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Carlton Television

Carlton Television (now part of the non-franchised ITV London region) was the ITV franchise holder for London and the surrounding counties from 9.25am every Monday to 5.15pm every Friday.[1] The company is now managed with London Weekend Television as a single entity (ITV London), but the two companies are still separately licensed. The station is owned and operated by ITV plc under the licensee of "ITV Broadcasting Limited". Carlton has been branded on air as "ITV1" since 28 October 2002 ("ITV" between 14 January 2013 and 14 November 2022). Carlton Television Ltd, the original holder of the licence (renamed Carlton Broadcasting Limited on 1 February 1997), has since been dissolved.[2] Carlton UK Television Limited however is now known as ITV Consumer Limited and legally operates ITV plc's websites. As Carlton's name has no relation to its region, its on-screen identity has been completely removed (along with those of HTV, LWT and GMTV). Other regions have kept their original company name as a region name and in their local news name.

Carlton Television
The Carlton region when it lost its identity in 2002
TypeRegion of television network
BrandingCarlton
Country
England
First air date
1 January 1993; 30 years ago (1993-01-01)
MottoTelevision For London
TV transmittersCrystal Palace
Headquarters101 St Martin's Lane, London
Broadcast area
London and parts of the South East
OwnerCarlton Communications
DissolvedLost on-air identity on 25 October 2002; 20 years ago (2002-10-25) (now known as ITV at all times)
Picture format
16:9 576i
Affiliation(s)ITV
Official website
www.itv.com/news/london
LanguageEnglish
ReplacedThames Television
Replaced byITV London

Formation

Carlton Television was originally set up by Michael Green's Carlton Communications to bid for an ITV franchise after Green failed to buy into Thames Television, the London franchise, in 1985.[3] On 16 October 1991, Carlton won the "Channel 3" franchise to broadcast to London during weekdays from January 1993, as a result of winning the silent auction used to renegotiate the new ITV franchises.[4] Thames bid £32.5M, while Carlton Television placed a bid of £43.2M[5] and CPV-TV placed a bid of £45.3M.[6] CPV-TV was the highest bidder, but was eliminated for failing the quality threshold; since both Thames and Carlton were deemed to have passed the quality threshold, the franchise was awarded to Carlton for having submitted the higher cash bid of the remaining two companies. Some commentators consequently speculated that Thames had fallen victim to a "government vendetta", whilst others felt that the auction had been won fairly.

Carlton did not buy Thames' studios, instead having its headquarters in St Martin's Lane in the West End and opting to rent transmission space at LWT's London studios. Also, unlike Thames which was both a production company and a broadcaster, Carlton chose to commission all of its programming from independent production companies.

Launch

Carlton started broadcasting at the stroke of midnight on 1 January 1993 (straight after the closedown of Thames), with the station's first programme A Carlton New Year, produced jointly by 'The Pozzitive Production Company' and 'Michael Hurll Television', and presented by Chris Tarrant.[7] Aptly, its first commercial break featured an advert for the Vauxhall Carlton.[8]

Broadcasting

In May 1994, the Independent Television Commission criticised a number of ITV stations as part of its review for the first 12 months of the new franchise in 1993. Carlton Television was condemned for providing a wide range of 'unimpressive and very disappointing' programmes for the ITV network, which were 'neither distinctive nor noticeable high quality'.[9] This criticism came after Carlton and Granada secretly planned to axe News at Ten in the chase for ratings, a move which was foiled by the ITC.[10] Carlton, angered by this criticism, responded: 'In the first year, Carlton launched 43 brand new series and 20 new single programmes, sustained audience levels and played a full part in ITV network; successes far outweighed failures.' A few days later, Carlton won two awards from the Royal Television Society's 'programme and tech awards' in London; Margie Clarke was named 'Best Female Presenter' for Carlton's The Good Sex Guide; while Old Bear Stories won the Children's Entertainment award.[11]

During a 1994 review, ITC commented that Carlton had made improvements, in its factual and drama output, while its children's programmes were 'impressive', but more remained to be achieved.[12] In 1995, its regional programming was regarded as high quality but with few innovations; The Good Sex Guide was guilty of breaching taste and decency requirements with little educational classifications, which resulted in the company receiving two written warnings from the ITC.[13] Once again, in 1997, Carlton was criticised for failing to ensure its programming complied with the programmes code, while the number of formal interventions from the ITC had increased from four in 1995 to eight; but its regional programming continued to be of high quality.[14]

Factual inaccuracy in 1996 documentary

Carlton found itself at the centre of a major controversy about truthfulness in broadcast journalism in May 1998, when The Guardian carried a series of articles alleging the wholesale fabrication of a much-garlanded 1996 documentary, The Connection, which had purported to film the route by which heroin was smuggled into the United Kingdom from Colombia. An internal inquiry at Carlton found that the allegations made by The Guardian were in large part correct, and the then-regulator of the industry, the ITC, punished Carlton with a record fine of £2 million[15] for multiple breaches of the UK's broadcasting codes. The scandal led to an impassioned debate about the accuracy of documentary production.[16][17]

