Jump to content

TCN

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jamesbehave (talk | contribs) at 14:26, 7 January 2008. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

{{Infobox broadcast}} may refer to:

{{Template disambiguation}} should never be transcluded in the main namespace.

TCN is the Sydney flagship television station of the Nine Network in Australia and is located at Willoughby. The license, issued to a company named Television Corporation Ltd headed by Frank Packer, was one of the first four licenses (two in Sydney, two in Melbourne) to be issued for commercial television stations in Australia.

History

TCN began broadcasting on 16 September 1956, and became the first station in Australia to begin regular transmissions. The first tv tower was built there in 1956, but was replaced by a taller one which is the tallest lattice tower in Australia at 233 metres and is now operated by TXA Australia which operates another tower nearby at Artarmon. The network will close the Willoughby studio site and facilities will be relocated to purpose built studios in Macquarie Park – next door to Foxtel's headquarters following the opening of the Chatswood to Epping Rail Link, which will become Broadcast Centre Sydney or BCS.[citation needed]

The first words spoken on the station were by John Godson, who introduced the station audio-only[1], shortly before the first program, This Is Television, was introduced by Bruce Gyngell, the first person to appear on Australian television, however original footage of this program does not exist. Gyngell again said this passage in 1959 for archival purposes. Other early programming included the 1958 variety music program Bandstand which was launched by Brian Henderson. It lasted for 14 years on the station and launched the careers of many Australians.

In 1957, the station formed an affiliation with Melbourne station HSV-7, allowing them to share programming. In 1963, station affiliations changed; TCN-9 formed part of the National Television Network with GTV-9 in Melbourne, QTQ-9 in Brisbane and NWS-9 in Adelaide. These stations formed the basis of what is now the Nine Network, although only the Sydney and Melbourne stations have been owned by Packer's company.

On Frank Packer's death in 1974, station ownership was passed to his son Kerry Packer.

Bruce Gyngell welcoming television broadcasting in Australia via TCN-9.

In December 1987, Kerry Packer sold the Sydney and Melbourne stations to Alan Bond's Bond Media for $1055 million, including $200 million in shares of Bond Media. Bond already owned the Perth and Brisbane Nine affiliate stations (among others). In 1990, Bond Media's inability to pay out preference shares to Packer forced Nine into receivership. In July 1990, Packer bought back the expanded Nine network (Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth stations) for only $200 million, one-fifth of what he sold it for.

On 1 October 1997, TCN-9 performed the first on-air trial of digital broadcasting in the southern hemisphere.

Production

Drama

News

Entertainment

Past

News

File:9newsopenersydmf.jpg
National Nine News with Mark Ferguson

National Nine News Sydney is anchored by Mark Ferguson, with Ken Sutcliffe presenting sport Mondays to Fridays and Stephanie Brantz presenting sport on Fridays, and Majella Wiemers presenting the weather, filling in for normal presenter Jaynie Seal, who is on maternity leave.

Mark Ferguson succeeded Jim Waley when he retired in 2005 as the bulletin's main presenter. Waley had been the longest serving presenter at the time, following the retirement of Brian Henderson.

Mike Munro presents on weekends in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane & Darwin, alongside sport presenters Stephanie Brantz on Saturdays and Ken Sutcliffe on Sundays. Mike Munro and Michael Usher are regular fill-in weekday presenters.

Pre-Network Logos

File:TCN1956.png
1956 - 1963

Note: Post-network logos can be found at the following article; Nine Network.

References

  1. ^ Walker, Vanessa (2006-07-20). "TV's original voice speaks up". The Australian. Retrieved 2006-07-20.

See also

Template:Autvportal