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Wikipedia

WIN Television

WIN Television is an Australian television network owned by WIN Corporation that is based in Wollongong, New South Wales. WIN commenced transmissions on 18 March 1962 as a single television station covering the Wollongong region. The WIN Network has since grown to cover much of regional Australia. The network's name, WIN, originates from its first station, Wollongong's WIN-4. WIN has a programme supply agreement with metropolitan broadcaster Nine Network, covering its stations in Regional Queensland, Southern and Western New South Wales, Griffith, Regional Victoria, Mildura, Tasmania, Eastern South Australia, and Regional Western Australia. WIN also has a programme supply agreement with third-placed metropolitan broadcaster Network 10 for its Northern New South Wales station.[1] WIN also produces and broadcasts weeknight half-hour local news bulletins across its Queensland, southern New South Wales, Victoria, and Tasmania markets as WIN News.[2]

WIN Television
CountryAustralia
Broadcast areaRegional Queensland, Northern NSW & Gold Coast, Southern NSW & ACT, Griffith, Regional Victoria, Mildura, Tasmania, Eastern SA, Regional WA
Affiliates
HeadquartersWollongong (head office)
Ingleburn, Sydney (national play-out centre)
Programming
Language(s)English
Picture format1080i HDTV
(downscaled to 16:9 576i for the SDTV feed)
Ownership
OwnerWIN Corporation
Sister channels
History
Launched18 March 1962; 62 years ago (1962-03-18)
Links
Websitewintv.com.au
Availability
Terrestrial
Freeview WIN owned (virtual)8/88 (5 in Northern NSW and Gold Coast)
Freeview WIN HD (virtual)80 (50 in Northern NSW and Gold Coast)

Regional services edit

Through its many television broadcast licences, WIN re-broadcasts metropolitan network content into regional Australian markets, as follows:

WIN Network service areas
Licence area Affiliation Call sign
Northern New South Wales Network 10 NRN
Southern New South Wales
Australian Capital Territory
Nine Network WIN
Griffith Seven Network MTN
Nine Network AMN
Network 10 MDN[a]
Regional Queensland Nine Network RTQ
Eastern South Australia Seven Network SES/RTS
Nine Network SDS/RDS
Network 10 MGS/LRS
Tasmania Nine Network TVT
Network 10 TDT[b]
Mildura Nine Network STV
Network 10 MDV[c]
Regional Victoria Nine Network VTV
Regional Western Australia Nine Network WOW
Network 10 GDW, SDW, VDW, WDW[d]
  1. ^ Supplementary licence owned entirely by WIN
  2. ^ Supplementary licence jointly owned by WIN and Southern Cross Austereo
  3. ^ Supplementary licence jointly owned by WIN and Seven West Media
  4. ^ Supplementary licence jointly owned by WIN and Seven West Media

History edit

Early years in Wollongong edit

Television Wollongong Transmission Limited (TWT) was incorporated on 4 October 1955 by a group of local businessmen. Five years later, it was awarded a licence by the Postmaster-General's Department over a number of other groups aligned to Sydney-based stations ATN-7 and TCN-9 to broadcast to the Illawarra and South Coast regions.[3] The new station was to broadcast on the VHF-4 frequency, using the callsign WIN (which stood for Wollongong Illawarra New South Wales), in line with other Australian call signs.

1980–1999: aggregation and expansion edit

 
The West Magazine reporting WIN Television as the second commercial broadcaster in regional Western Australia.

During this period, WIN expanded through the purchase of stations in Victoria, Queensland, and New South Wales. In 1984, WIN became the first regional television station to transmit stereophonic sound.[4] Close links between WIN Television and the Nine Network ensured the Nine Network affiliation for southern New South Wales when aggregation occurred in March 1989. The changes meant that WIN expanded into the rest of southern New South Wales, launching new stations in Canberra, Orange, Bathurst, Dubbo, and Wagga Wagga, with new buildings and studios built in Orange, Wagga, and Canberra. Aggregation also provided the network with two additional competitors, The Prime Network and Capital Television.

In 1990, WIN purchased Queensland station Star TV, with stations in Rockhampton (RTQ) and the Darling Downs (DDQ and SDQ), just weeks before aggregation was to occur in regional Queensland. The station had already been set to become a Network 10 affiliate under its previous owners; however, WIN's links with the Nine Network enabled it to clinch the Nine Network affiliation away from QTV, which was then forced to affiliate with third-placed Network Ten with just days to go.

