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HSV (TV station)

HSV is a television station in Melbourne, Australia. It is part of the Seven Network, one of the three main commercial television networks in Australia, its first and oldest station. It launched in time for the 1956 Summer Olympic Games in Melbourne. HSV-7 is the home of AFL coverage.

HSV
Channels
BrandingSeven
Programming
AffiliationsSeven (O&O)
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
4 November 1956; 66 years ago (1956-11-04)
Former channel number(s)
Analog: 7 (VHF) (1956–2013)
Australian Television Network (1956–1963)
Call sign meaning
Herald
Sun
Victoria
Technical information
Licensing authority
Australian Communications and Media Authority
ERP200 kW (analog)
50 kW (digital)
HAAT555 m (both)[1]
Transmitter coordinates37°50′8″S 145°20′52″E / 37.83556°S 145.34778°E / -37.83556; 145.34778 (HSV)
Links
Website7plus.com.au/seven-news-melbourne

The HSV building (also known as 'Broadcast Centre Melbourne') was the network's operations hub, where the Master Control Room was located, controlling all metropolitan and regional feeds. Programming lineup, advertisement output, feed switching, time zone monitoring and national transmission output was previously delivered there. All Seven Network owned and operated studios had their live signals relayed there: for instance, ATN's output was fed to HSV and then transmitted via satellite or fibre optics to towers around metropolitan Sydney. In 2019 this function was transferred to a new centre in Sydney as part of a joint venture with Nine Network. As with other Melbourne terrestrial stations, its original transmission tower was atop Mount Dandenong.

History

HSV-7 began test transmissions in July 1956, becoming the first 7 station in Australia and the first TV station in Melbourne. It began broadcasting on 4 November,[2] soon after the Commonwealth Government started issuing television licences. In the opening ceremony, Eric Pearce declared :

"We dedicate this station to the full service of the community. To Australian life – the happy families in the homes – we promise to serve you faithfully and well".

HSV-7 and rival station GTV-9 were formed in time to broadcast the Melbourne Olympics, while Sydney stations TCN-9 and ATN-7 in Sydney relayed the Melbourne coverage. HSV-7 was originally owned by The Herald and Weekly Times Ltd, owners of The Herald and The Sun (now merged as the Herald Sun). These two newspapers gave rise to the call sign HSV (the 'V' stands for Victoria, as is the normal protocol for television call signs to have the third letter indicate the state where the station is licensed, although for publicity purposes HSV was said to stand for Herald Sun Vision just as sister station ATN became the Australian Television Network rather than New South Wales).

 
The station's "Melbourne's Alive" promo, which ran in 1999.

In March 1960, the station converted an old cinema in Fitzroy into the southern hemisphere's first fully remote studio, equipped with RCA TRT video tape recorders, camera cranes and AV mixing equipment. It featured a larger stage and backstage rooms, and audience capacity for up to 600. It was called the Channel 7 Teletheatre and connected to the station's main Dorcas Street studios in South Melbourne by multiple microwave links. The teletheatre opened with a major live show featuring the US entertainer Bob Crosby and his band and the British comedian Jimmy Edwards, among others. Many popular children's shows and variety programs (e.g. Sunnyside Up and The Happy Show) originated there in front of live audiences.

This station commissioned many of Australian TV's earliest and longest-running courtroom and police procedural dramatic series such as Crawford's Consider Your Verdict and Homicide.

One of the longest-serving station and general managers during the transformative years into international satellite links and color transmissions was Ron Casey. By the late 1960s, Channel 7 was demonstrating PAL color TV to crowds visiting the annual Royal Melbourne Show.

The station began to identify as Channel Seven in the late 1960s, and in the early 1970s used the national Seven Network logos. It followed the network's on-air presentation and programming. In 1979, Fairfax bought a substantial share of HSV-7 after many failed bids for the entire station.[citation needed] In December 1986, the station was purchased by Rupert Murdoch's News Limited. In February 1987 HSV-7 was sold back to Fairfax, along with Brisbane station BTQ-7. As a result of the payback, HSV's unique faces – World of Sport, Mal Walden and its Hello Melbourne campaign, Australia's contribution to Frank Gari's Hello News campaigns were all ended. By 1987 its rights to Australian rules football telecasts were taken by ABC's state station ABV-2. Walden later moved to Ten (ATV-10) as a result of this.