Expansion

Changes in legislation concerning media ownership enabled Carlton to buy out many of the other ITV stations, including Central Independent Television, Westcountry, and part of HTV (via Granada), as well as the rights to the archives of ITC Entertainment and its former sister company ATV. Rank Film Distributors, including its library of 740 films, was purchased by Carlton in 1997 for £65 million.[18] HTV was the only region owned by Carlton not to be subject to a full on-screen rebrand as 'Carlton'. Both 'HTV West' and 'HTV Wales' stayed with their then-current idents; however, upon Carlton's purchase, the animated introduction and music to the idents were replaced by the sequences and audio in use with Carlton's graphical package. However, the logo and end-board of the ident remained unchanged, using the generic hearts look of 1999. Carlton also did not acquire most of HTV's production facilities; these were retained by Granada.

The ITC archive is financially lucrative, since it includes such popular series as Thunderbirds, The Prisoner, and The Saint, as well as such feature films as On Golden Pond. Carlton released much of the Rank library on video and DVD via its own label in the UK, and via A & E Home Video, Acorn Media, MGM Home Entertainment, and Lions Gate Home Entertainment in the USA. A large number of these films were screened on Carlton's digital movie channel, Carlton Cinema; however, it closed in March 2003. The merger with Granada led to the use of the Carlton name falling into disuse, and Carlton Video became part of Granada Ventures.

ITV Digital

In 1997, Carlton formed a partnership with Granada and BSkyB to bid for some of the multiplexes for the new digital terrestrial network. In June of that year, it was successful in its application, and began the service, OnDigital, under the condition BSkyB withdrew from the group.[19]

Merger and unification

In September 2002, Carlton and Granada, having now acquired all the franchises in England and Wales, made the decision to remove all regional idents, continuity and branding, and replace them with the single brand, ITV1. English regional idents were to only precede regional programming, and regional announcements were pre-recorded from London (Wales gets on-screen recognition prior to all programming, see ITV1 Wales). Unlike Granada-owned regions, Carlton used dual-branding on its regional idents with the Carlton logo, so the Carlton Westcountry and Carlton Central regions were simply known as ITV1 Carlton. Granada-owned franchises preferred simply to place text of the region name under the ITV1 logo. This went on until December 2003, when Carlton dropped the practice, resulting in changing the brands from Carlton Central to ITV1 for Central England, from Carlton Westcountry to ITV1 for the Westcountry. The HTV regions were re-branded ITV1 Wales and ITV1 West of England in 2002.

On 2 February 2004, Carlton Communications plc merged with Granada plc, creating ITV plc, which now owns all of the ITV franchises in England and Wales under the ITV1 brand (Wales still uses its own on-screen identity as ITV1 Wales, but now also uses English ITV1 continuity since 16 January 2006). The three English Carlton ITV regions were reverted to their previous names: ITV1 for Central England again became ITV1 Central, ITV1 West of England became ITV1 West and ITV1 for the Westcountry became ITV1 Westcountry, prior to regional programming in their respective areas.

ITV London

Since 28 October 2002, Carlton Television (in common with all the other ITV companies, except Scottish Television, Grampian Television, Ulster Television and Channel Television) has been known on air simply as ITV1 (London Weekdays). Unlike London Weekend Television, Carlton Television did not note the last day (25 October) of its regional identity on-air. However, the Carlton brand continued to be seen on production captions until 2004. Since Carlton and London Weekend Television now use identical presentation and logos, the division between the London weekday and weekend franchises is now invisible, although the old LWT - now ITV1 (London Weekends) - does have London Weekend Weather, which is sponsored by a different company to that of London weekdays.

With the merger of Carlton and Granada, Carlton Television and LWT are now run as a single entity (ITV London), with a single management team appointed to both companies. Both continue to have a separate legal existence however, and still have separate licences, although this is now just a formality.

Upon merger, Carlton lost recognition to programmes made by their companies, which became branded as Granada and the relevant area, for example, all programmes made in London became branded as Granada London. From 16 January 2006, all programmes produced by any ITV plc owned region were branded as ITV Productions and in 2009 this became ITV Studios.

Studios

Carlton was a publisher broadcaster who never made any of its own programming itself. Carlton productions that required studio space were booked at Lenton Lane when Carlton bought Central Independent Television in 1994, obtaining the company's Nottingham studios and gained the in-house production arm. The studios were booked by independent production companies.

Carlton was originally based in a small office building in St. Martin's Lane in Central London, with transmission being provided by London News Network, a company jointly owned with LWT and based at The London Studios that also provided a seven-day news service.

