L!VE TV

Last updated

L!VE TV
Live TV logo.jpg
Programming
Picture format 4:3, 576i (SDTV)
Ownership
Owner Mirror Group Newspapers
History
Launched12 June 1995 original (1)
2003 relaunch (2)
Closed5 November 1999 (1)
28 February 2006 (2)
Replaced by Babeworld (2)

L!VE TV was a British television station that was operated by Mirror Group Newspapers on cable television from 12 June 1995 until 5 November 1999. It was later revived for Sky from 2003. In 2006, L!VE TV's name was changed to Babeworld to reflect the channel's gradual change of focus towards "adult material".

Contents

Background

L!VE TV was proposed by David Montgomery as part of MGN's move into pay television and due to the dominance on satellite of Sky Television, the decision was made to launch channels exclusively on cable.

In February 1995, Mirror Television, a Mirror Group plc subsidiary, bought flagship cable channel Wire TV [1] which included sports content shown at certain times during Wire's output. Sports programming on Wire had recently been expanded when several sporting rights were acquired, such as Vauxhall Conference football, the live broadcast rights to Lennox Lewis's WBC title fights and the 1996 Cricket World Cup, plus other sporting coverage following a deal with Chrysalis Sport. [2] Mirror Group planned to turn Sportswire into a separate channel to operate alongside L!VE TV, both of which would replace Wire. Wire was closed on 31 May of that year; however TCI (owners of Telewest) and NYNEX made a deal with British Sky Broadcasting, which included a clause that the cable operators would not launch any rival channels to those already operated by Sky. Consequently, Sportswire collapsed just days before it was due to launch, leaving Mirror Television with just L!ve TV.

First incarnation (1995–1999)

At its launch in 1995, the station was headed by Kelvin MacKenzie with Janet Street-Porter as managing director. Presented by an on-air team of young presenters who were new to TV, Street-Porter created a channel based around three blocks of live broadcasting each day from its base on the 24th floor of London's Canary Wharf building. The output was orientated towards a rolling mix of celebrities, interviews, reviews, lifestyle features and reports from events and happenings across the UK. A typical early show was a two-hour afternoon piece based on viewers' wedding videos although by the second week only one had been sent in, and on phoning the participants to have a live commentary, the presenters were informed that the couple were too busy shopping.

Three months after going on air, Street-Porter left due to clashes with MacKenzie over content. MacKenzie axed the rolling content and replaced it with programmes that received much media coverage but low viewer figures. These included Topless Darts, [3] produced by future Times journalist Sathnam Sanghera [4] with commentary by comedian Jimmy Frinton, [5] the surreal talent show Spanish Archer , Talgarth Trousers, (a comedy sketch show) and Canary Wharf , a soap opera which used the station's offices in London Docklands as a set. Other features were the weather read in Norwegian by a blonde model (Eva Bjertnes or Anne-Marie Foss) wearing a bikini, Britain's Bounciest Weather with Rusty Goffe (known, although uncredited, for his appearance as an Oompa Loompa in the 1971 film Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory ) who due to his small stature bounced on a trampoline while doing the forecast (bouncing higher the further north he was talking about), Tiffany's Big City Tips, in which model Tiffany Banister gave the financial news while stripping to her underwear, [6] Painted Ladies, which involved topless girls "painting" on large sheets of paper with various body parts [7] and the News Bunny, a person in a rabbit suit who stood behind a newsreader making gestures and expressions for each item. [6] [8]

Considered cheap and always accused[ by whom? ] of poor taste, the channel never captured more than 1% of the British television audience under MGN, and at its worst was losing around £7 million a year. It was often described[ by whom? ] as "tabloid television", in part due to its control by MGN and because MacKenzie had been editor of The Sun .

L!VE TV had a teletext service, initially operated by Intelfax Ltd.

Sport

The channel also broadcast sport. The first event shown by the channel was the 1995 Rugby League World Cup. The channel showed the majority of the matches live due to the BBC deciding only to show the opening match, the semi-finals and the final live. L!VE also aired the 1995 darts World Masters, greyhound racing and weekly highlights from the 1998–99 Football Conference.

