Breakfast | |
---|---|
Genre | News program |
Presented by |
|
Country of origin | New Zealand |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Running time | 180 Minutes |
Original release | |
Network | TVNZ 1 |
Release | 11 August 1997 – present |
Related | |
1 News |
Breakfast (also referred to as TVNZ Breakfast) is a New Zealand morning news and talk show airing weekday mornings on TVNZ 1, produced by 1News . Debuting on 11 August 1997, it was the first of its genre in New Zealand. It contains a mixture of breaking news, news, sport, weather and feature items. Originally a two-hour programme, it was expanded to three hours in 2012. It is currently presented by Jenny-May Clarkson, Daniel Faitaua, Anna Burns-Francis and Chris Chang.
Breakfast began airing on 11 August 1997 on TV One and was preceded by Telstra Business, an early morning programme devoted to business and finance. The original presenters were Susan Wood and Mike Hosking, with Liz Gunn as newsreader and Michael Wilson as presenter of Telstra Business.
Before Breakfast came along, breakfast television was introduced to Channel 2 in November 1989 with an early morning news service called Breakfast News with Tom Bradley as anchor and Penelope Barr as weather presenter. Breakfast News – which consisted of overnight stories, a business news summary and weather forecasts – aired on Channel 2 initially as a half hour bulletin at 7am with a five-minute news and weather update at 8am.
In 1990, the format of Breakfast News was changed to five-minute bulletins at 7am, 7.30am, 8am and 8.30am (during Channel 2's early morning programming for children) with former Top Half presenter John Hawkesby taking over as anchor. By August, John Hawkesby replaced Lindsay Perigo as co-anchor of the late night edition of One Network News and Breakfast News was axed by TVNZ.
When Breakfast began, its dominance was virtually unchallenged by the other networks until 2007, when TV3 launched Sunrise . Sunrise struggled against Breakfast in the ratings until Sunrise went off air because of financial issues in April 2010, leaving Breakfast as the only morning news and talk show in New Zealand, until TV3 launched their second attempt at a morning news programme, Firstline , in 2011.
Following Hosking's tenure, Breakfast was dominated by host Paul Henry's outspoken nature for several years, until he resigned following a series of on-air racist comments in October 2010. [1] Years later, Henry's self-titled breakfast show on TV3 caused a significant increase in Breakfast's competition from 2015. This resulted in Breakfast's relaunch in September 2016, with a new presenting line-up led by Hilary Barry and Jack Tame. [2] Barry was moved to Seven Sharp from 2018, and was replaced on Breakfast by Hayley Holt. Holt resigned from the Green Party, who she had represented at the 2017 New Zealand general election, in order to take up the position. [3] Tame remained on Breakfast until 2019, when he became the presenter of Q+A and was replaced by veteran New Zealand broadcaster John Campbell, who had recently joined TVNZ. [4]
Between 23 March and 8 May 2020, the show was hosted by two rotating teams of three presenters due to the public health regulations around the COVID-19 pandemic. Campbell hosted with Pippa Wetzell and Melissa Stokes on Mondays and Tuesdays, with Jenny-May Clarkson (the show's regular newsreader), Hadyn Jones and Anna Burns-Francis taking over for the remaining episodes. Holt remained in self-isolation due to her pregnancy, while Matty McLean temporarily moved to present the weather for 1News at 6pm. From 11 May the regular daily presenters returned, with Clarkson continuing as a main co-presenter until 2 June in Holt's absence. Holt left the show permanently in August, with Clarkson taking over her role. [5] Indira Stewart subsequently joined the team as newsreader. [6] During Auckland's lockdown period between 18 August and 12 November 2021, the two presenting teams were Campbell, Stewart and Stokes, and Clarkson, McLean and Jenny Suo.
On 31 January 2022, a new look for Breakfast was unveiled. This included a new augmented reality studio set and new graphics. McLean and Stewart's presenting roles were also increased. [7] Campbell left the show in April to become TVNZ's special correspondent, and was briefly replaced by Kamahl Santamaria, who had previously presented for Al Jazeera English for 16 years. [8]
In May 2022, Breakfast became the focus of media attention when Santamaria resigned from TVNZ after a month at the station. Santamaria's departure was initially described to his colleagues and the media as a "family emergency" or "personal matter", though the day after his resignation was announced it emerged that a female colleague had made a complaint against him over inappropriate behaviour. After further allegations of harassment against Santamaria during his time at Al Jazeera were reported, a review of TVNZ's hiring process was undertaken. [9] Upon the review's completion in July 2022, TVNZ's head of news and current affairs, Paul Yurisich, who had hired Santamaria without thorough consultation, also resigned from his position. [10]
In January 2023, TVNZ announced that New York Correspondent Anna Burns-Francis and sports presenter and former midday presenter Chris Chang would join the team in 2023 after the announcement that Indira Stewart was leaving to become a in-depth multimedia reporter for 1News. However, she would present the midday bulletin on Fridays with Chang presenting Monday to Thursday.
