This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations .(November 2023) |
| |
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Channels | |
Branding | Seven Spencer Gulf Seven Broken Hill Nine Spencer Gulf Nine Broken Hill |
Programming | |
Affiliations | GTS/BKN: Seven GDS/BDN: Nine |
Ownership | |
Owner |
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SGS/SCN | |
History | |
First air date | GTS: 1 March 1968 BKN: 16 August 1968 |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: GTS: 4 (VHF) BKN: 7 (VHF) [1] |
Independent (1968 | –2006 )|
Call sign meaning | GTS: Spencer Gulf Telecasters South Australia BKN: BroKen Hill New South Wales |
Technical information | |
Licensing authority | Australian Communications and Media Authority |
ERP | GTS:240 kW BKN:4 kW |
HAAT | GTS:627 m (digital) BKN:104 m [2] |
Transmitter coordinates | GTS: 33°6′14″S138°9′51″E / 33.10389°S 138.16417°E BKN: 31°57′5″S141°26′25″E / 31.95139°S 141.44028°E |
GTS/BKN are Australian regional television stations serving the Spencer Gulf of South Australia and the Broken Hill area of New South Wales.
The stations are owned and operated by Southern Cross Austereo and based in Port Pirie with satellite offices in Broken Hill, Port Augusta, Whyalla and Port Lincoln, and playout facilities based in Hobart.
The station's name originates from the Port Pirie and Broken Hill stations' callsigns, GTS Port Pirie and BKN Broken Hill.
GTS signed on for the first time on 1 March 1968. BKN followed soon afterward, on 16 August. In 1974, the stations (and their repeaters) merged to form Spencer Gulf Telecasters and broadcast under the name GTS/BKN Television, and later, Central GTS/BKN. The company was bought by Southern Cross Broadcasting (SCB) in 2001, though it retained the Central name and branding until the end of 2005.
Due to their areas' sparse populations, after aggregation they remained among the few stations in Australia that continued to cherry-pick programming from all three networks, though from 2001 onward, it began favouring Seven through its affiliation with Southern Cross Television.
In 2003, Spencer Gulf Telecasters won the right to broadcast a second station in the same area, and in January 2004, started broadcasting SGS/SCN as a Ten affiliate. Since 31 October 2010, GTS/BKN has also operated a third station relaying Nine Network programming from Sydney and Adelaide, under the callsigns GDS in Port Pirie and BDN in Broken Hill.
In January 2006, Central GTS/BKN was renamed Southern Cross GTS/BKN, changing its logo to the corporate star branding used by TNT Tasmania and TND Darwin.
In July 2018, Southern Cross GTS/BKN was renamed Seven GTS/BKN, reverting to the Seven Network branding, as currently used by Southern Cross stations in Tasmania and Darwin.
On 31 October 2010, GTS/BKN launched GDS/BDN, a Channel Nine affiliate rebroadcasting TCN Sydney. On 11 January 2011, GTS/BKN launched Ten's SD multichannel Eleven. Starting from 7 November 2011, GTS/BKN slowly rolled out 9Gem, 9Go!, 7two, 7mate and One as digital channels across the GTS/BKN areas. [3]
On 7 December 2013, GDS/BDN switched to a feed of NWS Adelaide. [4] [ non-primary source needed ] On 30 September 2018, GDS/BDN launched 9Life.
