BTQ

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BTQ
Brisbane, Queensland
Branding Seven
Slogan GottaLoveItOn7
Channels Digital: 6 (VHF)
Affiliations Seven (O&O)
Network Seven
Owner Seven West Media Limited
(Channel Seven Brisbane Pty Ltd)
First air date 1 November 1959
Call letters' meaning Brisbane
Television
Queensland
Former channel number(s) Analog: 7 (VHF)
Transmitter power 200 kW (analog)
50 kW (digital)
Height 337 m (analog)
335 m (digital)[1]
Transmitter coordinates 27°27′59″S 152°56′36″E / 27.46639°S 152.94333°E / -27.46639; 152.94333
Website www.yahoo7.com.au/tv
For other acronyms using BTQ, such as the stimulant drug Butyltolylquinuclidine, see the BTQ (disambiguation) page.

BTQ is the Brisbane station of the Australian Seven Network. BTQ was the second television station to launch in Brisbane, going to air on 1 November 1959, after QTQ (station of the Nine Network) launched three months earlier.

Along with other Australian television channels, BTQ began broadcasting on digital television on 1 January 2001.

The channel has been a leader in Queensland television news - in the early eighties, Seven National News became the first Brisbane-based bulletin to be relayed throughout a string of independent Queensland telecasters. Within the same decade, BTQ was also a major production house for children's television - hosting popular shows as Wombat, Now You See It, Family Feud, Play Your Cards Right and Seven's Super Saturday featuring Agro (puppet). In the 1980s and 1990s, the channel regularly opened its facilities to the Brisbane public - at Open Days. In the 1970s, BTQ also held annual telethons for the Children's Hospital, featuring network personalities.

In the mid-1990s, BTQ also produced "Tourist TV", a tourist information channel which could be viewed at various Gold Coast hotels and resorts, including Sea World Nara Resort.

Until 2007, BTQ was the host station of the national Austext teletext service. The service was later largely automated out of Seven Sydney until it was decommissioned September 2009.

On 28 May 2013 the Analog signal was turned off.

Station slogans

  • 1959: Start on 7 and You'll Stay on 7!
  • 1960-61: "The Station of the Stars"
  • 1965: "The New 7!"
  • 1966: "You'll See It All on Seven"
  • 1967-68: "Brisbane's Liveliest Channel"
  • 1972: "The Big 7"
  • 1975 (Jan-Feb): "The Entertainers"
  • Summer 1978/79: "Summer Fever!"
  • 1979: "Seven Fever!" (used for their 20th anniversary)
  • Summer 1979/80: "Summer Fever!"
  • 1980: "Seven, You're Still Looking Hot!"
  • Early 1981: "We're Doing It For You"
  • 1981: "Supercharged 7!"
  • 1982-88: "Love You Brisbane"
  • 1982: "Shine on Brisbane" (used to promote the 1982 Commonwealth Games)
  • 1984: "Love You Queensland - 25 Years of Television"
  • 1989: "Only The Best Will Do"
  • 1989: "Happy 30th Birthday!"
  • 1989-94: "Nobody Knows Brisbane Like Seven"
  • 1995-96: "Queensland's Great South East"
  • 1997-99: "Seven's Great South East"
  • 1999: "7 - 1959-1999" (used to celebrate 40 Years of BTQ7)
  • Christmas 1999: "Christmas in the Great South East"
  • 2002: "The Great South East"
  • 2007-08: "Love You Queensland"
  • July–November 2009: "Celebrating 50 Years"
  • January–February 2011: "Love You Queensland"

News

Brisbane

Seven News Brisbane is directed by Rob Raschke and presented by Sharyn Ghidella and Bill McDonald from Sunday to Thursday and Kay McGrath and Rod Young on Friday & Saturday from Seven's Brisbane studios, located at Mount Coot-tha. Sport is presented by Shane Webcke from Thursday to Friday and Pat Welsh on Friday & Saturday. Weather is presented by Tony Auden from Sunday to Thursday and is presented by Paul Burt on Friday & Saturday.

The bulletin is also simulcast in Brisbane on local radio station 96.5 Family FM, to regional Queensland viewers in the Sunshine Coast, Wide Bay-Burnett, Toowoomba, Rockhampton, Mackay, Townsville and Cairns television markets via the Seven Queensland network and across central & remote areas of eastern Australia, on Southern Cross Central.

Previously, Tracey Challenor presented the weekend news for many years until her resignation in February 2007. Cummins was first appointed to the weekday weather in 2005 after more than a year of the Brisbane bulletin not having a weather presenter; former kids show presenter Tony Johnston had this role in 2003. Cummins was replaced by former Nine weatherman John Schluter in early 2007 and she was moved to weekends. Ghidella joined Seven News in 2007 and replaced Challenor.

In October 2002, Rod Young moved from ABC News in Brisbane to co-anchor with Kay McGrath. She had presented Seven News Brisbane solo for the previous nine months following the retirement of Frank Warrick. Their dual presenter format has proved to be successful. Following a couple of lean years coming second to Nine News Brisbane, Seven News Brisbane regained its ratings lead by 2007, helped by the recruitment of ex-Nine weatherman John Schluter and director of news Rob Raschke. In 2008, Seven News Brisbane was officially the #1 bulletin in Brisbane, winning all 40 ratings weeks.

In January 2013, Sharyn Ghidella and Bill McDonald were appointed Sunday to Thursday presenters with Kay McGrath and Rod Young moving to present on Friday & Saturday. It was also announced that Ghidella will present a local edition of Today Tonight.

News updates for Brisbane are presented by Sharyn Ghidella or Bill McDonald throughout the afternoon and the early evening. Patrick Condren, Bianca Stone and Jillian Whiting are fill-in news presenters, with Rohan Welsh presenting sport, and Liz Cantor presenting the weather.

Reporters

Senior Reporters

  • Neil Warren

General Reporters

  • Josh Adsett
  • Geoff Breusch
  • Michael Coombes
  • Peter Doherty
  • Erin Edwards
  • Sally Eeles
  • Kim Skubris
  • Carly Waters
  • Katrina Blowers
  • Emmy Kubainski
  • Eammon Atkinson

Special Reporters

Political Correspondent

  • Patrick Condren

Gold Coast Bureau

  • Bianca Stone

Past Presenters

News

  • Brian Cahill (1959–1967) (1973–1975) - Brian gave a guest presentation of 'Flashback' on Seven News in November 2009, to mark the station's 50th anniversary.
  • Brian Tait (1960s)
  • Alyson Ridgewell (1960s)
  • Ron Brady (1960s)
  • Mike Taylor (1960s)
  • Ken Hose (1970s-1980s)
  • Mike Higgins (1970–1986)
  • Jason Cameron (1970s)
  • Nev Roberts (1970s-1980s)
  • Ian Hislop (1980s)
  • Janne Rayner (1980s)
  • Donna Meiklejohn (1980s)
  • Darren McDonald (1980s)
  • Garry Wilkinson (1989–1994)
  • Frank Warrick (1977–2001)
  • Tracey Challenor (1991–2007)
  • Simon Reeve (2001–2003)

Sport

Weather

  • Annette Allison (1970s)
  • Gay Walker (Miss Australia 1972) (1970s)
  • Noel Stanaway (1980s)
  • Tony Johnston (2003)
  • Talitha Cummins (2005–2010)

Other programming

See also

References

  1. HAAT estimated from http://www.itu.int/SRTM3/ using EHAAT.
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