In January 2024, TVNZ announced that former Europe Correspondant Daniel Faitaua would return to the Breakfast team in 2024, replacing Matty McLean who departed the show in December 2023.
In late 2024, proposals were made to reduce the Breakfast line-up to two presenters as part of wider TVNZ restructuring. As a consequence, Burns-Francis opted to leave her role. [11]
Dates | Presenters | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
1997–2021 format | Anchor/s | News | Weather | |
1997–1999 | Mike Hosking [12] | Susan Wood [12] | ||
2000 | Alison Mau [12] | |||
2001 | Liz Gunn [12] | |||
2002 | Kate Hawkesby [12] | Neil Waka [13] | ||
2003 | Peter Williams [14] | |||
January 2004 – August 2004 | Alison Mau [12] | |||
August 2004 – December 2004 | Paul Henry [12] | |||
January 2005 – July 2007 | Kay Gregory | |||
August 2007 – October 2010 | Pippa Wetzell [15] | Tāmati Coffey [15] | ||
October 2010 – December 2010 | Greg Boyed | |||
Rawdon Christie [16] | ||||
January 2011 – May 2012 | Corin Dann [17] | Petra Bagust [17] | ||
May 2012 – December 2012 | Rawdon Christie [18] | |||
January 2013 – December 2013 | Toni Street [19] | Sam Wallace | ||
January 2014 – September 2015 | Alison Pugh [20] [21] | |||
September 2015 – September 2016 | Nadine Chalmers-Ross [22] | |||
September 2016 – December 2016 | Hilary Barry [2] | Jack Tame [2] | Daniel Faitaua [23] | |
2017 | Matty McLean | |||
January 2018 – April 2019 | Hayley Holt [3] | |||
April 2019 – August 2019 | John Campbell [4] | |||
September 2019 – August 2020 | Jenny-May Clarkson [24] | |||
August 2020 – December 2021 | Jenny-May Clarkson [5] | Indira Stewart | ||
Present format | Anchor/s | News | ||
January 2022 – April 2022 | Jenny-May Clarkson [7] | Matty McLean [7] | John Campbell [7] | Indira Stewart [7] |
April 2022 – May 2022 | Kamahl Santamaria [8] [25] | |||
May 2022 – December 2022 | ||||
January 2023 – December 2023 | Anna Burns-Francis [26] | Chris Chang [26] | ||
January 2024 – present | Daniel Faitaua |
Breakfast reporters appear in live crosses throughout the three hour broadcast, and during news bulletins.
Name | Role | Bureau |
---|---|---|
Larissa Howie | Reporter | Auckland |
Wilson Longhurst | Reporter | Auckland |
Grace Thomas | Foreign producer | Auckland |
Zion Dayal | Sports producer | Auckland |
Abbey Wakefield | Reporter | Wellington |
Digby Werthmuller | Reporter | Christchurch |
On 3 September 2011, TVNZ launched Saturday Breakfast, which aired between 7 am and 9 am each Saturday. The programme was axed at the end of 2012 due to low viewership.
Short news and sports updates are presented every half hour (6am, 6.30am, 7am, 7.30am, 8am and 8.30am) and followed by a weather forecast. Mostly, the programme has interviews with newsmakers or TVNZ reporters on the important headlines of the day. The first hour of the programme, from 6am, is usually devoted to news coverage and the rest of the programme has entertainment or special interest segments.
In 2014, TVNZ was awarded a Bravo award by the New Zealand Skeptics for coverage of the "dangers of Miracle Mineral Solution." And for their comment that MMS "is not a miracle cure for anything". [28]
1News is the news division of New Zealand television network TVNZ. The programme is broadcast live from TVNZ Centre in Auckland. The flagship news bulletin is the nightly 6 pm news hour, but 1News also has late night news bulletins, as well as current affairs shows such as Breakfast and Seven Sharp.
John James Campbell is a New Zealand journalist and radio and television personality. He is currently a presenter and reporter at TVNZ; before that, he presented Checkpoint, Radio New Zealand's drive time show, from 2016 to 2018. For ten years prior to that, he presented Campbell Live, a 7 p.m. current affairs programme on TV3. He was a rugby commentator for Sky Sports during the All Blacks' test against Samoa in early 2015 — a fixture he had vocally campaigned for while hosting Campbell Live.
