ABC1

ABC1
ABC1 logo
Launched 5 November 1956
Network ABC Television
Owned by Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Picture format 576i (16:9 SDTV)
Audience share 16.4% Nationally (2009 Ratings Year, [1])
Slogan ThinkEntertainment
Country Australia
Language English
Broadcast area Nationally
Formerly called ABC Television (5 November 1956–8 February 2008)
Sister channel(s) ABC2, ABC3, ABC4 Kids, ABC News 24
Website abc.net.au/tv/abctv
Availability
Terrestrial
Analogue Normally tuned to 2 in metropolitan areas, various frequencies in regional areas.To be phased out nation-wide by 2013
SD Digital Channel 2, 21
Satellite
Foxtel Channel 102
Austar Channel 102
Cable
Foxtel Channel 102
TransTV Digital Channel 2

ABC1 (until 2008 ABC Television) is a national public television channel in Australia. Launched on 5 November 1956 it is the responsibility of the ABC's television division, and is available nationally. In August 2009, ABC1 had a 19.1% audience share.

Contents

History

Origins

The history of ABC1 can be traced back to 1953, when the federal Television Act was passed, providing the initial regulatory framework for both ABC Television and commercial television networks.[1][2] Over the next three years, planning for the introduction of a national television service was put in place – land for studios and transmitters in Sydney and Melbourne was acquired, and overseas tutors were brought to Australia to assist with training.[1][2]

Commercial station TCN-9 Sydney was the first to broadcast in Australia, soon followed by the ABC's own ABN-2 Sydney and later ABV-2 in Melbourne.[1][2] Six stations, three in Melbourne and three in Sydney, were in operation in time to cover the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne.[1][2] The channel's first television broadcast was inaugurated by prime minister Robert Menzies on 5 November at the Gore Hill studios in Sydney, followed two weeks later by transmission in Melbourne.[1][2]

Although radio programmes could be broadcast nationally by landline, television relay facilities were not put in place until the early 1960s.[1] This meant that news bulletins had to be sent to each capital city by teleprinter, to be prepared and presented separately in each city, with filmed materials copied manually and sent to each state.[1][2]

A purpose-built television studio opened in Sydney on 29 January 1958—replacing temporary sound studios used since ABC TV's inception. In the same year, technical equipment was also moved to permanent locations, while main transmitters were introduced to Melbourne and Sydney in 1957 and 1958 respectively.[3]

1960s to the 1990s Colour television

Weekly current-affairs programme Four Corners began in 1961,[4] followed in the same year by Profiles of Power, a series of interviews with prominent Australians.[4] Direct relays between Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra were also established in 1961, replacing temporary microwave relays as a means of simultaneously airing programmes across multiple stations.[2][4] Videotape equipment, allowing the sharing of footage with much greater ease and speed, was installed in each state capital by 1962.[1]

ABC TV was one of the first television networks in Australia to embrace the rock'n'roll revolution of the late 1950s, most notably with Six O'Clock Rock, hosted by Johnny O'Keefe.[2] During the 1960s and early 1970s the channel continued to broadcast programmes on popular music, including the pop show Hitscene, performance specials by groups such as Tully and Max Merritt & The Meteors, as well as the magazine-style programme GTK, which premiered in 1969 and screened for 10 minutes, four nights per week at 6:30 pm, immediately prior to Bellbird and the 7:00 pm news bulletin.[5] In 1967, the weeknightly television current-affairs programme This Day Tonight was launched on ABC TV.[4]

Teletext services were introduced to ABC TV in 1983 to allow hearing impaired viewers access to closed captions.[6] Nationwide, successor to This Day Tonight, was replaced in turn by a new, hour-long, national news programme called The National. Having proved unsuccessful,[6][7] it reverted to a state ABC News bulletin at 7:00 pm, with a state-based edition of The 7.30 Report following afterwards.[6] Lateline and Media Watch also launched in the 1980s.[6][8]

2000s and beyond - Digital television

The year 2001 saw the launch of a new logo to celebrate the introduction of digital terrestrial television in Australia. The logo was modified to a three-dimensional metallic design. Coinciding with this, digital television was introduced to most of the network's coverage area on 1 January 2001 - this was soon followed by the gradual introduction of widescreen and high definition programming.[9]

In 2002, to celebrate seventy years of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, ABC TV's logo reverted to the "over and under" design seen in the previous decades, however it retained the three-dimensional metallic design. The channel's idents featured elements - fire, leaf and ice, and the slogan was updated to Everyone's ABC. The idents also featured the silver ring that morphs into the ABC logo[10][11][12]. This however did not last, as later in 2004, the channel's idents were modified to feature everyday Australians. On 19 December 2005 the channel's idents were revamped featuring a modified ABC logo transforming to a television. These idents were also carried onto ABC2.