ENT Limited, a Launceston-based company that owned a number of television and radio stations in regional Victoria and Tasmania, was taken over by WIN in 1994.[5] Television Victoria and TasTV were, as a result, rebranded as WIN Television. The network further expanded to Griffith in 1998, when WIN purchased MTN-9 Griffith and its supplementary station AMN-31 from its local owners. As MTN had been affiliated with WIN since the early 1990s, the station was easily integrated into the network.

WIN became regional Western Australia's second commercial television network on 26 March 1999 after winning the rights tender in 1997.[6] Prior to the launch of the new station, GWN held a commercial monopoly on the market. GWN became an affiliate of the Seven Network, while WIN took a combination of Nine Network and Network Ten programming. Despite Nine's traditional ratings dominance throughout most of the country, incumbent GWN has remained the market's most-watched station.[7] The second ratings survey of 2006 placed WIN Television with a 34.7% commercial audience share in prime-time, compared to the Golden West Network with 65.3%.[8]

Also in 1999, WIN purchased two stations in South Australia: SES-8 in Mount Gambier and RTS-5a in the Riverland region. They became known as WIN SA. In 2002, supplementary licences were granted under Section 38A of the Broadcasting Services Act, allowing the network to launch a WIN Ten service using the MGS call sign in Mount Gambier and LRS in the Riverland. This enabled the main SES/RTS station to be a sole Nine Network affiliate, which lasted until 2007, when a supply agreement was made with Seven.[9]

As well as the flagship weeknightly WIN News bulletin, WIN has been prolific in broadcasting relevant programmes for its audience. In the past, it produced current affairs programming, including the community affairs programme Roving Eye, and Sunday Review, a weekly review of international, national, and local stories.[10] It produced a mid-week rugby league wrap panel show in the mid-1990s, while in 1995, WIN Television Queensland produced its own rugby league coverage by televising games featuring the fledgeling North Queensland Cowboys in their maiden ARL Winfield Cup competition season.

2000–2016: Nine affiliation edit

 
A camera operator for WIN News Riverina.

WIN Television began to introduce digital television soon after it became available to metropolitan areas in January 2001. Under Section 38A of the Broadcasting Services Act, the network was able to introduce, in partnership with other stations, additional digital-only Network Ten affiliates. These included Tasmania's TDT, launched in late 2003 in partnership with Southern Cross Broadcasting, and Mildura's MDV in January 2006, with Prime Television.

On 30 May 2007, WIN purchased NWS from Southern Cross Broadcasting for A$105 million. Similarly, STW Perth, owned by Sunraysia Television and affiliated with the Nine Network, was purchased on 8 June 2007 for A$163.1 million.[11]

Despite the station's ownership of Nine Perth, the regional WIN WA service continued to broadcast Ten News Perth, produced for and shown on rival Perth station Ten Perth, until 27 August 2007, when Ten West came into service.[12]

A conflict between WIN and its long-time metropolitan partner, the Nine Network, arose in mid-2007, with PBL Media, Nine's parent company, requesting 40 percent of the network's advertising revenue in return for programme supply. WIN's owner, WIN Corporation, rejected this offer, expecting to pay only 29% (a 3% decrease from the previous contract and in line with many of the network's competitors, such as Prime Television and Southern Cross Ten).[13] The network's owner, Bruce Gordon, subsequently threatened to sever the network's affiliation after negotiations stagnated, stating that his previous position at Paramount Pictures meant he could programme the network independently.[14] On 16 August 2007, WIN Television dropped key Nine Network programmes from its daytime television schedule, including Mornings with Kerri-Anne and National Nine News: Morning Edition.[15] WIN also secured a new programme supply agreement for its regional South Australian station with Nine's rival Seven Network. Announced on 4 September 2007, the new programme schedule included a mixture of Seven and existing WIN programming, commencing on 1 October 2007.[16] WIN also started producing some local Australian programmes to replace key Nine content, including Alive and Cooking and Susie,[15][17] as well as the independently sourced The Ellen DeGeneres Show. WIN also produced Fishing Australia as part of its local content output on the WIN Network. Two years later, WIN officially reinstated its supply of Nine content to regional South Australia with a new supplementary channel, WIN SA, relaying NWS from Adelaide.

On 9 August 2009, WIN began transmission of the new digital channel GO! on channel 88 in Southern NSW, Regional Victoria, Tasmania, and Regional Queensland. It soon reached Mildura in 2010 and regional SA in 2011.