In late 1987, the government introduced cross-media ownership laws which forced Fairfax to choose between its print and broadcast operations. It chose print, and HSV-7 was sold to Christopher Skase's Qintex, which already owned Seven stations in Sydney, Adelaide and Perth.[citation needed] Skase pledged to revitalize the channel and its programs, and to return it to its prior success among Melbourne viewers. In 1990, Qintex was sent into damage control after Skase escaped extradition proceedings, and the Seven Network became a discrete company. Entrepreneur Kerry Stokes bought the network in 1995. On 10 December 2013, HSV-7 terminated its analogue signal as part of the switchover to digital transmission.

Headquarters

 
Broadcast Centre Melbourne, centre of programming operations for the entire Seven Network and the headquarters for HSV.

HSV's production studios and headquarters were originally located at the Dorcas Street Studios in South Melbourne. HSV remained there until March 2002 when news, current affairs and sport shows were moved to new headquarters at Docklands and the Dorcas Street Studios were closed. Docklands Studios Melbourne and Global Television (Australia) is home to HSV's studio facilities for the Seven Network's Melbourne-based entertainment, drama and reality programmes shows such as Dancing with the Stars (Australian TV series) and the quiz show The Chase Australia.

HSV's headquarters, known on-air as Broadcast Centre Melbourne or BCM, are located near the Marvel Stadium in Docklands. On 11 March 2002, the first Seven News Melbourne bulletin, presented by Peter Mitchell, was first broadcast from the new HSV building. The centre consists of three studios: a theatre studio, a production studio and a news studio that opens onto the newsroom. The building is used as the transmission control centre for Seven's owned-and-operated stations in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth and regional areas of Queensland. Approximately 200 full-time employees work in the building with an additional 100 part-timers. In 2005, the HSV building experienced a power failure that resulted in a blackout across the Seven Network, as well as all regional affiliates.[3]

The HSV studios produces Seven News Melbourne and are becoming the network's main play-out centre for sports broadcasting. While broadcasting on air, national news programs often refer to HSV as 'News Centre', while 'Sports Central' (or 'Footy Central' for AFL broadcasts) is commonly used for sports programs.

Programming

Locally produced programs by or with HSV-7 Melbourne:

HSV Studios

Location

Seven Melbourne is also the official broadcaster for these major events in Melbourne.

Past programming

News and Current Affairs

Entertainment

Drama

Sport

Seven News

 
A tram in Seven News Melbourne wrap livery outside Melbourne Town Hall.
 
Wideshot of Melbourne's news studio, with Peter Mitchell presenting.

7NEWS Melbourne is directed by Shaun Menegola and presented by Peter Mitchell on weeknights and Mike Amor and Rebecca Maddern on weekends from Broadcast Centre Melbourne. Sport is presented by Tim Watson on weeknights and Abbey Gelmi on weekends. Weather is presented by Jane Bunn on weeknights and Sonia Marinelli on weekends.

Peter Mitchell previously held the role of weekend presenter for then-titled Seven Nightly News between 1987 and 2000 when he replaced the short-lived presenting duo of David Johnston and Anne Fulwood. Jennifer Keyte was appointed as main weeknight presenter in 1990, becoming Australia's first solo female primetime commercial news presenter.[citation needed] In a network reshuffle in 1996, Keyte terminated her employment after the Seven Network attempted to pair her with David Johnston, who went on to present solo for three years.[citation needed] She returned in 2003, assuming the role as weekend presenter, succeeding Jennifer Adams.

In May 2018, Network Ten announced that Keyte would leave Seven Network to present Ten Eyewitness News Melbourne replacing Stephen Quartermain.[5] In August 2018, it was announced that Mike Amor would move back to Australia after 17 years as United States Bureau Chief to replace Keyte as weekend presenter.

Following decades of trailing Nine News Melbourne, 10 News First Melbourne (previously Ten Eyewitness News, Ten News at Five, Ten Evening News and Ten News: First at Five) and ABC News Victoria in the ratings, Seven News Melbourne won the ratings battle from February 2005. As of 2007, Seven News held the number one position.[6] This was followed by a series of advertisements and promos which touted Seven News Melbourne as Melbourne's New #1 and Nine altering their promotions to simply say Melbourne's Best News – a throwback to the 1980s when National Nine News Melbourne was beaten in the ratings by ATV-10's Ten Eyewitness News. But, it was replaced in 2009 when Nine News returned to win the Melbourne news ratings battle.