At midday on 8 February 2008 ABC TV was rebranded as ABC1 with the standard-definition redirect channel moved from LCN22 to LCN21, complementing the existing ABC2 digital-only channel launched on 7 March 2005.[13] Further cementing the change in identity was the change from the slogan There's more to television to It begins with 1. After concerns in some sections of the media that the 43-year-old Lissajous curve brand was to disappear completely, ABC management reaffirmed that it would remain in use by the corporation.[14][15][16]

June 2010 saw ABC1's high definition digital transmission terminated, to be replaced with a fourth channel, ABC News 24.

On February 6 2011, ABC1 launched its new branding via idents featuring a range of channel personalities and the new tagline - "ThinkEntertainment". A new watermark is also aired with a single “1″ above the network's famous squiggle logo.

Controllers

As part of a revamp of the entire ABC Television network, the ABC1 hired its very first television controller, Brendan Dahill from BBC Worldwide.

Programming

ABC1 is required by charter to meet certain programming obligations. Although it has a strong focus on news and current affairs, it also presents documentaries and educational programmes, children's shows, drama, light entertainment comedy and variety, and sports.

News and Current Affairs

ABC News, broadcast on ABC1, is a national news service produced by the News and Current Affairs division of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. A number of bulletins and updates are shown throughout the day, which include the flagship state-based evening bulletins of ABC News at 7.00pm, focused on local, national and international news relevant to their entire respective state or territory.[17] In addition, ABC News Breakfast is broadcast each weekday morning and it is also shown on ABC News 24, The Midday Report, a national weekday edition of ABC News, is broadcast at noon live from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's studios in Ultimo, Sydney. News updates for ABC1 are presented nationally throughout the day, however evening updates are shown in most states by their respective presenters. '

Other flagship programmes, which include Four Corners, Australian Story, Foreign Correspondent, Lateline and The 7.30 Report, are broadcast in primetime and are widely-regarded for their agenda-setting journalism.[17] Similarly, each state-based station produces and broadcasts their respective edition of Stateline in primetime, which includes one for every state and territory of Australia. In addition, Landline, Insiders, Media Watch and At the Movies cover rural, political and business, and media affairs respectively.

Sport

ABC Sport currently holds the broadcast rights to a range of sports, which are broadcast on ABC1, these include the Women's Australian Open, Netball World Championships, W-League, Women's National Basketball League, AFC Women's Asian Cup as well as state football league competitions which include Australian rules football and rugby league.[17] In addition to this, The ABC also holds the rights to the Paralympic Games, Australian Rugby Championship and the Hopman Cup tennis tournament.

ABC Sport currently broadcasts a Grandstand Sport which included the state football league such as New South Wales Rugby Union, Queensland Rugby League, Victorian Football League, Tasmanian Football League, South Australian Football League, West Australian Football League, and Northern Territory Football League. in addition to Tiwi Islands Football League and Australian Rugby Championship.

Children

Children's programming is broadcast in one block, afternoons from 3:00 pm to 6:00 pm. Two distinct age groups are targeted, preschoolers and non-preschoolers.

ABC's children's programming consists of a mixture of both in-house and out-sourced children's television programmes. Due to their longevity, current long-running programmes such as Play School, Giggle and Hoot, Five Minutes More and other shows are aired with iconic within Australia. in addition to older-children's programming on ABC1 & ABC3. former children's shows includes Bananas in Pyjamas, The Adventures of Bottle Top Bill and His Best Friend Corky, Mixy from The Ferals and other pre-school shows.

Children's programming also includes educational programmes. Behind the News is a long-running series which provides background information to current affairs. The programme has come to be incorporated into many school curricula. Schools TV is a segment between 10:00am and 11:00am that consists of documentaries and specials relevant to school study.

Availability

ABC1 varies depending on state and territory in terms of what 7:00 pm news bulletin, edition of Stateline, and in some stations promotions, are shown. National programming is often interrupted in order to show state election coverage. Each state and territory's individual station is based on that of its capital city, meaning that in the state of Victoria, all programmes originate from either Melbourne or Sydney, where the remainder of programmes are broadcast from. ABC1 is broadcast nationally via ABC Television transmitters, in an analogue and standard definition format.

