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In 2006 the company moved to new facilities at Pacific Quay. The Cowcaddens site was sold and subsequently demolished. The 1990 extension of the building - headquarters of the (then) sister companies of the [[The Herald (Scotland)|The Herald]] and [[Glasgow Evening Times]] newspapers still stands, but is no longer connected to STV having been sold off to the [[Newsquest]] publishing group.
In 2006 the company moved to new facilities at Pacific Quay. The Cowcaddens site was sold and subsequently demolished. The 1990 extension of the building - headquarters of the (then) sister companies of the [[The Herald (Scotland)|The Herald]] and [[Glasgow Evening Times]] newspapers still stands, but is no longer connected to STV having been sold off to the [[Newsquest]] publishing group.

'''New Media'''

stvjobs.com was launched on Sunday 8th Feb and will be backed by a multi million pound advertising campaign incorporating TV, Cinema, Outdoor, Radio and Online. With a reach of over 4 million people, STV is by far the largest media brand in Scotland.




==Programmes==
==Programmes==

Revision as of 15:45, 26 August 2009

Template:Infobox ITV franchisee Scottish Television (now legally known as STV Central Ltd and referred to on-air as STV) is Scotland's largest ITV franchisee, and has held the ITV franchise for Central Scotland since 31 August 1957. It is the second oldest ITV franchise still active. The channel is now owned and operated by STV Group plc (formerly SMG plc), which also owns another independent television franchisee, Grampian Television (now STV North), based in Aberdeen.

STV Central produces news for its transmission region (the Central edition of STV News at Six) along with current affairs, politics and sports programmes (in both English and Gaelic) for Northern and Central Scotland, although some sports output is also broadcast in Border Television's Southern Scotland sub-region. Along with STV North and ITV Tyne Tees & Border, STV Central is a rival to the publicly-funded national broadcaster, BBC Scotland.

The station's studios were located in Glasgow's Theatre Royal on Hope Street for almost two decades, and later in custom built premises on an adjacent site on Renfield Street in Cowcaddens, Glasgow, but moving to new studios in Pacific Quay, alongside BBC Scotland and the Glasgow Science Centre in July 2006.

In 2008, the United Kingdom plans to begin its 5-year programme to cease analogue television broadcasts as part of the switchover to Digital television, with STV Central ceasing analogue transmissions between October 2010 and March 2011. It is already transmitting digitally terrestrially from its land-based transmitters, and via satellite (Sky and Freesat) on Astra 28.2°E.

History

The company was founded by Canadian businessman Roy (Later Lord) Thomson in association with the Theatre Royal's owners Howard & Wyndham Ltd, and went on-air at 5:30pm on Saturday 31st August 1957 - the first ITV franchise to launch outside the three largest regions and thereby the first to operate throughout the week. The company soon gained a reputation for musical entertainment, variety, documentary films under Dr John Grierson, and sports coverage. It also sponsored Scottish Opera and televised live opera and ballet, networking more opera than similar television companies.[1]

In 1965 the chairman of the Independent Television Authority Charles Hill paid a visit to STV's Glasgow studios during which he observed an edition of the popular daytime entertainment show One O'clock Gang. So appalled by it he immediately axed the show with the words "My God, how long have you been getting away with this?" [2].

Television for schools was pioneered in association with Glasgow Corporation, and post graduate television services initiated, including surgery, in conjunction with universities. Programmes were devised for the emerging countries in the British Commonwealth, and the Thomson Foundation was created to educate and train television producers, journalists and engineers, from Kirkhill House - a bespoke studio complex within Kirkhill House, near Newton Mearns.

Although the early days of the ITV network were a financial gamble, in England, the STV service soon became profitable, resulting in Thomson claiming that 'running a commercial television station is like having a licence to print money'.[3]

However by 1969 the company was no longer part of the Thomson Group, and like many within the ITV system, struggling with a recession, increased transmitter rental fees and taxation on income (rather than profits) as a result of the Pilkington Committee review into ITV. The situation hit STV harder than most and by 1970 was making significant losses.

The conversion of the Gateway Theatre at Leith Walk in Edinburgh into new colour studios also saw a drain on finances. This facility grew in importance in 1969 after a fire gutted Studio A (the Theatre Royal auditorium) which was one of the main studios and production suites at the Cowcaddens site, a fire in which a fireman died. The site was subsequently modified and extended with new colour facilities built, which became fully operational in 1973. STV sold the Theatre Royal to Scottish Opera to become the the first national opera house in Scotland, and the home of Scottish Opera and Scottish Ballet. The company cited necessary cost savings as its reason to give up the Gateway (which for a time had become the permanent studio home for 'High Road'), and the studios were subsequently closed around the early 1990s.

By this time a change in taxation rules and a general increase in advertising spend saw STV's fortunes recover. In the following twenty years the company gained greater access to the national network, primarily through the soap opera Take the High Road and the long-running detective series Taggart. Recent contributions have included the quiz Wheel of Fortune and the adaptation of the Rebus crime books.

During the 1970s and 1980s, Scottish Television produced a wide range of religious programming including weekly church services, half-hour religious programmes on a Sunday, religious contributions to Channel 4, the ever popular epilogue Late Call, and occasional documentaries, produced by Executive Producer Rev. Dr Nelson Gray, a Minister of the Congregatinal Church, and Rev. Eric Hudson, a Minister of the Church of Scotland. As the 1990s came and public service broadcasting receded, religious programmes were gradually phased out.

In late 1992, Scottish took over responsibility for a number of children's programmes made by independent producers for the outgoing ITV company TVS including the shows Art Attack and How 2.

In 2006 the company moved to new facilities at Pacific Quay. The Cowcaddens site was sold and subsequently demolished. The 1990 extension of the building - headquarters of the (then) sister companies of the The Herald and Glasgow Evening Times newspapers still stands, but is no longer connected to STV having been sold off to the Newsquest publishing group.

New Media

stvjobs.com was launched on Sunday 8th Feb and will be backed by a multi million pound advertising campaign incorporating TV, Cinema, Outdoor, Radio and Online. With a reach of over 4 million people, STV is by far the largest media brand in Scotland.


Programmes

A list of programmes made by Scottish Television. All programmes now come under the banner of STV Productions.

News

Current Affairs

Sport

Features and Documentaries

Entertainment

Drama

Children's

Religion

Scots Gaelic

Channel changes

On 2 March 2006, it was announced by SMG plc (now STV Group plc) that Scottish Television would revert back to the brand name of STV, that it used from the start of colour broadcasting in 1969 until 30 August 1985, and which the station was still informally known as in parts of Scotland. At the same time, Grampian Television would also become known as STV. The new-look branding was launched on 30 May 2006.

Regional news and advertising has remained segmented with viewers in the East of the region receiving their own opt-out version of STV Central, including a dedicated news bulletin within STV News at Six on weekdays and separate local advertising. Former managing director of Scottish, Bobby Hain is now the managing director for both STV regions. Hain was also briefly director of programmes for the two regions following the departure of former Grampian Television MD, Derreck Thomson. In November 2008, former strategy director of Channel 4, David Brook, took over the role. Scottish Television's head of news, Gordon MacMillan, has now become STV's head of news across Scotland, following the departure of Craig Wilson from STV North (Grampian).

References

  1. ^ "The Theatre Royal:Entertaining a Nation" by Graeme Smith ISBN 978-0-955-94200-6
  2. ^ Cherry, S, ITV: The People's Channel, Reynolds and Hearn, London 2005
  3. ^ Black, P, The Mirror In The Corner - People's Television, Hutchinson & Co, London, 1972