Following the creation of ITV plc in 2004, Carlton's office in St Martin's Lane was vacated and the operations transferred to The London Studios, albeit as part of the ITV plc operations housed there. ITV London's news operation moved to ITN on 1 March 2004. The transmission operation moved to the HD Technicolor Playout Centre at Chiswick.

Identity

Launch ident

Carlton's on-screen identity was launched on 1 January 1993 with an ident package featuring London personalities. These people, who lived and worked in the capital would appear against a brightly coloured background with the Carlton logo in the top left corner, and would say the phrase, "This is Carlton, television for London", or other variations of the theme. In excess of sixty idents were produced and used from 1993. This was replaced by a single montage of individuals used from later on from 6 December 1993 until 1 September 1995.

1995

On 4 September 1995,[20] a new in-house look was launched featuring changing backgrounds of colours with a translucent Carlton logo in the centre of the screen, becoming opaque and white at the end of the ident. These idents lasted until 22 November 1996, but were deemed not exciting or brash enough for Carlton executives.

1996

Lambie-Nairn devised the new set on 25 November 1996,[21] featuring the Carlton logo against a brightly coloured background and various animations occurring. This could be interaction between other letters in the name, letters being replaced by objects, or the letters becoming part of something larger, such as a crossword of places in London. Thirty sequences were produced, including some designed especially to introduce certain programmes, and versions for Central were also introduced two years later on 20 April 1998. These idents were used until 3 September 1999.

1999

On 6 September 1999,[22] Carlton's boldest rebrand yet occurred, and it was also to be its last. While Granada and UNM regions were about to adopt the "Hearts" generic look, Carlton refused the look and instead adopted a package that related back to the Hearts, but put their own distinct take on it. Lambie-Nairn was once again commissioned, and a dozen idents were produced and were used depending on the programme to go before it. The idents featured opening films featuring a heart shape, before a star shaped light is emitted from the heart shape, before the screen changes to the Carlton logo, now with added star in top right corner, against a spinning stars background of different colours, with ITV logo beneath. This look has received criticism, not concerning the idents themselves, but because these idents replaced the brands used by both Central and Westcountry. The idents were later partially adopted by HTV following its sale to Carlton, with the opening films from said look, although with the HTV logo and ITV Hearts ending slide being retained.

Continuity announcers

Carlton used a number of continuity announcers throughout the years.

  • Hilary Holden (1994–1997)
  • Mark Lipscomb (1993–2002) (only Thames continuity announcer to work for its successor franchisee)
  • David Allan (1995–2002)
  • Graham Bannerman (1993–2002)
  • Adrian Finighan (1993)
  • Fiona Goldman (1993–2002)
  • Erica Longdon (2000–2002)
  • John McKenzie (2000–2002) (previously at Granada)
  • Peter Tompkins (2000–2002)

Productions

Network

Some notable Carlton commissions are listed below:

Regional

  • Big City (1993–95)[30]
  • Blues and Twos (1993–98)[31]
  • Carlton Country (1996–2003)
  • Carlton Debate (1996–2002)
  • Capital Futures (1994)
  • Capital Lives (1995)
  • Carlton People (1994–99)
  • Carlton Sport (1993–2004)
  • Capital Woman (1993–97)
  • Crown And Country (1996–2000)
  • First Edition (1997–2004)[32]
  • Going Underground (1993)
  • One in 5 Million (1993–95)
  • Revelations (1995–96; a co-production with Central and Granada Television)[33]
  • The Frost Programme (1993)
  • The Sports Show (1998–2000)
  • The Tube (2003–05)
  • Who Cares Wins (1994)

For other details about local news and non-news programmes for London, see London News Network.

Other ventures

Between 1996 and 2003, Carlton owned a number of extra channels, carried initially on analogue cable, and also later on their flagship platform, ONdigital too, although none of them ever made it onto Sky Digital. However, three closed in 2000; and all five were closed by 2003. Most were closed due to funding issues and lack of loyal viewership. They all time-shared on three EPG positions. Carlton Food Network and Carlton Select shared a channel, Carlton Kids, Carlton World, and another channel named 'RAW!' shared the second. Carlton Cinema received an EPG position of its own, but would be periodically closed down to provide bandwidth for "On Sport 2" during the ONdigital days.

Carlton Cinema

Carlton Cinema was the Carlton channel which showed classic movies, but also unusually for a movie channel, cartoons. This ceased transmission on 31 March 2003, the last of the five Carlton channels to do so.

Carlton Select

Carlton Select was the main entertainment channel from Carlton, and broadcast both in the UK and Africa. It time-shared with the Carlton Food Network, and ceased transmission in March 2000.

Carlton World

Carlton World was a general entertainment and factual channel broadcast in the evenings, with sister channel Carlton Kids broadcast in the daytime. This ceased transmission in 2000.

Carlton Kids

Carlton Kids was a children's channel and showed most of all of Carlton's children's imports, and programming from Carlton's regions. Time-shared with Carlton World, it ceased transmission in 2000.