In January 2022, it was announced that Rebecca Maddern would return to the Seven Network to present 7NEWS Melbourne on weekends with Mike Amor.

Until 2022, during the AFL season, Peter Mitchell and the weeknight team presented from Sunday to Thursday and Mike Amor, Rebecca Maddern and the weekend team would present on Friday and Saturday nights.

Afternoon news updates for Melbourne are presented by Amor or Maddern, while Mitchell presents weeknight updates. Amor presents weekend news updates. Blake Johnson and Jayde Vincent is a fill-in news presenter with Tom Browne, Andrew McCormack and Laura Spurway as the fill-in sport presenters and Estelle Griepink as fill-in weather presenters.

In August 2015, Seven News Melbourne began producing a local Seven Afternoon News bulletin replacing the national bulletin. Amor and Maddern present the bulletin on alternate days. In 2020, owing to the COVID-19 pandemic, that bulletin temporary included news items from South Australia following the cancellation of the statewide afternoon bulletin from SAS-7 in Adelaide before the network reinstated it due to viewer opposition and the threat faced by the local Nine News team on Seven's news dominance.

Presenters

Current presenters
Role Bulletins
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
News Peter Mitchell (2000–present) Mike Amor (2018–present)
Rebecca Maddern (2022–present)
Sport Tim Watson (2013–present) Abbey Gelmi (2022–present)
Weather Jane Bunn (2014–present) Sonia Marinelli (2022–present)

Reporters

  • Blake Johnson (Senior Reporter/Fill-in News Presenter)
  • Cameron Baud (Police Crime Reporter)
  • Sharnelle Vella (State Political Reporter)
  • Jayde Vincent (Court Reporter/Fill-in News Presenter)
  • Georgia Main (Health Medical Reporter)
  • Nick McCallum (Senior Reporter)
  • Paul Dowsley (Senior Reporter)
  • Jackie Quist (Senior Reporter)
  • Melina Sarris (Senior Reporter and Weather Presenter)
  • Jodi Lee (Senior Reporter)
  • Estelle Griepink (Senior Reporter)
  • Sonia Marinelli (Senior Reporter and Weather Presenter)

Sport Reporters

  • Tom Browne (Chief AFL Reporter)
  • Andrew McCormack (Sport Reporter)
  • Laura Spurway (Sport Reporter)
  • Mitch Cleary (Sport Reporter)

Sunrise & The Morning Show Correspondent

  • Teegan Dolling (Sunrise Correspondent)
  • Nathan Currie (Sunrise Reporter)

Canberra Bureau

  • Mark Riley (Canberra Political Bureau Chief)
  • Rob Scott (Canberra Political Reporter)

Overseas Bureaus

  • Ashlee Mullany (US Bureau Chief)
  • Tim Lester (Los Angeles Correspondent)
  • David Woiwod (Los Angeles Correspondent)
  • Hugh Whitfeld (Europe Bureau Chief)
  • Sarah Greenhalgh (Europe Correspondent)

Past Presenters

Past Reporters

  • Greg Shackleton (mid 1970s)
  • Dean Felton
  • Heath O'Loughlin (2000–2006)
  • Dylan Howard (2005–2008)
  • Leith Mulligan (2008–2012)
  • Amy Parks (2009–2013)
  • Michael Felgate (2004–2012; 2014–2019)
  • Brendan Donohoe (1990–2020)
  • Jade Robran
  • Karen O'Sullivan (2004–2018)
  • Michael Scanlan (2012–2018)
  • Peter Beaton (1987–1995)
  • Laurel Irving (2008–2021)
  • Nathan Templeton (2012–2022)
  • Mark Stevens (2013–2021)
  • Alan Murrell

