This Day Tonight
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This Day Tonight (commonly abbreviated as "TDT") was an award-winning and long running Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) current affairs program of the late 1960s and early 1970s.
[edit] Overview
When TDT premiered in 1967 it was the first regular nightly current affairs program on Australian TV, and it extended the ABC's award-winning coverage of current affairs, which had begun in the early 1960s with its flagship weekly program Four Corners.
TDT was hosted for the first eight years by journalist Bill Peach. The original on-air team was Peach and reporters Peter Luck, Paul Murphy, Brian Joyce and June Heffernan. Noted Australian journalist, author and filmmaker Tim Bowden also worked on the show as a producer.
It was a training ground for a generation of leading Australian TV journalists, including Gerald Stone (later the producer of the Australian Sixty Minutes), Richard Carleton, Caroline Jones, Mike Willesee, George Negus, Mike Carlton and Allan Hogan.
TDT was renowned for its hard-hitting interviews, a craft brought to a high degree of perfection by Carleton and Negus; the program subjected Australian politicians to a novel degree of questioning and raised the hackles of politicians on both sides who were unused to being placed under such scrutiny. It also broke new ground with its famous "empty chair" tactic, naming politicians who had declined to appear on the show and showing the empty chair where an absent invitee was supposed to be seated.
However TDT sometimes took a more irreverent approach to stories. One notable example of its sometimes controversial editorial approach was a musical comedy sketch that satirised the actions of then NSW Premier Robert Askin, who was reported to have ordered his driver to "run over the bastards" when anti-war demonstrators threw themselves in the front the car in which he and visiting U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson were travelling.
TDT also ran annual April Fool's Day stories, including the "Dial-O-Fish" (an electronic device attached to a fishing rod that could be set to catch any desired species), a story alleging that the Sydney Opera House was sinking into the harbour, and a bogus report about the supposed abolition of the 24-hour clock and the introduction of a digital time system. Each of these reports generated considerable feedback with hundreds of viewers reportedly taken in by the hoaxes.
TDT won many awards during its run including Logie Awards for 'Best New Program' in 1967, 'Most Outstanding Coverage of Political Affairs' in 1971 and 'Outstanding Contribution to TV Journalism' in 1977.
The show was axed in 1978 but the format was revived in the mid 1980s by The 7.30 Report, ABC-TV's current program of this genre hosted by Kerry O'Brien which continues to the present. It screens Monday to Thursday, replaced on Fridays by the state-based Stateline.