In June 2010, playout was moved from WIN's Wollongong headquarters to its new Media Hub facility in the south-west Sydney suburb of Ingleburn, co-owned with ABC Television.[18]

On 26 September 2010, WIN began transmission of the HD digital channel GEM on channel 80 in Southern NSW, Regional Victoria, Tasmania, and Regional Queensland.

On 1 May 2012, WIN began transmission of an SD digital infomercial channel, Gold, on channel 84.[19] The second infomercial channel, Gold2, began on 13 July 2013 as a five-hour timeshift of Gold.[20]

Following Nine's launch of 9HD and 9Life on 26 November 2015 and WIN's promise of following suit,[21] WIN began broadcasting a "coming soon" test pattern on channels 85 and 86 on 10 February 2016. Both channels began broadcasting on 1 March 2016.[22][23] As a result, their channel listing was reshuffled to match Nine's metropolitan with 9Gem on channel 82, 9Go! on channel 83, 9Life on channel 84, Extra on channel 85, and Gold on channel 86.

The network continued to produce its own local news service, WIN News, for most of its markets throughout its Nine affiliation, although requests for increased revenue by Nine repeatedly threatened the news division's viability. By 2016, only twelve bulletins were being produced and presented.[24]

2016–2021: 10 affiliation edit

After Nine launched its new online catch-up video on demand and live streaming service 9Now on 27 January 2016, WIN filed a lawsuit against Nine, claiming that live streaming into regional areas breached their exclusive affiliation agreement.[25][26] Justice Hammerschlag of the NSW Supreme Court dismissed the case on 28 April 2016, ruling that the definition of "broadcasting" in WIN's affiliation agreement with the Nine Network did not cover internet streaming "and that Nine is under no express or implied obligation not to do it".[27][28]

Shortly after WIN's legal defeat, Nine announced a new $500 million, five-year programme supply agreement with Southern Cross Austereo, the Ten affiliate. This saw Southern Cross Austereo's stations in Southern NSW, the ACT, and regional areas in Victoria and Queensland switch to Nine affiliation at midnight on 1 July 2016.[29] With that announcement, WIN was effectively stripped of its 27-year partnership with Nine. In response, WIN entered affiliation talks with Network Ten,[30][31] in which Gordon held a significant stake, reaching a final agreement on 23 May 2016. From 1 July 2016, WIN carried Ten programming into its regional Queensland, Southern NSW, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, and Western Australia markets.[32][33][34] Supplementary station deals were left until late due to disagreement over the rate that loss-making stations should make to Nine Network. With just days left, deals were secured for South Australia, Griffith, and Tasmania.[35][36] However, no deal was secured for the Western Australia joint venture West Digital Television before 1 July,[37] but a deal was later finalised on 2 July 2016, with the relay of Nine content commencing that night.[38][39] The channel changes reshuffled WIN's LCN listing, with One on LCNs 81 and 86, Eleven on LCN 82, TVSN on LCN 84, and Gold on LCN 85. WIN and WIN HD remained on LCNs 8 and 80. WIN also relocated its SD simulcast from LCN 81 to LCN 88.

Negotiations in January 2017 for WIN to acquire Northern New South Wales station NRN in exchange for WIN's Wollongong radio station i98FM with Southern Cross Austereo failed,[40][41][42][43] although a deal was secured on 28 March 2017 for the sole sale of NRN to WIN for $55 million.[44][45][46] The sale took effect on 31 May 2017;[47][48] NRN was rebranded as WIN on 1 September 2017, with playout and transmission transferred to WIN, while the LCNs were reshuffled to align with WIN's other stations, although they stayed as 5-numbered due to 8-numbering already held by Nine-owned NBN Television for Northern NSW.[49]

On 28 May 2018, WIN announced a new programme supply agreement with the Australian News Channel to carry Sky News Australia content on a new free-to-air channel, Sky News on WIN, which launched on 2 September 2018.[50] The channel consisted of mixed Sky News and Fox Sports News programming, along with WIN's All Australian News, while Sky programmes gained access to WIN's regional news stories.[51][52][50]

WIN converted TVSN to MPEG-4 SD on 30 August 2018, two days before the launch of Sky News on WIN.[53]

On 31 October 2018, at 6:30 p.m., during The Project, WIN updated its logo, launching at the same time as the launch of Network 10's new logo. WIN also rebranded its versions of 10's multi-channels, One and Eleven, into WIN Boss (later changed to WIN Bold in December) and WIN Peach.