See also

References

  1. ^ HAAT estimated from http://www.itu.int/SRTM3/ using EHAAT.
  2. ^ Communications – Television – Radio and telecommunications – The transmitting tower of Herald-Sun Television Pty Limited at Mount Dandenong, Victoria – Shown at the base of the tower are parabolic discs that pick up the signal transmitted by the studios in the city National Archives of Australia 1956 Retrieved 18 December 2008
  3. ^ "Blackout leaves Heelers fans hanging". Sydney Morning Herald. AAP. 14 April 2005. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  4. ^ Niall, Jake (7 May 2020). "Remotely, with remote Brian: How Seven plans to cover COVID footy". The Age. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  5. ^ "Jennifer Keyte Joins Network Ten As Presenter – ten daily". tendaily.com.au. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  6. ^ . The Age. Melbourne. 14 June 2007. Archived from the original on 17 June 2007. Retrieved 27 June 2007.
  7. ^ The Age, 1 November 1956 – TelevisionAU
  8. ^ TV Week, 28 December 1968 – TelevisionAU

External links

  • Official website

station, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, station, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 20. 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 HSV TV station news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message HSV is a television station in Melbourne Australia It is part of the Seven Network one of the three main commercial television networks in Australia its first and oldest station It launched in time for the 1956 Summer Olympic Games in Melbourne HSV 7 is the home of AFL coverage HSVMelbourne VictoriaChannelsDigital 6 VHF Virtual 7BrandingSevenProgrammingAffiliationsSeven O amp O OwnershipOwnerSeven West Media Channel Seven Melbourne Pty Ltd HistoryFirst air date4 November 1956 66 years ago 1956 11 04 Former channel number s Analog 7 VHF 1956 2013 Former affiliationsAustralian Television Network 1956 1963 Call sign meaningHeraldSunVictoriaTechnical informationLicensing authorityAustralian Communications and Media AuthorityERP200 kW analog 50 kW digital HAAT555 m both 1 Transmitter coordinates37 50 8 S 145 20 52 E 37 83556 S 145 34778 E 37 83556 145 34778 HSV LinksWebsite7plus wbr com wbr au wbr seven news melbourneThe HSV building also known as Broadcast Centre Melbourne was the network s operations hub where the Master Control Room was located controlling all metropolitan and regional feeds Programming lineup advertisement output feed switching time zone monitoring and national transmission output was previously delivered there All Seven Network owned and operated studios had their live signals relayed there for instance ATN s output was fed to HSV and then transmitted via satellite or fibre optics to towers around metropolitan Sydney In 2019 this function was transferred to a new centre in Sydney as part of a joint venture with Nine Network As with other Melbourne terrestrial stations its original transmission tower was atop Mount Dandenong Contents 1 History 2 Headquarters 3 Programming 3 1 HSV Studios 3 2 Location 4 Past programming 4 1 News and Current Affairs 4 2 Entertainment 4 2 1 Drama 4 2 2 Sport 5 Seven News 5 1 Presenters 5 2 Reporters 5 3 Sport Reporters 5 4 Sunrise amp The Morning Show Correspondent 5 5 Canberra Bureau 5 6 Overseas Bureaus 5 7 Past Presenters 5 8 Past Reporters 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditHSV 7 began test transmissions in July 1956 becoming the first 7 station in Australia and the first TV station in Melbourne It began broadcasting on 4 November 2 soon after the Commonwealth Government started issuing television licences In the opening ceremony Eric Pearce declared We dedicate this station to the full service of the community To Australian life the happy families in the homes we promise to serve you faithfully and well HSV 7 and rival station GTV 9 were formed in time to broadcast the Melbourne Olympics while Sydney stations TCN 9 and ATN 7 in Sydney relayed the Melbourne coverage HSV 7 was originally owned by The Herald and Weekly Times Ltd owners of The Herald and The Sun now merged as the Herald Sun These two newspapers gave rise to the call sign HSV the V stands for Victoria as is the normal protocol for television call