Hilary Ann Barry is a New Zealand journalist and television personality who co-hosts Seven Sharp with Jeremy Wells on TVNZ 1. She was a newsreader on TV3 for many years and until 2016, presented the 6 pm Newshub show with Mike McRoberts. She also worked on the Paul Henry morning TV show since its launch, reading the news. Barry resigned from these roles in April 2016.
Newshub was a New Zealand news service that aired on the television channel Three, and on digital platforms, until July 2024. It also operated on radio stations run by MediaWorks Radio until December 2021.
John Langley Hawkesby is a former news presenter for ONE News and THREE News in New Zealand.
Peter Allan Williams is a New Zealand broadcaster and sports journalist who worked for the national broadcaster TVNZ between 1979 and 2018. His roles with TVNZ included hosting the 1News 6pm weekend bulletin and serving as the southern editor of TVNZ Sports in Wellington. Between 2019 and 2021, Williams also hosted the morning talkback programme on Magic Talk, a MediaWorks radio network.
Jenny-May Clarkson is a television presenter who formerly played New Zealand netball international and commentated sports.
Carol Ann Hirschfeld is a New Zealand journalist, documentary maker, broadcaster, producer and media executive. She is best known for her role as a TV3 News presenter alongside John Campbell from 1998 until 2005. As a broadcast media executive she has been a powerful advocate for improving the coverage of Māori issues, and of increasing the diversity of voices within the media. “I think the biggest challenge is to have that Māori voice in mainstream media organisations. And one of my concerns has been how to integrate an informed Māori viewpoint into the fabric of our news.”
Hayley Doreen Holt is a New Zealand television presenter and former snowboarder and ballroom dancer, who presents sports news on 1 News At 6pm. She co-presented TVNZ Breakfast from 2018 to 2020 alongside Jack Tame and later John Campbell, and earlier was notable for her appearances on several reality television series, as well as co-hosting a networked breakfast show on More FM from 2012 to 2013. She stood in the 2017 general election for the Green Party.
Miriama Jennet Kamo is a New Zealand journalist, children's author and television presenter. She currently presents TVNZ's Māori current affairs programme Marae and presented the current affairs programme Sunday between 2002 and 2024, when the show was cancelled.
Gregory Stephen Boyed was a New Zealand journalist and television presenter. He was best known as the presenter of TVNZ 1's 1 News Tonight; he also hosted Breakfast, 1 News At 6pm, Q+A, and Seven Sharp.
Jennifer Goodwin is a New Zealand journalist, television newsreader and continuity announcer. On Monday 30 June 1975 she became a news presenter on the newly launched TV-2, making her New Zealand's first female television newsreader, and the first woman within the Commonwealth of Nations to present a prime time news programme. Prior to her work at TV-2, Goodwin worked in radio before moving into television in the 1960s, where she initially worked as a continuity announcer. In 2009 she was one of several former TVNZ presenters to return to the station to celebrate 40 years of television network news in New Zealand.
Kamahl Santamaria is a New Zealand television journalist who achieved international prominence as an anchor for Al Jazeera between 2005 and 2022. In April 2022, he joined the hosting team of Breakfast, on New Zealand's TVNZ 1, but resigned abruptly after a brief period on air. Allegations of inappropriate behaviour towards female employees subsequently emerged.
Seven Sharp is a half-hour-long New Zealand current affairs programme produced by Television New Zealand. The programme was created after the discontinuation of Close Up. It broadcasts at 7 pm every weekday on TVNZ 1. Seven Sharp typically presents 3 stories within a 30-minute timeslot every weeknight, and is designed to be more integrated with social media and real time opinions than its predecessor.
Daniel Faitaua is a New Zealand television news reporter of Samoan descent. He was the 1News Europe correspondent, based in London, from 2019 to 2022 and was previously newsreader on Breakfast and 1 News At Midday. In 2024 Faitaua returned to Breakfast replacing Matty Mclean.
Jack Renfrey Tame is a New Zealand television and radio journalist and presenter. He is the host of TVNZ’s political show Q+A, and a presenter at Newstalk ZB.
TVNZ Duke, formerly Duke and stylized as TVNZ DUKE or DUKE, is a New Zealand television channel run by state broadcaster Television New Zealand. It screens programming targeted at a male audience. It was launched on 20 March 2016 to replace TVNZ's popup channel that was used to air the Wimbledon Championships. Initially advertised as a male-skewed channel, this branding was later dropped.
Oriini Kaipara is a New Zealand broadcaster, journalist and translator and interpreter of Māori and English. Kaipara has worked for Mai FM, TVNZ 1, Māori Television, and Three.
Matthew Bruce McLean is a New Zealand journalist and television presenter. He previously presented Breakfast, and was a 1News reporter. He has also worked on the television programmes Seven Sharp, 20/20 and Close Up.