C31 Melbourne

Last updated

C31 Melbourne
C31 Melbourne logo 2010.png
TypeCommunity television
Country Australia
Broadcast area Melbourne, Geelong, surrounding areas [1]
Headquarters2/4 Douglas Street
Southbank, Victoria
Programming
Language(s)English
Picture format 576i (SDTV) 16:9
Ownership
OwnerMelbourne Community Television Consortium
Sister channels Channel 44 Adelaide
History
Launched6 October 1994;29 years ago (1994-10-06)
Links
Website www.ctvplus.org.au
Availability
Terrestrial
DVB-T32 (Melbourne)
42 (South Yarra)
Freeview (virtual)44

C31 Melbourne is a free-to-air community television channel in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Its name is derived from UHF 31, the frequency and channel number reserved for analogue broadcasts by metropolitan community television stations in Australia.

Contents

History

The station began broadcasting officially on 6 October 1994. The Australian Broadcasting Authority had granted Melbourne Community Television Consortium (MCTC) with a temporary open-narrowcast licence on 5 March 1993. The framework of community television in Australia can be traced back to 1992, when the Government asked the ABA to conduct a trial of community television using the vacant sixth television channel 31. On 30 July 2004, the Australian Broadcasting Authority granted the station a full-time community broadcasting licence.

C31 began broadcasting in digital during June 2010. [2]

C31 is primarily funded through sponsorship, grants, sale of airtime and member donations. The station does not receive any regular Government funding. [3] The annual revenue of C31 is approximately (AUD) $1.3 million per year. For comparison, the Nine Network, an Australian commercial station, has $907 million annual revenue. [4] The station claims that "1.4 million Melburnians tune in each month" [5] this figure is supplied by the ratings company OzTam. Individual programs can have ratings of up to 180,000 viewers.

The C31 website was completely remodelled in 2009, offering streaming of every program they broadcast (if the producer consents). [6] C31 Melbourne was the only community television broadcast in Australia which offered this. A new website, ctvplus.org.au, was released in 2016 and offers livestreaming of both C31 Melbourne, C44 Adelaide, and catch up viewing of over 80 programs.

C31 announced to its digital service provider and officially began simulcasting from 2010 on logical channel number 44. C31 officially started broadcasting in Digital on 28 May 2010 [7] with the official launch date on 11 June. [8]

On 27 June 2010, the community TV programming was rebranded "C31" with new logo, identities, schedule and watermark.[ citation needed ]

On 1 March 2012, C31 ceased broadcasting its analogue signal, and became available only as logical digital channel 44.[ citation needed ]

In September 2014, Australian federal communications minister Malcolm Turnbull announced that licensing for community television stations would end in December 2015. [9] In September 2015, Turnbull, then Prime Minister, announced an extension of the deadline to 31 December 2016. [10]

C31, like other community television stations, started moving operations online, and began streaming its channel live from ctvplus.org.au, allowing access to viewers outside of its traditional broadcast area. In April 2016, C31 became the first community station to offer a mobile app that offers live streaming and video on demand catch-up television. [11] A new, improved mobile app, CTV+. was released on 26 August 2022. An app for smart TVs is currently under development.

The deadline was further extended twice at the last minute by Minister for Communications Mitch Fifield, first to 30 June 2017, [12] and later to 31 December 2017. [13] Fifield made an additional extension to 30 June 2018 as part of the government's deal with the Nick Xenophon Team to garner support for large-scale media reforms in the Senate, [14] [15] while a further extension, announced on 1 June 2018, gave broadcasters an additional two years through 30 June 2020. [16] In June 2020, they were given another 12-month extension. [17] In June 2021, thanks to amendments tabled by South Australian Senator Rex Patrick, the station was given a three-year extension. [18] [19]

Transmission quality

Its signal is transmitted from Mount Dandenong and Como Centre, South Yarra, reaching much of the Greater Melbourne, Geelong and West Gippsland areas on free-to-air television. [20]

C31 is available on digital via UHF 32 in Melbourne & Geelong and UHF 66 in South Yarra. [8]

Prior to 1 March 2012, C31's signal was available in analog UHF at a lower power than Melbourne's other television stations (it was, for example, one quarter of SBS's output power). Nevertheless, viewers with good line-of-sight to the main transmitter on Mount Dandenong could receive a usable signal from as far away as Geelong, Castlemaine and Moe [ citation needed ].

