London News Network
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London News Network (or LNN) was a television news and facilities organisation in London. It was created in 1992 as a joint operation between London's two ITV contractors, Carlton Television and London Weekend Television, with each company holding a 50% stake. LNN debuted on air on 1 January 1993 with London Tonight, on the same day that Carlton replaced Thames Television as London's weekday ITV franchise. Prior to this, LWT had its own news department, separate from that of Thames.
The company's facility was located at the The London Television Centre on the South Bank (home to LWT and The London Studios). A view of the London skyline, including St. Paul's Cathedral, could be seen from the window set of Studio 7, the main news studio.
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[edit] Programming
LNN's core programmes were London Today and the flagship evening bulletin London Tonight, produced seven days a week for Carlton and LWT (the first time regional ITV in London had had such an operation). LNN was in charge of the production of both programmes until 2004, when ITN took over those responsibilities. The final edition of London Tonight produced by LNN was broadcast on 29 February 2004, following which, its news operation was absorbed into ITN. At the same time, the set and visual style of the programme altered to match, more closely, the new corporate ITV News branding. The transmission business continued at The London Television Centre, albeit under the aegis of the Southern Transmission Centre (now managed by Technicolor Network Services, at its UK headquarters in Chiswick).
The date also marked the move of London Today and London Tonight from The London Studios to the headquarters of ITN on Grays Inn Road, London. The familiar London skyline backdrop for its news programmes is maintained, however, thanks to a fixed live video feed.
Sports programming was often produced for the London ITV region by LNN's sport division, credited as "LSN/London Sports Network" on the end caption. LSN was heavily linked with ITV Sport - it maintained the ITV Sport archive and was the production partner (with Central) on ITV's football coverage, as well as other sports. LSN and Central's sports department (by now controlled and branded Carlton) were merged in 2006, forming ITV Sport Productions, now under the control of ITV director of news and sport Mark Sharman.
[edit] Transmission
Aside from merging the production of news and sports programming for the region into the new venture, LWT and Carlton took the view that instead of having two transmission centres in different buildings, neither on air at the same time as the other, it would make financial sense for the transmission departments to be merged as part of the new company. To that end, from the start in 1993, LNN took over responsibility for the transmission of Carlton and LWT to the viewer at home.
The companies stopped short of handing over full control of presentation and scheduling, however, and planning and scheduling staff, along with the continuity announcers (the "voices" of the stations), were retained separately by Carlton and LWT. This meant that, uniquely for the time, the transmission controllers (later "network directors" - a change only in name) and the continuity announcers worked for different companies and answered to different management.
Carlton and LWT effectively shared the position of what was known as "nominated contractor" in the ITV network. The responsibilities of this ranged from contingency planning and coordinating the network's response to, for example, major breaking news to the provision of the "Network Feed", this being the "clean" feed of programmes to all the other contractors in the ITV Network. To this end, LNN operated two tranmission feeds: one to the London transmitter at Crystal Palace and its dependent relays, and another to the other ITV control rooms around the country. The latter was provided without announcements, commercials or interstitial material (except during times of a "presented feed", such as during the shared overnight service). The network feed was known as "KRS-17/67" - referring to the circuits (17 the original analogue and 67 the latterday digital) allocated to it by BT Broadcast between the South Bank and the BT Tower (The London Television Centre stands on a stretch of the South Bank known as the "King's Reach", and "KRS" an acronym for "King's Reach Studios").
The LNN transmission department has latterly been absorbed into the merged ITV plc as the Southern Transmission Centre, the management and operation of which has been outsourced to Technicolor Network Services. As a result, playout will shortly leave The London Television Centre and move to Technicolor Network Services' hi-tech, HD capable broadcast centre in Chiswick.
[edit] Presenters
- Alastair Stewart
- Fiona Foster
- Mary Nightingale
- Natasha Kaplinsky
- Lucy Alexander
- Anna Maria Ashe
- Paul Greene
- Nick Clark
- Matthew Lorenzo
[edit] External links
- ITV London News at ITN.co.uk
- TV Ark: London News Network - clips of LNN broadcasts
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