Logo History

In the early years, ABC TV had been using Lissajous curves with its initials, ABC TV, inside it as fillers in-between programmes. A staff competition was conducted in 1963 to create a new logo for use on television, stationery, publications, microphone badges and ABC vehicles.[2] Graphic designer, Bill Kennard, who had been experimenting with telerecording of the Cathode Ray Oscillograph displays, submitted a design in 1965 which was part of the waveform of an oscilloscope.[2] The letters A-B-C were added to the wavelength design and it was adopted as the ABC's official logo.[2] Bill Kennard was paid £25 for his design.[2] This logo has been modified from two dimensions, to colour, to three dimensions, over time and it is now one of the most well-known logos in Australia.

To celebrate the introduction of colour television in 1975, the ABC logo was modified to a thickened version. The logo was also changed to an "over and under" design. To celebrate the Australian Bicentenary, on Australia Day in 1988, the idents were updated. The original set of idents were titled "Natural Textures of Australia", with a following called "Man Made Textures of Australia". The ABC logo featured on idents and promos was modified in 1995 to a similar design to that seen in 1963 on the first design. The logo was hand drawn by persons featured in the promos and idents.

Branding Gallery

Identity History

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "About the ABC - The 50s - The Postwar Years". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. http://abc.net.au/corp/history/hist4.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-01. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Brooklyn Ross-Hulands. "AusTVHistory: Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1950s-1960s". AusTVHistory. http://www.austvhistory.com/abc/index.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-04. 
  3. ^ Twenty-Sixth Annual report of the Australian Broadcasting Commission. 1958 
  4. ^ a b c d "About the ABC - The 60s and 70s". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. http://abc.net.au/corp/history/hist5.htm. 
  5. ^ "GTK Title Details". National Film and Sound Archive. http://colsearch.nfsa.afc.gov.au/nfsa/search/display/display.w3p;adv=yes;group=;groupequals=;holdingType=;page=0;parentid=;query=Number%3A138467;querytype=;rec=0;resCount=10. Retrieved 2007-12-07. 
  6. ^ a b c d Inglis, Kenneth Stanley (2006). Whose ABC? The Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1983-2006. Melbourne, Victoria: Black Inc.. ISBN 1-86395-189-X. 
  7. ^ Brooklyn Ross-Hulands. "AusTVHistory: Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1970s-1980s". AusTVHistory. http://www.austvhistory.com/abc/70s.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-04. 
  8. ^ "About the ABC - The 80s". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. http://abc.net.au/corp/history/hist6.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-01. 
  9. ^ "Digital TV to commence on 1 January 2001". Australian Broadcasting Authority. http://www.acma.gov.au/WEB/STANDARD/pc=PC_91112. Retrieved 2007-08-19. 
  10. ^ a b c "ABC TV Australia". Finns TV Website. http://classic-web.archive.org/web/20080720002057/www.finnswebsite.com/abc/abc.html. 
  11. ^ a b c "CLG Wiki - ABC TV Australia". Closing Logos Group. http://www.closinglogos.com/page/ABC+National+IDs+%28Australia%29. 
  12. ^ a b c "AusTVHistory - ABC Australia". http://replay.web.archive.org/20081121032311/http://www.austvhistory.com/abc/90s.htm. 
  13. ^ a b "ABC promises more content choice". The Australian. 2008-02-06. http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23171159-12377,00.html. Retrieved 2008-02-06. 
  14. ^ a b Welch, Dylan (30 January 2008). "ABC squiggle to stay". Brisbane Times. http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/articles/2008/01/30/1201369172600.html. Retrieved 2008-01-30. 
  15. ^ a b "ABC revamps squiggle logo". ABC Online. 30 January 2008. http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/01/30/2149528.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-30. 
  16. ^ http://www.abc.net.au/reception/digital/
  17. ^ a b c "Annual Report 2006-07". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2007-11-01. http://www.abc.net.au/corp/annual_reports/ar07/pdf/ABC_annual_report_2006-2007.pdf. Retrieved 2007-12-06. 
  18. ^ a b c {{Cite web| url = http://www.tvtonight.com.au/2008/01/it-begins-with-1.html | title = It begins with 1 | accessdate = 2008-01-29

External links