Southern Cross Austereo launched 7HD, 9HD, and 10 HD in the Spencer Gulf/Broken Hill areas in March 2020, via the stations GTS/BKN, GDS/BDN, and SGS/SCN, while also making 7mate, 9Gem, and 10 Bold all SD channels to accommodate the aforementioned HD channels. The following are the changes that occurred on 19 March 2020: 7HD launched on LCN 60, 7mate moved from LCN 60 to LCN 63 and became a SD channel, and the main Seven channel was made available on both LCNs 6 and 61. 10 HD was launched on LCN 50. 10 Peach was moved from LCN 55 to LCN 53, 10 Bold was moved from LCN 50 to LCN 52 and became an SD channel, while the main 10 channel was made available on both LCNs 5 and 51. Southern Cross Austereo's Nine channel adjustments occurred in late March 2020; the following is a list of GDS/BDN channel changes that occurred in March 2020: 9HD was made available on LCN 80, the main Nine channel was made available on both LCNs 8 and 81, 9Go! was moved to LCN 83 from LCN 88, and 9Gem was moved to LCN 82 from LCN 80 and became a SD channel. [5]
The main GTS/BKN service carries programming from the Seven Network, including the Adelaide edition of Seven News' nightly 6pm bulletin.
GDS/BDN broadcasts programs from the Nine Network, including the state bulletin from NWS from Adelaide.
GTS/BKN produced a wide range of local programming throughout the 1970s and 1980s, including Panel Probe, Women's World, Cue, sports coverage, local documentaries and a nightly epilogue. The station also produced its own local commercials.
For over 50 years, GTS / BKN ran a regional news service for its viewing area, initially as a 10-minute mid-evening bulletin [6] before gradually expanding to a full half-hour program each weeknight.
The bulletin aired under numerous titles such as GTS / BKN News, Central News and Southern Cross News, before relaunching as Nightly News in January 2019.
The news service retained reporters and video journalists based at bureaus in Port Pirie, Broken Hill, Port Augusta, Port Lincoln and Whyalla, although in later years, presentation for the bulletin was moved from the Port Pirie studios to Southern Cross Austereo's Canberra headquarters, and latterly, the company's Hobart studio.
Presenters and reporters included Rosanna Mangiarelli, Will McDonald, Virginia Langeberg, Tim Hatfield, Fraser Goldsworthy, Julie Snook, and at the time of the bulletin's axing, Madeline Kerr and John Hunt, with weather presenter Alex Sykes.
In 2019, Nightly News was moved from GTS / BKN to sister station 7two, airing at 7pm on weeknights following the Adelaide-based edition of Seven News on the main channel.
On 13 April 2023, Southern Cross Austereo announced it was ceasing production of GTS / BKN's local news service, effective immediately, marking the end of local television programming for the Spencer Gulf and Broken Hill areas. According to other media outlets, some staff working on the program had not been informed that the final bulletin had been broadcast until after it aired. [7]
GTS / BKN's Nightly News was the last regional TV news service to be produced in South Australia, following the end of WIN News' bulletins for the Mount Gambier and Riverland areas in February 2013.
The following is a list of channels broadcast on GTS and BKN respectively.
Southern Cross Broadcasting (Australia) Limited was a diversified Australian media company, that owned and operated a variety of media businesses, primarily in radio and television.
WIN Television is an Australian television network owned by WIN Corporation that is based in Wollongong, New South Wales. WIN commenced transmissions on 18 March 1962 as a single television station covering the Wollongong region. The WIN Network has since grown to cover much of regional Australia. The network's name, WIN, originates from its first station, Wollongong's WIN-4. WIN has a programme supply agreement with metropolitan broadcaster Nine Network, covering its stations in Regional Queensland, Southern and Western New South Wales, Griffith, Regional Victoria, Mildura, Tasmania, Eastern South Australia, and Regional Western Australia. WIN also has a programme supply agreement with third-placed metropolitan broadcaster Network 10 for its Northern New South Wales station. WIN also produces and broadcasts weeknight half-hour local news bulletins across its Queensland, southern New South Wales, Victoria, and Tasmania markets as WIN News.
TVT is Tasmania's first television station, delivering its first official broadcast on 23 May 1960. The callsign stands for "TeleVision Tasmania". Unlike the commercial stations in Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Adelaide, and later Perth, TVT held a monopoly in the Hobart market for many years.
TND is a television station in Darwin, Northern Territory. The station, launched in 1998 as Seven Darwin and broadcasting across Darwin, Palmerston and surrounding areas, is owned by Southern Cross Austereo. Its main competitor is the Nine Network's owned-and-operated station, NTD.