Carlton Food Network

Carlton Food Network was the Carlton channel devoted to cookery, and time-shared with Carlton Select. It was later re-branded "Taste CFN", and ceased transmission in late 2001.

References

  1. ^ . Ofcom. Archived from the original on 25 January 2009. Retrieved 25 June 2013.
  2. ^ House, Companies. "Carlton Broadcasting Limited (previously Carlton Television Limited)". Gov.UK. Companies House. Retrieved 4 February 2023.
  3. ^ Guardian Friday, 11 October 1985 P20, Dennis Barker " Carlton Communications proposal ruled unaccepted"- IBA blocks sale of Thames
  4. ^ Legal threats follow biggest ITV shake-up.Melinda Wittstock, Media Correspondent. The Times, Thursday, 17 October 1991
  5. ^ Winners and Losers. The Times, Thursday, 17 October 1991
  6. ^ "CPV-TV Bid Amount - a Freedom of Information request to Office of Communications". WhatDoTheyKnow. 1 June 2012. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  7. ^ TV Ark
  8. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : LufthansaTerminal. "The launch of Carlton TV, 1993". Retrieved 4 January 2019 – via YouTube.
  9. ^ Williams, Rhys (30 May 1994). "The case for Carlton Television: Paul Jackson, managing director of Carlton, gives Rhys Williams his response to the stinging criticism of his company's performance by the Independent Television Commission". The Independent. Retrieved 25 June 2013.
  10. ^ "Carlton TV: 10 tumultuous years". The Guardian. 2 January 2003. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  11. ^ TV watchdog condemns quality of programmes. Alexandra Frean, Media Correspondent. The Times, Friday, 27 May 1994;
  12. ^ Watchdog urges ITV to put spotlight on drama. Alexandra Frean, Media Correspondent. The Times, Wednesday, 12 April 1995;
  13. ^ How the TV Companies Rated. The Times, Thursday, 25 April 1996;
  14. ^ Most TV regions "could do better". Alexandra Frean Media Correspondent. The Times, Wednesday, 23 April 1997
  15. ^ ITC Annual Report 1998 - Programme regulation Retrieved 26 September 2007
  16. ^ The primrose path: faking UK television documentary, "Docuglitz" and Docusoap 6 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 26 September 2007
  17. ^ British Journalism Review - John Owen - Now you see it, now you don't Retrieved 26 September 2007
  18. ^ Dawtrey, Adam (2 April 1997). "Carlton Buy of Rank a Done Deal". Variety. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  19. ^ Itv Big Two lead digital revolution. Eric Reguly and Carol Midgley. The Times, Wednesday, 25 June 1997
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 February 2019. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 February 2019. Retrieved 17 February 2019.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 February 2019. Retrieved 17 February 2019.
  23. ^ "Into the Blue (1997)". BFI. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  24. ^ "The Big Story".
  25. ^ "The Big Story".
  26. ^ "The Unknown Soldier (TV series)". BFI. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  27. ^ "Too Good to Be True (TV series)". BFI. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  28. ^ "Sport in Question (TV series)". BFI. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  29. ^ "A Woman's Guide to Adultery". Retrieved 4 January 2019 – via www.imdb.com.
  30. ^ "Big City (TV series)". BFI. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  31. ^ "Blues and Twos (TV series)". BFI. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  32. ^ "First Edition (TV series)". BFI. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  33. ^ "Revelations (TV series)". BFI. Retrieved 4 January 2019.

External links

ITV regional service
Preceded by London (weekdays)
1 January 1993 – 25 October 2002
Succeeded by

