ABC News 24
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ABC News 24 | |
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Launched | 22 July 2010 |
Network | ABC Television |
Owned by | Australian Broadcasting Corporation |
Picture format | 720p (HDTV) 16:9 |
Audience share | 1.1% nationally (March 2011, [1]) |
Slogan | Know The Story |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Broadcast area | Nationally |
Headquarters | Ultimo, New South Wales |
Replaced | ABC HD |
Sister channel(s) | ABC ABC2 ABC3 ABC Kids |
Website | ABC News 24 |
Availability
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Terrestrial | |
ABN Sydney (DVB-T) | 544 @ 12 (226.5 MHz[1] |
ABV Melbourne (DVB-T) | 560 @ 12 (226.5 MHz) |
ABQ Brisbane (DVB-T) | 576 @ 12 (226.5 MHz) |
ABS Adelaide (DVB-T) | 592 @ 12 (226.5 MHz) |
ABW Perth/Mandurah (DVB-T) | 736 @ 12 (226.5 MHz) |
ABT Hobart (DVB-T) | 624 @ 8 (191.5 MHz) |
ABD Darwin (DVB-T) | 640 @ 30 (543.5 MHz) |
Freeview ABC (virtual) | 24 |
Satellite | |
Foxtel (virtual) | 642 |
VAST (virtual) | 24 |
Cable | |
Foxtel/Optus (virtual) | 642 |
Streaming media | |
News 24 | live feed via RTMP/HLS |
ABC News 24 is an Australian 24-hour news channel launched and owned by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.[2][3][4] The channel replaced the former ABC High Definition simulcast of ABC TV and commenced broadcasting at 7:30 pm (AEST) 5:30 (AWST) on Thursday, 22 July 2010.[5][6]
The majority of the channel's content is produced from the ABC Ultimo Centre in Sydney, which the public can view being presented from an atrium looking into the news presentation studio. ABC News 24's early morning programme, ABC News Breakfast and the evening programme The World is produced at the ABC Southbank Centre in Melbourne (weekdays).
Contents
Pre-launch
The ABC announced in January 2010 that it planned to launch a 24-hour news channel.[2] The new ABC News 24 logo was revealed by Freeview in their new promotion on Tuesday 22 June.[7] The official promotional reel for ABC News 24 was launched on digital channel 24 between 6 and 8 July.[8]
Speculation about a launch date for ABC News 24 took place in the weeks prior to the official announcement. The Daily Telegraph claimed in early July that the channel would be delayed due to technical issues at the ABC's new playout facility, MediaHub, in south west Sydney while other outlets reported that the channel was on track to begin in mid-July.[9]
The ABC announced on 13 July 2010 that the channel would have its first live broadcast on 22 July.[5][6]
Reception
Since the commencement of regular broadcasting, the reaction to the new news channel has been mixed. A particular concern has been the pressure placed upon the budget and operations of both the news division of the ABC, as well as the broadcaster as a whole, owing to the decision to launch the channel without additional Government funding, as was the case with the recent launch of the children's channel ABC3.
In Senate Estimates hearings in February 2012 the broadcaster confirmed a $2.5 million shortfall in the budget for its news and current affairs division and imposed a 1.5% cut in newsroom budgets, though denies the link to ABC News 24, instead pointing to recent major news events in the past year such as the Christchurch earthquakes and flooding in Queensland and Victoria.[10] However, Independent Senator Nick Xenophon has blamed the reported $20 million annual cost of the network for cutbacks in ABC TV sports coverage of the SANFL.[11]
However, the network has seen success with high viewership compared to competitor Sky News Australia, with reach exceeding 2 million viewers weekly, tripling that of Sky News.[12]
Programming
ABC News 24's output consists of a mix of live bulletins, timeshifted repeats of existing ABC News and Current Affairs output, coverage of the Federal Parliament's Question Time, documentaries and factual and arts programming.[13] These draw upon the ABC's own resources and those of its partner broadcasters, the BBC, TVNZ, PBS, NHK, and Al Jazeera English.
