Timeline of Westcountry Television
This is a timeline of the history of Westcountry Television (now known as ITV West Country).
1990s
- 1991
- 16 October – The ITC announces that TSW has lost its licence. It loses out to Westcountry Television. Westcountry had tabled a lower bid but the ITC awarded the licence to Westcountry because it felt that TSW’s bid of £16.1 million was too high.[1] Westcountry was the second highest of the other two applicants and was awarded the licence with a bid of £7.82 million per year.
- 1992
- 6 February – TSW’s appeal to have the ITC’s decision to relieve TSW of its licence fails when the House of Lords rejects the appeal.[2]
- 1993
- 1994
- No events.
- 1995
- No events.
- 1996
- 25 November – Carlton Communications buys Westcountry Television.[4]
- 1997
- No events.
- 1998
- 15 November – The public launch of digital terrestrial TV in the UK takes place.
- 1999
- 6 September – Carlton Television drops the Westcountry name from their on-air presentation, instead branding the region as Carlton Westcountry.[5]
- 8 November – A new, hearts-based on-air look is introduced.
2000s
- 2000
- No events.
- 2001
- No events.
- 2002
- 28 October – On-air regional identities are dropped apart from when introducing regional programmes and Westcountry is renamed ITV1 for the Westcountry.
- 2003
- No events.
- 2004
- 2005
- No events.
- 2006
- No events.
- 2007
- 12 September – ITV issues a statement to the City of London, saying that it wished to merge ITV West with ITV Westcountry to form a non-franchise region, ITV West and Westcountry, from February 2009.[6][7][8]
- 2008
- No events.
- 2009
- 15 February – Westcountry Live is broadcast for the final time.
- 16 February – As part of major cutbacks across ITV to its regional broadcasts in England the operations of ITV Westcountry and ITV West are merged into a new non-franchise region ITV West & Westcountry. The new ‘region’ results in a merged regional news service based in Bristol called The West Country Tonight. However the first half of the main programme and the entirety of the late evening bulletin remain separate.[9]
- All non-news local programming ends apart from a monthly political discussion show.
- 9 September – The Westcountry region completes digital switchover.
2010s
- 2010
- No events.
- 2011
- 5 September – Separate weekday daytime bulletins for the two main regions - west and south west - are reintroduced.
- 2012
- No events.
- 2013
- 16 September – The south west opt-out from the Bristol-based regional news magazine is restored as fully separate regional programmes on weekdays with shorter daytime and weekend bulletins reintroduced.[10]
- 2014
- 1 January – Following the formal split of the Wales and West of England regions, a new region covering the merged west and south west regions - ITV West Country - is officially launched.[11]
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References
- TVS's £54m bid 'threatens profits'.Melinda Wittstock, Media Correspondent. The Times, Tuesday, 6 August 1991.
- Wittstock, Melinda (6 February 1992). "TSW franchise appeal dismissed". London, United Kingdom. p. 2. Retrieved 10 September 2012.
- "TV companies link up". Times. London. 20 July 1993. p. 22. Retrieved 10 September 2012.
- Horsman, Mathew (25 November 1996). "Westcountry chief pockets pounds 4m from bid". The Independent. Retrieved 25 June 2013.
- TV Live: Westcountry
- "The Future of PSB on ITV – Redrawing the regional news map" (PDF). Ofcom. Retrieved 17 September 2012.
- "ITV to merge regional newsrooms". BBC News. 12 September 2007. Retrieved 17 September 2012.
- "Strike threat over ITV news cuts". BBC News. 14 September 2007. Retrieved 17 September 2012.
- Seventeen regions into nine: How the updated ITV local news services will run Caitlin Fitzsimmons, The Guardian, 17 February 2009
- OFCOM sets out licence terms for ITV, STV, UTV and Channel 5 Archived 2013-07-26 at the Wayback Machine, OFCOM, 23 July 2013
- Ofcom agrees ITV news shake-up Jake Kanter, Broadcast Now, 23 July 2013
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