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Nine News Melbourne is the weeknight, flagship news bulletin of the Nine Network. It is screened in Melbourne, and across Victoria.
Like all Nine News bulletins, the Melbourne bulletin runs from 6-6.30pm every day. It local, national and international news, as well as sport, weather and finance.
News23 was the first primetime newscast and one of the first local programs aired over Studio 23. Aired from October 14, 1996 to September 18, 1998.
News At Seven-Thirty, is the evening English and flagship national news programme broadcast Monday to Sunday at 7:30pm in Hong Kong by television channel TVB Pearl. News At Seven-Thirty is also for free reviewing on TVB News' website. The programme first aired in TVB Pearl when it launched on November 19, 1967 and is the longest-running newscasts in Hong Kong with News at 6:30 on its sister channel TVB Jade.
Annenberg TV News, or ATVN, is a student-produced 30-minute nightly news program serving the University of Southern California student body and Downtown Los Angeles. ATVN airs live at 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday during the school year on Trojan Vision 8 on campus and online on Trojan Vision's website. The student reporters also produce exclusive web content year-round on www.ATVN.org.
New Faces was an Australian talent show that preceded the British show of the same name, produced at GTV-9 Melbourne. The program began in 1963 under the name Kevin Dennis Auditions, sponsored by Kevin Dennis Motors, running on Saturday mornings. The program name soon changed to Kevin Dennis New Faces, and later simply New Faces, becoming a Sunday night prime time show.
Originally hosted by Frank Wilson from 1963 to 1976, and then by Bert Newton from 1976 to 1985, the show featured two serious judges, such as Geoff Brooke, Rod McLennan and Tim Evans. Contestants would compete in heats, with the winners competing in finals. Many of its contestants later became famous, including Daryl Somers, Paul Hogan, The Hawking Brothers, Col Elliott and Julia Morris.
MTV News: Unfiltered was an MTV television show created by Steven Rosenbaum in 1993. In the series viewers sent story ideas to MTV News producers about controversial events in the viewers' community that were not being covered by traditional news outlets. Al Gore was apparently a fan of its Dogme 95-style approach, which can be seen through his help in founding the Current TV network, which operates on the same premise.
The Series premiered in 1994 and ran for 4 years on MTV.
The series was shot on Hi-8 video tape, and was the first show at MTV edited on Avid. It ran for four years on MTV, produced by BNN. Old clips can be seen on the Internet on various websites. MTV would choose stories and provide video cameras and tapes for the viewers to record and submit stories. MTV then edited the footage and prepared it for broadcast. It contained four to six stories per show.
It was originally hosted by Alison Stewart, and later by Serena Altschul. Rob Barnett produced the original Pilot and Rob Fox was the supervising producer of the Series. Steven Rosenbaum and Dave Sirulnick Co-Executive Produced the Series. Betsy Forhan, Robin Turner, Dave Goldberg, Mona Eldaie, Bruce Mcdonald and Dina Kaplan were all segment producers.
The 7 O'Clock News was the main news programme, broadcast each weekday at 7:00pm, on British digital television channel BBC Three between 9 February 2003 to 2 December 2005. Originally called The News Show from the launch of BBC Three in 9 February 2003, it was rebranded later in the year, though retaining the same presentation team.
News Team 13 is the flagship program of Intercontinental Broadcasting Corporation. It airs at 4:30pm & 10pm on weekdays.
New Zealand's Top 100 History Makers was a weekly television programme first shown on Prime Television New Zealand on 6 October 2005. 430 notable New Zealanders were ranked by a panel to determine the 100 most influential in New Zealand history. There were six episodes to present the list, and a final episode, screened live on 17 November 2005, showed the rankings of the top ten of these people as a result of votes collected from the public via text and internet.
Diana Wichtel, reviewing the show in The New Zealand Listener, described it as "surprisingly watchable", but commented that the format was "history as striptease, with the programme counting down over the weeks to the big winner." Scott Kara, writing in The New Zealand Herald, called it "educational but not dull". Another review described it as "history ... as an Idol-style talent search".
Joseph Romanos, one of the panellists, produced a book later in 2005 containing profiles of the same 100 people. The book was revised for a 2008 edition.
Sky World News Tonight was a dedicated international news programme which was shown between 8pm and 9pm British time every weekday evening on Sky News. The show launched on 24 October 2005 as part of a wider revamp of the channel. Its production team was also responsible for putting together Sky World News and the Sky Review and Business report. The show was replaced on 10 July 2006 by Sky News with Martin Stanford. The show featured in-depth reports, analysis and comment based around news stories from around the world, and was presented by James Rubin. It consisted of the main presentation desk revolving to a presentation position of Rubin seated in front of a neon globe with studio guests then able to be seated either side of him. Note however that many of the show's guests appear via link-up from other countries. While the focus was firmly on events outside of the UK, the show usually incorporated brief domestic news updates. These were typically presented by either Chris Roberts or Gillan Joseph, who co-presented Sky News Tonight at 9pm. Sky News' Foreign Affairs Editor Tim Marshall often contributed material to the programme, and on occasion hosted during Rubin's absence. American neo-conservative commentator William Kristol also frequently appeared from the US as a guest contributor. Rubin has also presented the show from some international locations including Jerusalem, and Aleppo. The show was cancelled on 10 July 2006, along with The Sky Report, as part of a minor re-shuffle of the Sky News schedules. Rubin can still be seen on Sky News as a World News Commentator.
NITV News is a program broadcast on Australia's National Indigenous Television digital channel 34 and is a part of SBS Australia.
Started in February 2008, the program began with 5 minutes of News, followed by 15 minutes before finally extending to a half hour bulletin.
Anchor Natalie Ahmat and Sports Presenter Kris Flanders are the regular hosts of the program and all the reporters and presenters at NITV news are from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander backgrounds.
The program is directed at Indigenous and non Indigenous viewers, but has found a wide audience among all Australians interested in Indigenous Australian issues, as such topics are rarely covered in the mainstream Australia media.
The Walter Compton News was an American television news series that aired from 1947 to 1948 on the DuMont Television Network Monday through Friday from 6:45pm to 7pm ET.
The New Tech Times is a "video magazine for the electronic age" that aired on PBS in Wisconsin.
News @ 6 is the flagship evening newscast of People's Television Network in the Philippines, succeeding newscast Teledyaryo. Shown every weekdays at 6:00 pm Philippine Standard Time, it is anchored by former Teledyaryo anchors Ralph Obina, Kathy San Gabriel and Atty. Marc Castrodes. The newscast is simulcast on radio thru Radyo ng Bayan stations nationwide.
The program features a MMDA video traffic system used during the commercial breaks, and closing credits while a video showing Filipino Sign Language slightly shrunk away from that corner enclosed in a egg circle of the news for audience with visual difficulties for the blind and deaf persons and hearing impaired.
Solar Nightly News is the flagship late night newscast of Talk TV. It airs every Weeknights 10 p.m. at Talk TV on July 16, 2012 and on Solar News Channel on October 30, 2012. On October 1, 2012, the newscast was moved to an earlier time-slot at 9 p.m. On October 31, 2012 it began simulcasting on ETC on RPN for Free-TV viewers.