Live rolling news coverage on the channel is presented on weekdays by Joe O'Brien (mornings), Ros Childs (midday), Kumi Taguchi (afternoons) and Tony Eastley (evenings). Specialist and feature programming includes a daily business programme covering the Asia-Pacific region, a topical debate programme entitled The Drum presented by Steve Cannane or Julia Baird and an international bulletin with Beverley O'Connor entitled The World presented from ABC Melbourne Studio.[13]
Existing shows ABC News Breakfast and ABC News at Noon are broadcast live on ABC News 24 at the same time as on ABC TV in AEST/AEDT time zones; viewers in the AWST and ACST time zones can choose to watch these programs either live (on ABC News 24) or on delay in their local time (on ABC TV). In addition, The Business is shown in an earlier timeslot than currently scheduled on ABC TV. Overnight, two hours of BBC World News bulletins from London are broadcast, as well as two Al Jazeera Newshour bulletins.[13]
On 30 September 2010, the ABC announced the first new programme to be shown on ABC News 24 titled Capital Hill. The political programme, originally hosted by Chris Uhlmann airs Fridays at 5:30 pm AEST/AEDT and takes a look at the week's political events and news, as well as feature interviews with the key players of politics. It is now broadcast every weekday at 1:00 pm AEST/AEDT and is hosted by Greg Jennett.
Repeated from ABC TV
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- 7.30
- Lateline
- Insiders (live simulcast)
- Offsiders
- Australian Story
- Q&A (live simulcast)
- Four Corners
- Landline
- Big Ideas
- Foreign Correspondent
Criticism
Along with other rolling news channels, ABC News 24 has been criticised for launching into rolling news coverage for 'breaking news' where little new information supports such coverage, and just repeating limited information and footage about an event.[14] Conversely, ABC News 24 has also been criticised for not turning to rolling coverage.[15][16]
ABC News 24 online
ABC News 24 is streaming online at the ABC's website.[17] However, contrary to previous ABC News and ABC Online practice,[citation needed] the news stream is not available outside of Australia,[18] and unlike other programming on iView it is not currently offered as unmetered content by any internet service providers. The ABC News 24 stream is available in Medium and High bandwidth varieties on the iView site.
Notable presenters
News
Weekdays
- ABC News Breakfast with Michael Rowland & Virginia Trioli
- ABC News Mornings with Joe O'Brien
- ABC News at Noon with Ros Childs
- ABC News Afternoons with Kumi Taguchi
- The Business with Ticky Fullerton
- The Drum with Steve Cannane
- ABC News Evenings with Tony Eastley
- The World with Beverley O'Connor
- 7.30 with Leigh Sales
- Lateline with Tony Jones & Emma Alberici
- The Business with Ticky Fullerton
Substitute news presenters
- Jeremy Fernandez (ABC Weekend evening NSW News bulletins)
The Drum
- Steve Cannane – presenter
- Annabel Crabb – substitute presenter and panelist
- Eleanor Hall – substitute presenter
- Scott Bevan – substitute presenter
Finance
- Alan Kohler – ABC/ABC News 24 finance segment
Sport
ABC News Breakfast and ABC News Mornings
- Sharelle McMahon – fill in
Weather
- Jenny Woodward - ABC News Afternoons, Evenings, The World and late night bulletins fill-in
Other
- Dr. Norman Swan – Tonic
- Angela Pulvirenti – Inside Edge
- James Valentine – The Mix
Former presenters
- Ali Moore – Afternoon Live, 2010
- Chris Uhlmann – Political editor and host of Capital Hill, 2010
- Juanita Phillips – ABC Evening News, 2010-2014
International bureaus
- London
- Paris
- Mumbai
- Mexico City
- New York City
- Moscow
- Singapore
- Jakarta
- Shanghai
- Hong Kong
- Istanbul
- Tokyo
- Dubai
Overseas correspondents
- Sally Sara - Afghanistan
- Mark Willacy - North Asia
- Matt Brown - Indonesia
- Lisa Millar - Washington
- Peter Cave - Foreign Affairs Editor (Worldwide)
References
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External links
- ↑ http://www.freetv.com.au/media/Engineering/Australian_Digital_Terrestrial_Television_Broadcasting_Service_Information_Register_-_Issue_4_-_January_2011.pdf
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- Pages with reference errors
- Use Australian English from April 2015
- All Wikipedia articles written in Australian English
- Use dmy dates from June 2013
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with unsourced statements from April 2013
- Official website not in Wikidata
- Australian Broadcasting Corporation television
- Commercial-free television networks in Australia
- English-language television stations in Australia
- 24-hour television news channels in Australia
- Public television in Australia
- Television channels and stations established in 2010
- Articles with dead external links from October 2010