carlton, television, this, article, about, london, franchise, other, carlton, branded, franchises, carlton, central, carlton, westcountry, carlton, owner, carlton, communications, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve. This article is about the London franchise For other Carlton branded franchises see Carlton Central and Carlton Westcountry For Carlton s owner see Carlton Communications This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Carlton Television news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Carlton Television now part of the non franchised ITV London region was the ITV franchise holder for London and the surrounding counties from 9 25am every Monday to 5 15pm every Friday 1 The company is now managed with London Weekend Television as a single entity ITV London but the two companies are still separately licensed The station is owned and operated by ITV plc under the licensee of ITV Broadcasting Limited Carlton has been branded on air as ITV1 since 28 October 2002 ITV between 14 January 2013 and 14 November 2022 Carlton Television Ltd the original holder of the licence renamed Carlton Broadcasting Limited on 1 February 1997 has since been dissolved 2 Carlton UK Television Limited however is now known as ITV Consumer Limited and legally operates ITV plc s websites As Carlton s name has no relation to its region its on screen identity has been completely removed along with those of HTV LWT and GMTV Other regions have kept their original company name as a region name and in their local news name Carlton TelevisionThe Carlton region when it lost its identity in 2002TypeRegion of television networkBrandingCarltonCountryEnglandFirst air date1 January 1993 30 years ago 1993 01 01 MottoTelevision For LondonTV transmittersCrystal PalaceHeadquarters101 St Martin s Lane LondonBroadcast areaLondon and parts of the South EastOwnerCarlton CommunicationsDissolvedLost on air identity on 25 October 2002 20 years ago 2002 10 25 now known as ITV at all times Picture format16 9 576iAffiliation s ITVOfficial websitewww wbr itv wbr com wbr news wbr londonLanguageEnglishReplacedThames TelevisionReplaced byITV London Contents 1 Formation 1 1 Launch 2 Broadcasting 2 1 Factual inaccuracy in 1996 documentary 2 2 Expansion 2 3 ITV Digital 3 Merger and unification 3 1 ITV London 4 Studios 5 Identity 5 1 Launch ident 5 2 1995 5 3 1996 5 4 1999 5 5 Continuity announcers 6 Productions 6 1 Network 6 2 Regional 7 Other ventures 7 1 Carlton Cinema 7 2 Carlton Select 7 3 Carlton World 7 4 Carlton Kids 7 5 Carlton Food Network 8 References 9 External linksFormation EditFor a chronological guide see Timeline of Carlton Television Carlton Television was originally set up by Michael Green s Carlton Communications to bid for an ITV franchise after Green failed to buy into Thames Television the London franchise in 1985 3 On 16 October 1991 Carlton won the Channel 3 franchise to broadcast to London during weekdays from January 1993 as a result of winning the silent auction used to renegotiate the new ITV franchises 4 Thames bid 32 5M while Carlton Television placed a bid of 43 2M 5 and CPV TV placed a bid of 45 3M 6 CPV TV was the highest bidder but was eliminated for failing the quality threshold since both Thames and Carlton were deemed to have passed the quality threshold the franchise was awarded to Carlton for having submitted the higher cash bid of the remaining two companies Some commentators consequently speculated that Thames had fallen victim to a government vendetta whilst others felt that the auction had been won fairly Carlton did not buy Thames studios instead having its headquarters in St Martin s Lane in the West End and opting to rent transmission space at LWT s London studios Also unlike Thames which was both a production company and a broadcaster Carlton chose to commission all of its programming from independent production companies Launch Edit Carlton started broadcasting at the stroke of midnight on 1 January 1993 straight after the closedown of Thames with the station s first programme A Carlton New Year produced jointly by The Pozzitive Production Company and Michael Hurll Television and presented by Chris Tarrant 7 Aptly its first commercial break featured an advert for the Vauxhall Carlton 8 Broadcasting EditIn May 1994 the Independent Television Commission criticised a number of ITV stations as part of its review for the first 12 months of the new franchise in 1993 Carlton Television was condemned for providing a wide range of unimpressive and very disappointing programmes for the ITV network which were neither distinctive nor noticeable high quality 9 This criticism came after Carlton and Granada secretly planned to axe News at Ten in the chase for ratings a move which was foiled by the ITC 10 Carlton angered by this criticism responded In the first year Carlton launched 43 brand new series and 20 new single programmes sustained audience levels and played a full part in ITV network successes far outweighed failures A few days later Carlton won two awards from the Royal Television Society s programme and tech awards in London Margie Clarke was named Best Female Presenter for Carlton s The Good Sex Guide while Old Bear Stories won the Children s Entertainment award 11 During a 1994 review ITC commented that Carlton had made improvements in its factual and drama output while its children s programmes were impressive but more remained to be achieved 12 In 1995 its regional programming was regarded as high quality but with few innovations The Good Sex Guide was guilty of breaching taste and decency requirements with little educational classifications which resulted in the company receiving two written warnings from the ITC 13 Once again in 1997 Carlton was criticised for failing to ensure its programming complied with the programmes code while