Programming

C31 broadcasts a vast array of locally produced content including news, sport, youth, arts, and entertainment programs. The station also features a substantial amount of local multicultural programming, celebrating Melbourne's ethnic diversity.

FishCam

Fishcam is arguably C31's best-known program. It was a pre-recorded broadcast of a fish tank located in the station's studios, set to music by independent artists. [21] It used to be live, but the station got complaints from the Australian Communications & Media Authority when there was a dead fish floating on the top of the tank for several days. It was originally shown in place of a test pattern when the station had no programming available for broadcast. After it was discovered that Fishcam was reasonably popular, Fishcam became a scheduled show and was even listed in the TV guide. C31 has boasted that Fishcam is "very popular" [22] and is so widely recognised in the Melbourne community that "many people know C31 as 'the fish station'." [23]

The station has previously made VHS tapes of Fishcam available for purchase. After having its timeslot continually cut back over the years to make room for more traditional programming, Fishcam finally ceased broadcasting on 4 March 2007. [24] On 13 October 2014 FishCam returned at the new time of 9pm hosted by Luis from Lessons with Luis. [25] The return of FishCam coincides with the station's twentieth anniversary.

Other programs

The logo for Deaf TV, one of the diverse programs on C31 Deaf tv.png
The logo for Deaf TV, one of the diverse programs on C31

Personalities

Many comedians, performing artists and producers worked at C31 before moving to mainstream television, these people include Rove McManus, Amy Parks, Greg Tingle, Hamish and Andy's Hamish Blake and Andy Lee, Adam Richard, Peter Helliar, Merrick and Rosso's Merrick Watts and Tim Ross, Jo Stanley, Darren Chau, Corinne Grant, Jamie McDonald, Tom Ballard, Tommy Little, Dave Thornton, Jess Harris, Alex Tigani, Josh Schmidt and Kim Hope.

Logos

See also

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. "C31 Melbourne and Geelong licence area" (PDF). Australian Community Television Alliance. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  2. "About C31" . Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  3. "C31 Information Kit" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 August 2007. Retrieved 17 April 2007.
  4. James Packer, "Chairman's Address", Publishing & Broadcasting Limited Annual General Meeting, 27 October 2005
  5. C31 Website - About C31 "...with over 1.4 million Melburnians tuning in each month"
  6. "Community Television, Music Television, Footy Show, Car Restoration, Classic Cars Shows" . Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  7. "Miralax dosage". Archived from the original on 25 May 2010. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
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  13. "Channel 31 gets a six-month reprieve on free-to-air TV shutdown". The Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney. 27 June 2017. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
  14. Wallbank, Paul (15 September 2017). "The devil in the detail: The deals the government made to get media reforms across the line". Mumbrella . Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  15. Harris, Rob (13 September 2017). "Media reform: Government clinches deal with crossbench". Herald Sun . Melbourne. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  16. "Community television broadcasters granted two-year licence extension" (Press release). Canberra. Department of Communications and the Arts. 1 June 2018. Archived from the original on 6 June 2018. Retrieved 6 June 2018.
  17. Knox, David (30 June 2020). "11th hour reprieve: C31 & C44 win 12 month extension | TV Tonight". tvtonight.com.au. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  18. Kelsall, Thomas (24 June 2021). "Channel 44 off death row with three-year licence extension". InDaily . Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  19. Sutton, Malcolm (23 June 2021). "Community TV stations Channel 31 and Channel 44 given three-year lifeline in surprise turnaround". ABC News. ABC Radio Adelaide. Australian Broadcasting Corporation . Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  20. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 June 2010. Retrieved 1 August 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  21. Application to the ABA for Melbourne Community Television "From midnight there is a live camera broadcasting...with music by independent artists playing in the background."
  22. Application to the ABA for Melbourne Community Television "Fishcam is a very popular and peaceful alternative to late night infomercials."
  23. Channel 31's Former Fishcam Webpage (via the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine) "Fishcam is one of Channel 31's most popular and recognised programs to the extent that many people know Channel 31 as 'the fish station'. To our knowledge, there is nowhere in the world where you can switch on your television to watch fish".
  24. C31 : Our Shows: Show Guide Archived 7 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
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  26. "Comic Attitude: Jodie J. Hill" . Retrieved 5 July 2015.
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