Iranian embassy siege, the Tottenham riots, the Kings Cross fire, the death of Labour leader John Smith and coverage of Dunblane have all been voted the Best Journalism of the Year by the RTS. RTS awards for foreign coverage range from conflicts in Vietnam, Eritrea, Poland, El Salvador, Beirut, Afghanistan, Iraq, South Africa, Russia, Chechnya, Bosnia, Israel and Albania as well as humanitarian disasters including Romania, the Mozambique floods and the Asian tsunami. Coverage of the aforementioned Mozambique floods in 2000 also won an Emmy award.

From the United States there has been recognition of ITN's journalism, from the prestigious Emmy awards, the New York Television Programming Festival and the White House News Photographers' Association. ITN was the first non-US news broadcaster to win a News and Documentary Emmy when it was awarded top prize for Outstanding Investigative Journalism for the 1992 discovery of the Serb camps. The famous footage of emaciated men behind barbed wire went round the world and helped change the course of the conflict in Bosnia.

In addition to many BAFTA, Emmy and RTS awards, ITN/ITV News has also claimed awards from the Monte Carlo Gold Nymphs, prizes from the News Festival of Angers in France, the Television and Radio Industries Club, the Ethnic Multicultural Media Awards and the Broadcasting Press Guild as well as many others.[8]

[edit] Services

[edit] Uploaded

Uploaded was an ITV News feature which launched on Tuesday 31 July 2007. The service, available on itv.com featured viewer's contributions to daily debates.

Candid pieces of comment and opinion from 'citizen correspondents' was then used across ITV News programmes in short clips edited to entice people to visit the website and to complement its TV reporting work.

The service is now unavailable on itv.com and it is thought that the service trial was unsuccessful with viewers.

[edit] NewsFix

During Summer 2007, ITN and ITV Mobile launched NewsFix, short news updates sent directly to mobile phones (twice per day). The service previously charged users £2, but was free from October 2007 until its demise a year later.[9]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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