signs to have the third letter indicate the state where the station is licensed although for publicity purposes HSV was said to stand for Herald Sun Vision just as sister station ATN became the Australian Television Network rather than New South Wales The station s Melbourne s Alive promo which ran in 1999 In March 1960 the station converted an old cinema in Fitzroy into the southern hemisphere s first fully remote studio equipped with RCA TRT video tape recorders camera cranes and AV mixing equipment It featured a larger stage and backstage rooms and audience capacity for up to 600 It was called the Channel 7 Teletheatre and connected to the station s main Dorcas Street studios in South Melbourne by multiple microwave links The teletheatre opened with a major live show featuring the US entertainer Bob Crosby and his band and the British comedian Jimmy Edwards among others Many popular children s shows and variety programs e g Sunnyside Up and The Happy Show originated there in front of live audiences This station commissioned many of Australian TV s earliest and longest running courtroom and police procedural dramatic series such as Crawford s Consider Your Verdict and Homicide One of the longest serving station and general managers during the transformative years into international satellite links and color transmissions was Ron Casey By the late 1960s Channel 7 was demonstrating PAL color TV to crowds visiting the annual Royal Melbourne Show The station began to identify as Channel Seven in the late 1960s and in the early 1970s used the national Seven Network logos It followed the network s on air presentation and programming In 1979 Fairfax bought a substantial share of HSV 7 after many failed bids for the entire station citation needed In December 1986 the station was purchased by Rupert Murdoch s News Limited In February 1987 HSV 7 was sold back to Fairfax along with Brisbane station BTQ 7 As a result of the payback HSV s unique faces World of Sport Mal Walden and its Hello Melbourne campaign Australia s contribution to Frank Gari s Hello News campaigns were all ended By 1987 its rights to Australian rules football telecasts were taken by ABC s state station ABV 2 Walden later moved to Ten ATV 10 as a result of this In late 1987 the government introduced cross media ownership laws which forced Fairfax to choose between its print and broadcast operations It chose print and HSV 7 was sold to Christopher Skase s Qintex which already owned Seven stations in Sydney Adelaide and Perth citation needed Skase pledged to revitalize the channel and its programs and to return it to its prior success among Melbourne viewers In 1990 Qintex was sent into damage control after Skase escaped extradition proceedings and the Seven Network became a discrete company Entrepreneur Kerry Stokes bought the network in 1995 On 10 December 2013 HSV 7 terminated its analogue signal as part of the switchover to digital transmission Headquarters Edit Broadcast Centre Melbourne centre of programming operations for the entire Seven Network and the headquarters for HSV HSV s production studios and headquarters were originally located at the Dorcas Street Studios in South Melbourne HSV remained there until March 2002 when news current affairs and sport shows were moved to new headquarters at Docklands and the Dorcas Street Studios were closed Docklands Studios Melbourne and Global Television Australia is home to HSV s studio facilities for the Seven Network s Melbourne based entertainment drama and reality programmes shows such as Dancing with the Stars Australian TV series and the quiz show The Chase Australia HSV s headquarters known on air as Broadcast Centre Melbourne or BCM are located near the Marvel Stadium in Docklands On 11 March 2002 the first Seven News Melbourne bulletin presented by Peter Mitchell was first broadcast from the new HSV building The centre consists of three studios a theatre studio a production studio and a news studio that opens onto the newsroom The building is used as the transmission control centre for Seven s owned and operated stations in Melbourne Sydney Brisbane Adelaide Perth and regional areas of Queensland Approximately 200 full time employees work in the building with an additional 100 part timers In 2005 the HSV building