the number of formal interventions from the ITC had increased from four in 1995 to eight but its regional programming continued to be of high quality 14 Factual inaccuracy in 1996 documentary Edit Carlton found itself at the centre of a major controversy about truthfulness in broadcast journalism in May 1998 when The Guardian carried a series of articles alleging the wholesale fabrication of a much garlanded 1996 documentary The Connection which had purported to film the route by which heroin was smuggled into the United Kingdom from Colombia An internal inquiry at Carlton found that the allegations made by The Guardian were in large part correct and the then regulator of the industry the ITC punished Carlton with a record fine of 2 million 15 for multiple breaches of the UK s broadcasting codes The scandal led to an impassioned debate about the accuracy of documentary production 16 17 Expansion Edit Changes in legislation concerning media ownership enabled Carlton to buy out many of the other ITV stations including Central Independent Television Westcountry and part of HTV via Granada as well as the rights to the archives of ITC Entertainment and its former sister company ATV Rank Film Distributors including its library of 740 films was purchased by Carlton in 1997 for 65 million 18 HTV was the only region owned by Carlton not to be subject to a full on screen rebrand as Carlton Both HTV West and HTV Wales stayed with their then current idents however upon Carlton s purchase the animated introduction and music to the idents were replaced by the sequences and audio in use with Carlton s graphical package However the logo and end board of the ident remained unchanged using the generic hearts look of 1999 Carlton also did not acquire most of HTV s production facilities these were retained by Granada The ITC archive is financially lucrative since it includes such popular series as Thunderbirds The Prisoner and The Saint as well as such feature films as On Golden Pond Carlton released much of the Rank library on video and DVD via its own label in the UK and via A amp E Home Video Acorn Media MGM Home Entertainment and Lions Gate Home Entertainment in the USA A large number of these films were screened on Carlton s digital movie channel Carlton Cinema however it closed in March 2003 The merger with Granada led to the use of the Carlton name falling into disuse and Carlton Video became part of Granada Ventures ITV Digital Edit In 1997 Carlton formed a partnership with Granada and BSkyB to bid for some of the multiplexes for the new digital terrestrial network In June of that year it was successful in its application and began the service OnDigital under the condition BSkyB withdrew from the group 19 Merger and unification EditIn September 2002 Carlton and Granada having now acquired all the franchises in England and Wales made the decision to remove all regional idents continuity and branding and replace them with the single brand ITV1 English regional idents were to only precede regional programming and regional announcements were pre recorded from London Wales gets on screen recognition prior to all programming see ITV1 Wales Unlike Granada owned regions Carlton used dual branding on its regional idents with the Carlton logo so the Carlton Westcountry and Carlton Central regions were simply known as ITV1 Carlton Granada owned franchises preferred simply to place text of the region name under the ITV1 logo This went on until December 2003 when Carlton dropped the practice resulting in changing the brands from Carlton Central to ITV1 for Central England from Carlton Westcountry to ITV1 for the Westcountry The HTV regions were re branded ITV1 Wales and ITV1 West of England in 2002 On 2 February 2004 Carlton Communications plc merged with Granada plc creating ITV plc which now owns all of the ITV franchises in England and Wales under the ITV1 brand Wales still uses its own on screen identity as ITV1 Wales but now also uses English ITV1 continuity since 16 January 2006 The three English Carlton ITV regions were reverted to their previous names ITV1 for Central England again became ITV1 Central ITV1 West of England became ITV1 West and ITV1 for the Westcountry became ITV1 Westcountry prior to regional programming in their respective areas ITV London Edit Main article ITV London Since 28 October 2002 Carlton Television in common with all the other ITV companies except Scottish Television Grampian Television Ulster Television and Channel Television has been known on air simply as ITV1 London Weekdays Unlike London Weekend Television Carlton Television did not note the last day 25 October of its regional identity on air However the Carlton brand continued to be seen on production captions until 2004 Since Carlton and London Weekend Television now use identical presentation and logos the division between the London weekday and weekend franchises is now invisible although the old LWT now ITV1 London Weekends does have London Weekend Weather which is sponsored by a different company to that of London weekdays With the merger of Carlton and Granada Carlton Television and LWT are now run as a single entity ITV London with a single management team appointed to both companies Both continue to have a separate legal existence however and still have separate licences although this is now just a formality Upon merger Carlton lost recognition to programmes made by their companies which became branded as Granada and the relevant area for example all programmes made in London became branded as Granada London From 16 January 2006 all programmes produced by any ITV plc owned region were branded as ITV Productions and in 2009 this became ITV Studios Studios EditCarlton was a publisher broadcaster who never made any of its own programming itself Carlton productions that required studio space