Spotlight | |
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Also known as | BBC Channel Islands (Channel Islands opt-out) |
Format | Regional News |
Presented by | Victoria Graham Justin Leigh (Main anchors, Spotlight) Clare Burton (Main anchor, BBC Channel Islands) David Braine (Weather presenter) |
Production | |
Producer(s) | BBC South West |
Running time | Main bulletin: 30 minutes 8pm bulletin: 30 seconds |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | BBC One South West |
Original run | 1961 (as South West at Six) – present |
Spotlight is the BBC's regional news programme for the southwest of England, covering Cornwall, Devon, West Dorset, and Somerset. There is also a special version of the programme for viewers in the Channel Islands. The main version of the programme broadcasts between 18:30 and 18:58 on weekdays, with shorter bulletins at other times. The programme can be viewed anywhere in the UK (and Europe) on digital satellite channel 987/988 on the BBC UK regional TV on satellite service. Its main competitors are ITV South West's main evening programme The West Country Tonight in Devon, Cornwall, South Somerset and West Dorset and ITV Channel Television's main evening programme Channel Report in the Channel Islands.
Spotlight is broadcast from BBC Broadcasting House in Seymour Road, Plymouth - this is the main headquarters for all BBC South West programming, on TV, radio and online. There are also smaller studios in Truro, Exeter, Paignton, Barnstaple and Taunton.
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Although local radio had been broadcast from Plymouth as station 2PY between 1924 and 1934, the first regional television programme was not broadcast until 20 April 1961, just nine days before the rival ITV service from Westward Television began broadcasting. At first a ten minute bulletin called News from the South West was read by Tom Salmon, but in under a year it had doubled in length and had been renamed as South West at Six, hosted by Sheila Tracy. The name Spotlight was adopted on 30 September 1963.[1][2]
Those early radio broadcasts had been made from the Athenaeum Chambers in Athenaeum Lane in Plymouth (ironically, next to what would become Westward and TSW's headquarters), but just before the Second World War the BBC started looking for alternative premises. A Victorian villa named Ingledene in Seymour Road was bought from the Douglass family and this building has, as of 2010, remained the BBC's headquarters in the South West. It has been considerably extended over the years, including the addition of a new and larger television studio in 1974 in preparation for the conversion of Spotlight to colour the following year.[2] A replacement purpose-built broadcasting centre on the opposite side of Sutton Harbour from the Barbican has been under construction since 2008. It is due to open in mid 2011.[3]
A lighthouse motif had been in use within the programme's title sequences for many years until May 2000, when Spotlight adopted the generic BBC regional news design. The motif returned in May 2006, and the use of a lighthouse in the titles remained with the latest BBC News relaunch in 2008.
Currently, the Spotlight/BBC Channel Islands on-air team consists of:
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District Correspondents
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Specialist Correspondents
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General Reporters
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Journalists
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Production Staff
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Presenters
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BBC Channel Islands is the dedicated opt-out service for the Channel Islands.
Local news for the Islands had existed since the 1990s when a short bulletin aired following the BBC Nine O'Clock News. Since 16 October 2000, two evening bulletins have been broadcast at 6:30pm and following the BBC News at Ten - until April 2008, these bulletin had been known as Spotlight Channel Islands. Originally broadcast from a studio at the Fremont Point transmitter, the news service is now entirely based at the studios of BBC Radio Jersey in St Helier.
The opt-outs are presented by either Gwyn Garfield Bennett or Clare Burton and produced by a team of multi-skilling journalists who write, film and edit their own stories, as well as producing and directing the three bulletins for the islands on weekdays. The main opt takes up the first twelve minutes of the nightly 6.30pm programme with a full opt at 10.25pm and a short 30-second update at 8pm. No opt-outs are broadcast during the day and at weekends, except for special occasions such as local elections or major sporting events such as the Island Games.
Like other BBC enterprises in the Channel Islands, funding comes primarily from television licence fees collected within the Channel Islands themselves.[4][5]
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