experienced a power failure that resulted in a blackout across the Seven Network as well as all regional affiliates 3 The HSV studios produces Seven News Melbourne and are becoming the network s main play out centre for sports broadcasting While broadcasting on air national news programs often refer to HSV as News Centre while Sports Central or Footy Central for AFL broadcasts is commonly used for sports programs Programming EditLocally produced programs by or with HSV 7 Melbourne HSV Studios Edit Seven News Melbourne 1956 present Seven Afternoon News Melbourne 2015 present AFL Game Day 2008 2020 Talking Footy 1994 2002 2013 2020 Footy Flashbacks 2010 2017 The Front Bar 2016 present House of Wellness 2017 present Saturday Afternoon Horse Racing 2013 present Good Friday Appeal 1957 present Location Edit Better Homes and Gardens 1995 present The Great Weekend 2019 present House Rules 2013 present Highway Patrol 2007 present Border Security 2004 present Yummy Mummies 2017 present Ms Fisher s Modern Murder Mysteries 2019 present The Doctor Blake Mysteries 2013 2017 on ABC 2018 on Seven Good Friday Appeal 1957 present Moomba Street Parade 2010 present Melbourne New Year s Eve Fireworks 2011 present Seven Melbourne is also the official broadcaster for these major events in Melbourne Test Cricket coverage 2018 present Women s Big Bash League coverage 2018 present Big Bash League coverage 2018 present Olympic Games coverage 1992 2008 2016 present Australian Football League 1957 2001 2007 present excluding 1987 In 2020 most if not all matches were called from Seven Melbourne s studios rather than at stadiums due to safety concerns surrounding the COVID 19 pandemic 4 Victorian Football League 2015 present Australian Masters Golf 2013 present Past programming EditNews and Current Affairs Edit Today Tonight HSV 7 1995 2006 ATN 7 2006 2012 HSV 7 2013 Seven 4 30 News HSV 7 2003 2006 production moved to ATN 7 Seven Afternoon News 2013 production moved to ATN 7 Seven News at Five 1996 Hinch 1987 1991 Newsworld 1982 1988 Local Late night news bulletin Meet The Press 1958 1967 Sunrise Weather 2008 Entertainment Edit Kinne 2014 2017 A Moveable Feast 2017 2018 Behave Yourself 2017 2020 ABC Studios Elsternwick Melbourne Weekender 2006 2008 2015 2020 The Big Music Quiz 2016 Powerball Australia 1996 2016 Oz Lotto 1995 2016 Dancing with the Stars 2004 2015 Million Dollar Minute 2013 2015 Slide Show 2013 Pictures of You TV series 2012 Spit It Out TV series 2010 2011 Iron Chef Australia 2010 Medical Emergency 2004 2009 Double Take 2009 Beat the Star Australia 2010 Thank God You re Here 2009 The Rich List 2007 2009 Battle of the Choirs 2008 Kath amp Kim 2007 Australia s Got Talent 2007 2012 It Takes Two 2006 2008 Where Are They Now 2006 2008 Great Comedy Classics 2006 2007 The Master 2006 The Support Unit 2005 2005 Made in Melbourne Specials 2005 commemorating station s 50th anniversary Let Loose Live 2005 Coxy s Big Break 2004 2015 Hamish and Andy 2004 Deal or No Deal 2003 2013 Big Bite 2003 parts Greeks on the Roof 2003 The Weakest Link 2001 2002 The Mole 2000 2005 Something Stupid 1998 Eric 1997 Big Girl s Blouse 1994 Man O Man 1994 Jimeoin 1994 1995 Full Frontal 1993 1997 parts Bligh 1992 Tonight Live With Steve Vizard 1990 1993 Fast Forward 1989 1992 parts Acropolis Now 1989 1992 The D Generation 1988 1989 The Eleventh Hour 1985 The New Price Is Right 1981 1986 Shirl s Neighbourhood 1979 1983 Two on the Aisle 1971 1974 with Ivan Hutchinson and Jim Murphy The Penthouse Club 1970 1979 It s Academic 1970 1978 TV Ringside 1966 1975 SSB Club 1960s Video Village 1960s with Danny Webb and Liz Harris Fighting Words 1960s Review with Geoff Raymond 1960s Romper Room 1963 1988 Time For Terry 1965 Variety 7 1963 1964 Auditions 1962 Buy Word 1962 Make a Wish 1962 1964 Make Mine Music 1962 What s the Meaning 1962 Hold Everything 1961 Merry Go Round 1961 Lady for a Day 1960 1962 The Happy Show 1960 1969 with Happy Hammond Saturday Showcase 1960 Tea for Two 1960 Western Holiday 1960 Bandwagon 1959 1960 Brenda s Time 1960 Club Seven 1959 1961 Don t Argue 1959 Let s Make Clothes 1959 What s On 1959 At Your Request 1958 1959 Brian and the Juniors 1958 1970 with Brian Naylor Cool Cats Show 1958 1960 Movie Guide 1958 1959 Personal Column 1958 1959 Tuesday Home Show 1958 