were booked at Lenton Lane when Carlton bought Central Independent Television in 1994 obtaining the company s Nottingham studios and gained the in house production arm The studios were booked by independent production companies Carlton was originally based in a small office building in St Martin s Lane in Central London with transmission being provided by London News Network a company jointly owned with LWT and based at The London Studios that also provided a seven day news service Following the creation of ITV plc in 2004 Carlton s office in St Martin s Lane was vacated and the operations transferred to The London Studios albeit as part of the ITV plc operations housed there ITV London s news operation moved to ITN on 1 March 2004 The transmission operation moved to the HD Technicolor Playout Centre at Chiswick Identity EditLaunch ident Edit Carlton s on screen identity was launched on 1 January 1993 with an ident package featuring London personalities These people who lived and worked in the capital would appear against a brightly coloured background with the Carlton logo in the top left corner and would say the phrase This is Carlton television for London or other variations of the theme In excess of sixty idents were produced and used from 1993 This was replaced by a single montage of individuals used from later on from 6 December 1993 until 1 September 1995 1995 Edit On 4 September 1995 20 a new in house look was launched featuring changing backgrounds of colours with a translucent Carlton logo in the centre of the screen becoming opaque and white at the end of the ident These idents lasted until 22 November 1996 but were deemed not exciting or brash enough for Carlton executives 1996 Edit Lambie Nairn devised the new set on 25 November 1996 21 featuring the Carlton logo against a brightly coloured background and various animations occurring This could be interaction between other letters in the name letters being replaced by objects or the letters becoming part of something larger such as a crossword of places in London Thirty sequences were produced including some designed especially to introduce certain programmes and versions for Central were also introduced two years later on 20 April 1998 These idents were used until 3 September 1999 1999 Edit On 6 September 1999 22 Carlton s boldest rebrand yet occurred and it was also to be its last While Granada and UNM regions were about to adopt the Hearts generic look Carlton refused the look and instead adopted a package that related back to the Hearts but put their own distinct take on it Lambie Nairn was once again commissioned and a dozen idents were produced and were used depending on the programme to go before it The idents featured opening films featuring a heart shape before a star shaped light is emitted from the heart shape before the screen changes to the Carlton logo now with added star in top right corner against a spinning stars background of different colours with ITV logo beneath This look has received criticism not concerning the idents themselves but because these idents replaced the brands used by both Central and Westcountry The idents were later partially adopted by HTV following its sale to Carlton with the opening films from said look although with the HTV logo and ITV Hearts ending slide being retained Continuity announcers Edit Carlton used a number of continuity announcers throughout the years Hilary Holden 1994 1997 Mark Lipscomb 1993 2002 only Thames continuity announcer to work for its successor franchisee David Allan 1995 2002 Graham Bannerman 1993 2002 Adrian Finighan 1993 Fiona Goldman 1993 2002 Erica Longdon 2000 2002 John McKenzie 2000 2002 previously at Granada Peter Tompkins 2000 2002 Productions EditNetwork Edit Some notable Carlton commissions are listed below 99 1 1994 95 Alphabet Castle 1993 95 Anybody s Nightmare 2001 Bananas in Pyjamas 1992 Babes in the Wood 1998 99 Bad Blood 1999 The Beat 1993 95 Bertie and Elizabeth 2002 Body and Soul 1993 Bodyguards 1996 97 Bramwell 1995 98 The Brief 2004 05 Brighton Belles 1993 94 Catchphrase 1994 2002 previously produced by TVS Meridian between 1986 and 1993 Class Act 1994 95 The Clive James Show 1995 97 Crazy Cottage 1996 98 The Chrystal Rose Show 1993 96 Dave Allen 1993 Element of Doubt 1996 Fortysomething 2003 Family Fortunes 1999 2002 Frank Stubbs Promotes 1993 94 Frontiers 1996 The Good Sex Guide 1993 94 Goodnight Mister Tom 1998 Good Sex Guide Abroad 1995 Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids Head over Heels 1993 Heat of the Sun 1998 Into The Blue 1997 23 The Hypnotic World of Paul McKenna 1993 97 Is It Legal 1995 96 the series moved to Channel 4 in 1998 though still produced by Hartswood Films Lose A Million 1993 Loved by You 1997 98 Mad for It 1998 2000 Michael Ball 1993 95 Mike and Angelo 1993 2000 previously produced by Thames Television from 1989 91 Mopatop s Shop 1999 2005 co produced with the Jim Henson Company Monsignor Renard 2000 Moving Story 1994 95 Murder in Suburbia 2004 05 Noah s Ark 1997 98 Old Bear Stories 1993 97 Police Camera Action 1994 2002 Pollyanna 2003 Pump It Up 1999 2000 The Railway Children 2000 Rebecca 1997 Starstreet 2001 02 A Statement of Affairs 1993 Storyline 1993 24 Talking Telephone Numbers 1994 97 Terror Towers 1994 96 Timbuctoo 1997 The 10 ers 1994 96 The Big Story 1993 97 25 The Little Picture Show 1993 95 The Unforgettable 2000 02 The Unknown Soldier 1998 26 Too Good to be True 2003 27 TV s Naughtiest Blunders 2000 2005 Tots TV 1993 98 previously networked by Central until 1996 The Treasure Seekers 1996 Schofield s TV Gold 1993 98 Scavengers 1994 95 Sharman 1995 96 Sport in Question 1993 regional only 1994 96 networked 28 Transylvania Pet Shop 1994 97 The Vault 2002 04 The Vice 1999 2003 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire 1998 co produced with Celador