10 is an Australian television network distributed by Southern Cross Austereo (SCA) in regional Queensland, southern New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory, regional Victoria, the Spencer Gulf, and Broken Hill. SCA's network is the primary affiliate of Network 10 in most regional areas.
In Australia, regional television is the local television services outside of the five main Australian cities.
Southern Cross Media Group Limited, doing business as Southern Cross Austereo, is an Australian media company which operates broadcast radio and television stations. It is the largest radio broadcaster in Australia, operating 86 radio stations, and has a reach into every state and territory.
TVSN is an Australian and New Zealand broadcast, cable television and satellite television network specializing in home shopping. It is owned by parent company Direct Group Pty Ltd, a home marketing and shopping company based in the Sydney suburb of Frenchs Forest, which also owns sister channel Expo.
Seven is an Australian television network distributed by Southern Cross Austereo (SCA) in Tasmania, Darwin, the Spencer Gulf, Broken Hill, and remote eastern and central Australia. SCA's network is the primary affiliate of the Seven Network in the areas it serves.
Southern Cross Media Group is one of Australia's major media companies, as the parent company of Southern Cross Austereo. Its headquarters are in South Melbourne.
SES/RTS, part of the WIN Television network, are Australian television stations licensed to, and serving the rural south-east portion of South Australia, including Mount Gambier, the Limestone Coast and the Riverland. The network began as two separate stations, SES-8 and RTS-5A.
This timeline of Australian television lists important station launches, programs, major television events, and technological advancements that have significantly changed the forms of broadcasting available to viewers of television in Australia. The history of television in Australia can be traced back to an announcement from the Menzies' government concerning plans for television services in Sydney and Melbourne.
SGS/SCN are Australian regional television stations serving the Spencer Gulf of South Australia and the Broken Hill area of New South Wales, owned by Southern Cross Austereo. The station is based in Port Pirie with satellite offices in Broken Hill, Port Augusta, Whyalla and Port Lincoln, and studio and playout facilities based in Canberra.
Just 4 Fun was an Australian children's television show produced by the GTS/BKN television station, which broadcast throughout the Spencer Gulf and Broken Hill regions. The show contained live segments with a presenter interspersed with pre-recorded short cartoons, birthday calls and other TV shows such as The Wotsaname Show produced by Clifford Warne.
9Go! is an Australian free-to-air digital television multichannel, which was launched by the Nine Network on 9 August 2009, replacing Nine Guide. It is a youthful channel that offers a mix of comedy, reality, general entertainment, movies, animation and drama aimed at people between the ages of 2 and 18.
7mate is an Australian free-to-air digital television multichannel, which was launched by the Seven Network on 25 September 2010. The channel contains sport and regular programs aimed primarily to a male audience, with programming drawn from a combination of new shows, American network shows and other shows previously aired on its sister channels Seven, 7two and 7flix.
9Gem is an Australian free-to-air digital television multichannel, launched by the Nine Network in September 2010. The channel provides general entertainment and movie programming, from which the original name "GEM" is derived.
Aspire TV was an Australian advertorial datacasting channel launched on 21 May 2013, owned by Southern Cross Austereo and Brand Developers. The channel operated a full-time format of mostly US produced paid programming and, to a lesser extent, other paid program content including religious programming. Though datacasting was intended by the Labor government of the time to broadcast telecourses and other non-commercial content, without any legislative restriction on its use, most Australian broadcasters have utilized the datacasting services for teleshopping instead. For the most part however, the general public has ignored these datacasting teleshopping channels, resulting in their swift discontinuation.
A number of news broadcasts were referred to as Southern Cross News, including:
9Life is an Australian free-to-air digital television multichannel owned by Nine Entertainment. The channel airs mostly foreign lifestyle and reality programs, with the channel having a licensing agreement with Discovery Inc. for the distribution of many formats.
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