1959 Be My Guest 1957 Blues Studio One 1957 Zig amp Zag 1957 1969 Handyman 1957 1958 Beauty is My Business 1957 1958 Let s Dance 1957 Oxford Show 1957 1958 Peters Fun Fair Sunnyside Up 1957 1964 1966 Swallows Parade 1957 Take That 1957 1959 Teenage Mailbag 1957 1958 with Ernie Sigley Tivoli Party Time 1957 The Late Show 1957 1959 with Noel Ferrier and Bert Newton Fun with Charades 1956 1958 I ve Got a Secret 1956 1958 The Isador Goodman Show 1956 1957 The Judy Jack Show 1956 1957 Guest of the Week 1956 1957 Sports Talk 1956 1959 Stairway to the Stars 1956 1958 Eric and Mary 1956 Drama Edit Winners amp Losers 2011 2016 City Homicide 2007 2011 Blue Heelers 1994 2006 Marshall Law 2002 Last Man Standing 2005 Skirts 1990 The Power The Passion 1989 All the Rivers Run 1983 1990 Sons And Daughters 1982 1987 Neighbours 1985 moved to Network 10 from 1986 and axed in 2022 Revived by Amazon in 2023 Skyways 1979 1981 Cop Shop 1977 1983 Solo One 1976 Ryan 1972 1974 Bluey 1976 1977 Homicide 1964 1975 Consider Your Verdict 1961 1964 Sport Edit Melbourne Spring Racing Carnival Horse Racing 2002 2018 The Emirates Melbourne Cup Carnival Horse Racing 2002 2018 V8 Supercars Sandown 500 Motor Racing 1985 1996 2007 2014 Santo Sam and Ed s Sports Fever 2012 Rex Hunt s Footy Panel 1997 2003 Sportsworld 1987 2003 production moved to Sydney World of Sport 1959 1987 Live and Kicking 1998 1999 The Game 2000 2001 Seven s Big League AFL Football 1978 1986 Football Inquest 1960 1974 The Footy Show 1957 1958 John Coleman on Football 1957 Seven News Edit A tram in Seven News Melbourne wrap livery outside Melbourne Town Hall Wideshot of Melbourne s news studio with Peter Mitchell presenting 7NEWS Melbourne is directed by Shaun Menegola and presented by Peter Mitchell on weeknights and Mike Amor and Rebecca Maddern on weekends from Broadcast Centre Melbourne Sport is presented by Tim Watson on weeknights and Abbey Gelmi on weekends Weather is presented by Jane Bunn on weeknights and Sonia Marinelli on weekends Peter Mitchell previously held the role of weekend presenter for then titled Seven Nightly News between 1987 and 2000 when he replaced the short lived presenting duo of David Johnston and Anne Fulwood Jennifer Keyte was appointed as main weeknight presenter in 1990 becoming Australia s first solo female primetime commercial news presenter citation needed In a network reshuffle in 1996 Keyte terminated her employment after the Seven Network attempted to pair her with David Johnston who went on to present solo for three years citation needed She returned in 2003 assuming the role as weekend presenter succeeding Jennifer Adams In May 2018 Network Ten announced that Keyte would leave Seven Network to present Ten Eyewitness News Melbourne replacing Stephen Quartermain 5 In August 2018 it was announced that Mike Amor would move back to Australia after 17 years as United States Bureau Chief to replace Keyte as weekend presenter Following decades of trailing Nine News Melbourne 10 News First Melbourne previously Ten Eyewitness News Ten News at Five Ten Evening News and Ten News First at Five and ABC News Victoria in the ratings Seven News Melbourne won the ratings battle from February 2005 As of 2007 Seven News held the number one position 6 This was followed by a series of advertisements and promos which touted Seven News Melbourne as Melbourne s New 1 and Nine altering their promotions to simply say Melbourne s Best News a throwback to the 1980s when National Nine News Melbourne was beaten in the ratings by ATV 10 s Ten Eyewitness News But it was replaced in 2009 when Nine News returned to win the Melbourne news ratings battle In January 2022 it was announced that Rebecca Maddern would return to the Seven Network to present 7NEWS Melbourne on weekends with Mike Amor Until 2022 during the AFL season Peter Mitchell and the weeknight team presented from Sunday to Thursday and Mike Amor Rebecca Maddern and the weekend team would present on Friday and Saturday nights Afternoon news updates for Melbourne are presented by Amor or Maddern while Mitchell presents weeknight updates Amor presents weekend news updates Blake Johnson and Jayde Vincent is a fill in news presenter with Tom Browne Andrew McCormack and Laura Spurway as the fill in sport presenters and Estelle Griepink