Wilderness 1996 A Woman s Guide to Adultery 1993 29 Regional Edit Big City 1993 95 30 Blues and Twos 1993 98 31 Carlton Country 1996 2003 Carlton Debate 1996 2002 Capital Futures 1994 Capital Lives 1995 Carlton People 1994 99 Carlton Sport 1993 2004 Capital Woman 1993 97 Crown And Country 1996 2000 First Edition 1997 2004 32 Going Underground 1993 One in 5 Million 1993 95 Revelations 1995 96 a co production with Central and Granada Television 33 The Frost Programme 1993 The Sports Show 1998 2000 The Tube 2003 05 Who Cares Wins 1994 For other details about local news and non news programmes for London see London News Network Other ventures EditBetween 1996 and 2003 Carlton owned a number of extra channels carried initially on analogue cable and also later on their flagship platform ONdigital too although none of them ever made it onto Sky Digital However three closed in 2000 and all five were closed by 2003 Most were closed due to funding issues and lack of loyal viewership They all time shared on three EPG positions Carlton Food Network and Carlton Select shared a channel Carlton Kids Carlton World and another channel named RAW shared the second Carlton Cinema received an EPG position of its own but would be periodically closed down to provide bandwidth for On Sport 2 during the ONdigital days Carlton Cinema Edit Main article Carlton Cinema TV channel Carlton Cinema was the Carlton channel which showed classic movies but also unusually for a movie channel cartoons This ceased transmission on 31 March 2003 the last of the five Carlton channels to do so Carlton Select Edit Main article Carlton Select Carlton Select was the main entertainment channel from Carlton and broadcast both in the UK and Africa It time shared with the Carlton Food Network and ceased transmission in March 2000 Carlton World Edit Main article Carlton World Carlton World was a general entertainment and factual channel broadcast in the evenings with sister channel Carlton Kids broadcast in the daytime This ceased transmission in 2000 Carlton Kids Edit Main article Carlton Kids Carlton Kids was a children s channel and showed most of all of Carlton s children s imports and programming from Carlton s regions Time shared with Carlton World it ceased transmission in 2000 Carlton Food Network Edit Main article Carlton Food Network Carlton Food Network was the Carlton channel devoted to cookery and time shared with Carlton Select It was later re branded Taste CFN and ceased transmission in late 2001 References Edit London ITV Ofcom Archived from the original on 25 January 2009 Retrieved 25 June 2013 House Companies Carlton Broadcasting Limited previously Carlton Television Limited Gov UK Companies House Retrieved 4 February 2023 Guardian Friday 11 October 1985 P20 Dennis Barker Carlton Communications proposal ruled unaccepted IBA blocks sale of Thames Legal threats follow biggest ITV shake up Melinda Wittstock Media Correspondent The Times Thursday 17 October 1991 Winners and Losers The Times Thursday 17 October 1991 CPV TV Bid Amount a Freedom of Information request to Office of Communications WhatDoTheyKnow 1 June 2012 Retrieved 4 March 2019 TV Ark Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine LufthansaTerminal The launch of Carlton TV 1993 Retrieved 4 January 2019 via YouTube Williams Rhys 30 May 1994 The case for Carlton Television Paul Jackson managing director of Carlton gives Rhys Williams his response to the stinging criticism of his company s performance by the Independent Television Commission The Independent Retrieved 25 June 2013 Carlton TV 10 tumultuous years The Guardian 2 January 2003 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 4 September 2019 TV watchdog condemns quality of programmes Alexandra Frean Media Correspondent The Times Friday 27 May 1994 Watchdog urges ITV to put spotlight on drama Alexandra Frean Media Correspondent The Times Wednesday 12 April 1995 How the TV Companies Rated The Times Thursday 25 April 1996 Most TV regions could do better Alexandra Frean Media Correspondent The Times Wednesday 23 April 1997 ITC Annual Report 1998 Programme regulation Retrieved 26 September 2007 The primrose path faking UK television documentary Docuglitz and Docusoap Archived 6 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 26 September 2007 British Journalism Review John Owen Now you see it now you don t Retrieved 26 September 2007 Dawtrey Adam 2 April 1997 Carlton Buy of Rank a Done Deal Variety Retrieved 6 July 2018 Itv Big Two lead digital revolution Eric Reguly and Carol Midgley The Times Wednesday 25 June 1997 Carlton Idents 1995 1996 Archived from the original on 18 February 2019 Retrieved 16 February 2019 Ident Central Carlton Idents 1996 1999 Archived from the original on 18 February 2019 Retrieved 17 February 2019 Ident Central Carlton 1999 2002 Archived from the original on 18 February 2019 Retrieved 17 February 2019 Into the Blue 1997 BFI Retrieved 4 January 2019 The Big Story The Big Story The Unknown Soldier TV series BFI Retrieved 4 January 2019 Too Good to Be True TV series BFI Retrieved 4 January 2019 Sport in Question TV series BFI Retrieved 4 January 2019 A Woman s Guide to Adultery Retrieved 4 January 2019 via www imdb com Big City TV series BFI Retrieved 4 January 2019 Blues and Twos TV series BFI Retrieved 4 January 2019 First Edition TV series BFI Retrieved 4 January 2019 Revelations TV series BFI Retrieved 4 January 2019 External links EditITV London at itv com ITV plc at itv com Carlton Screen Advertising Carlton Television at TVARKITV regional servicePreceded byThames Television London weekdays 1 January 1993 25 October 2002 Succeeded byITV London Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carlton Television amp oldid 1142806338, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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