In 1996, Mirror Television entered the bidding process with Carlton Television for rights to show FA Premier League football but they were beaten by Sky Sports.

Shortly before its demise in 1999, it was said[ by whom? ] that the channel would, once again, bid for rights to show the FA Premier League, but given the size of the financial commitment required, it is likely that it was merely a publicity stunt.

Local L!VE TV channels

Part of the overall plan for L!ve TV was for a network of local L!ve TV channels and at the end of 1995 and during 1996 the first local channels launched in Liverpool and Edinburgh. These channels featured both local content and programming from London. A local version was also carried on BT-owned Westminster Cable, featuring local headlines but had fewer and shorter opt-outs than the Liverpool and Edinburgh channels. Around 20 stations had been planned to launch by the end of the 1990s but only a small number ever made it to air.

Closure

L!VE TV ceased broadcasting on 5 November 1999 at 6 pm with a pre-recorded farewell message from the station's production team.

Earlier in the day, L!VE TV's local channels had aired their final local programmes before handing over to the national channel ahead of the 6pm closedown. [9]

Second incarnation (2003–2006)

In 2003, L!VE TV returned as a free channel on Sky, first on EPG 274, then on 214. Its content was almost entirely archive from L!VE TV. Then in 2004, following competitor channels, its risqué archive of late-night offerings was supplemented with banners advertising adult text messaging.

Towards the end of 2005, the evening and late night were turned over to promoting adult text and phone-in services, involving models stripping to entice viewers into phoning or texting the studio. This was under the pretence that the viewer would get to talk to a studio guest.

By February 2006, content had dwindled to little more than these shows and it was moved to the adult section of Sky's EPG on 28 February 2006. Two days later, the name changed to Babeworld, ending links to the MGN operation. Babeworld closed on 22 October 2011, two days prior to Ofcom publishing a notice of revocation for its broadcast licence, ending eight years of the active Sky channel slot.

2007–present

A number of archive programmes from L!VE TV, including The Why Files and Lie Detector were shown on My Channel, formerly known as Eat Cinema, on Sky channel 199.

The entire L!VE TV archive and the rights to the channel's programming were sold on eBay in May 2013 [10] with the winner of the sale buying the entire programming archive for £14,100. [11]

Personnel

[12] [13]

Presenters

Management

See also

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References

  1. "Mirror Group buys cable TV channel", The Independent , 16 February 1995.
  2. Sporting push for UK cable-only channel Archived 9 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Screen Digest, 1 March 1994
  3. L!VE TV: Talking topless darts Archived 16 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine . BBC News Online . 22 October 1999. Retrieved 18 April 2008.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved 18 June 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. Iain Weaver (17 February 2010). "UK Gameshows: Topless Darts". UKGameshows.com . Archived from the original on 4 February 2010. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
  6. 1 2 Ashley Hames, "Sin Cities", Tonto Books, 2008, ISBN   0-9556326-0-9, p.33
  7. Melanie Rickey (5 December 1998). "Fashion: On the street - Ladies' night". The Independent. Archived from the original on 9 November 2012. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  8. Quentin Falk, Ben Falk, "Television's Strangest Moments: Extraordinary But True Tales from the History of Television", Franz Steiner Verlag, 2005, ISBN   1-86105-874-8, p.236
  9. "Birmingham Live TV closedown - November 5th 1999" . Retrieved 16 July 2023.
  10. "Details about Exciting Opportunity to buy your own Cable TV Archive - LIVETV ***NO RESERVE***". ebay.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2 November 2013.
  11. "Live TV Prospectus ebay.pdf". Google Docs. Archived from the original on 18 October 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2016.
  12. David Steer (3 June 2008). "L!VE TV Launch". Archived from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 15 March 2017 via YouTube.
  13. Paul Carmichael (31 August 2016). "Trouble at the Top - Nightmare at Canary Wharf (L!VE TV)". Archived from the original on 6 April 2017. Retrieved 15 March 2017 via YouTube.
  14. Matt Arnold Archived 28 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine at tvnewsroom.co.uk, retrieved 28 March 2019
  15. "L!VE TV Thursday 22nd April 1999". Archived from the original on 23 April 2020. Retrieved 29 May 2019.

Sources