as fill in weather presenters In August 2015 Seven News Melbourne began producing a local Seven Afternoon News bulletin replacing the national bulletin Amor and Maddern present the bulletin on alternate days In 2020 owing to the COVID 19 pandemic that bulletin temporary included news items from South Australia following the cancellation of the statewide afternoon bulletin from SAS 7 in Adelaide before the network reinstated it due to viewer opposition and the threat faced by the local Nine News team on Seven s news dominance Presenters Edit Current presenters Role BulletinsMonday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday SundayNews Peter Mitchell 2000 present Mike Amor 2018 present Rebecca Maddern 2022 present Sport Tim Watson 2013 present Abbey Gelmi 2022 present Weather Jane Bunn 2014 present Sonia Marinelli 2022 present Reporters Edit Blake Johnson Senior Reporter Fill in News Presenter Cameron Baud Police Crime Reporter Sharnelle Vella State Political Reporter Jayde Vincent Court Reporter Fill in News Presenter Georgia Main Health Medical Reporter Nick McCallum Senior Reporter Paul Dowsley Senior Reporter Jackie Quist Senior Reporter Melina Sarris Senior Reporter and Weather Presenter Jodi Lee Senior Reporter Estelle Griepink Senior Reporter Sonia Marinelli Senior Reporter and Weather Presenter Sport Reporters Edit Tom Browne Chief AFL Reporter Andrew McCormack Sport Reporter Laura Spurway Sport Reporter Mitch Cleary Sport Reporter Sunrise amp The Morning Show Correspondent Edit Teegan Dolling Sunrise Correspondent Nathan Currie Sunrise Reporter Canberra Bureau Edit Mark Riley Canberra Political Bureau Chief Rob Scott Canberra Political Reporter Overseas Bureaus Edit Ashlee Mullany US Bureau Chief Tim Lester Los Angeles Correspondent David Woiwod Los Angeles Correspondent Hugh Whitfeld Europe Bureau Chief Sarah Greenhalgh Europe Correspondent Past Presenters Edit Eric Pearce 1956 1957 7 Weeknight Presenter Brian Naylor 1964 1978 Weeknight Presenter Mal Walden 1979 1987 Weeknight Presenter Greg Pearce 1987 Weeknight Presenter David Johnston Late 1960s 1996 2005 8 Weeknight Presenter amp Seven 4 30 News Presenter Anne Fulwood 1999 2000 Weeknight Presenter Sandy Roberts 1983 2013 Sport Presenter Ivan Hutchinson 1964 1994 Music Director amp Presenter Nicole Chvastek 1996 2002 Presenter amp Reporter Jennifer Adams 1999 2003 Weekend News Presenter Rob Gell 2004 2008 Weather Presenter David Brown 1995 2012 2015 Weather Presenter Jill Singer 1995 1997 Today Tonight Presenter Naomi Robson 1997 2006 Today Tonight Presenter Helen Kapalos 2013 Today Tonight Presenter Jacqueline Felgate 2012 2022 Weekend Sport Presenter amp Afternoon Presenter Sean Sowerby 2012 2021 Sport PresenterPast Reporters Edit Greg Shackleton mid 1970s Dean Felton Heath O Loughlin 2000 2006 Dylan Howard 2005 2008 Leith Mulligan 2008 2012 Amy Parks 2009 2013 Michael Felgate 2004 2012 2014 2019 Brendan Donohoe 1990 2020 Jade Robran Karen O Sullivan 2004 2018 Michael Scanlan 2012 2018 Peter Beaton 1987 1995 Laurel Irving 2008 2021 Nathan Templeton 2012 2022 Mark Stevens 2013 2021 Alan MurrellSee also EditTelevision broadcasting in AustraliaReferences Edit HAAT estimated from http www itu int SRTM3 using EHAAT Communications Television Radio and telecommunications The transmitting tower of Herald Sun Television Pty Limited at Mount Dandenong Victoria Shown at the base of the tower are parabolic discs that pick up the signal transmitted by the studios in the city National Archives of Australia 1956 Retrieved 18 December 2008 Blackout leaves Heelers fans hanging Sydney Morning Herald AAP 14 April 2005 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Niall Jake 7 May 2020 Remotely with remote Brian How Seven plans to cover COVID footy The Age Retrieved 7 May 2020 Jennifer Keyte Joins Network Ten As Presenter ten daily tendaily com au Retrieved 30 May 2018 How Seven trumped Nine The Age Melbourne 14 June 2007 Archived from the original on 17 June 2007 Retrieved 27 June 2007 The Age 1 November 1956 TelevisionAU TV Week 28 December 1968 TelevisionAUExternal links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HSV TV station amp oldid 1144175415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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