On 29 March 2021, the WIN channel in the Illawarra region was converted to MPEG-4 HD as an experiment for other WIN areas.[54] On 14 May 2021, it was reverted to the MPEG-2 format in SD after viewers complained that they could no longer get the WIN channel on LCN 8.

2021–present: Return to Nine affiliation edit

On 12 March 2021, Nine announced it had secured a new programme supply agreement with its original partner, WIN Network, across regional Australia beginning 1 July 2021, in effect dumping Southern Cross Austereo, which was forced to return to relaying third-placed Ten content. The seven-year deal sees WIN pay around 50 percent of broadcast advertising revenue to Nine Entertainment Co., plus advertising time for Nine's properties on WIN's television and radio assets. WIN also integrated advertising sales services for Nine's O&O regional stations, NBN, and NTD. Nine CEO Hugh Marks explained that "while our relationship with Southern Cross has been strong over the last five years, the opportunities presented by the WIN Network to both extend the reach of Nine's premium content into more regional markets under one agreement and to work cooperatively with them on a national and local news operation mean this is the right time for us to return to WIN".[55] Also for the first time, WIN now broadcasts Nine content under Nine branding. WIN's multi-channels have again been rearranged, with 9Gem on channel 81, 9Go! on channel 82, and 9Life on channel 83, while TVSN and Gold would continue to broadcast on channels 84 and 85, but despite the return, the "nine dots" were not reinstated on the network logo. WIN still broadcasts Network Ten content on its northern New South Wales station.

On 18 March 2022, WIN Television celebrated 60 years of broadcasting across Wollongong and the Illawarra.[56]

On 16 June 2022, WIN Television converted 9Gem and 9Go! to MPEG-4 SD in Tasmania via WIN's Tasmanian station TVT.

On 22 March 2023, WIN Television announced that they would be converting all of their remaining MPEG-2 channels to MPEG-4 later that same year. On 22 May 2023, 9Gem was converted into an MPEG-4 SD channel in most WIN areas, except Tasmania, Western Australia, and Northern NSW. On 19 June 2023, 9Go! was converted into an MPEG-4 SD channel in most WIN areas, except Tasmania, Western Australia, and Northern NSW. In most WIN areas, except Northern NSW and Western Australia, 9Gem was upgraded to an MPEG-4 HD channel on 27 July 2023.[57][58] In Northern NSW, WIN upgraded 10 Bold and 10 Peach from MPEG-2 to MPEG-4 in November 2023, 10 Bold on 21 November 2023, and 10 Peach on 28 November 2023.[59] On 6 December 2023, 9Go! was converted into an MPEG-4 HD channel in most WIN areas, except Western Australia, and Northern NSW.

Programming edit

WIN Television carries the programming of all three commercial television stations in Australia. It is a sole affiliate of the Nine Network in all broadcast areas except for Northern NSW, but it is also an affiliate of the Seven Network in Griffith, New South Wales, and eastern South Australia and is an affiliate of Network 10 in Griffith, Northern New South Wales, and eastern South Australia. WIN Television has always produced regional programming, including the flagship local news service WIN News, that supplements programmes sourced from affiliates.

Since its inception, the network has produced and broadcast notable programmes, including Sportsview and Sportsworld, a review of international, national, and local sporting events.[10] From the first week of transmissions, the children's television series The Channel 4 Club was produced, with the children's television programme Stopwatch beginning in 1979.[10] The English-language educational programme You Say the Word began in 1971, catering to non-English-speaking immigrants. The long-running entertainment programme Variety Italian Style premiered in 1974, with Malcom Elliott initially hosting the short-lived Tonight Show in 1981 before being replaced by John Tingle a year later. To commemorate WIN Television's 21st year of broadcasting, a one-and-a-half-hour retrospective montage special was produced in 1983. WIN Television also co-produced the telemovie Last Chance in 1986 with a Canadian television production company.[10] Spanning close to a decade, the children's television series Goodsports was produced by WIN Television from 1991 to 2000.

WIN Television's current Australian programming productions consist of television shows including Fishing Australia and Alive and Cooking. On 17 May 2007, WIN Television announced a new midday programme called Susie; however, this was subsequently moved to a morning timeslot. It lasted until 2009.[15][17] WIN Television also broadcasts a range of exclusive overseas and domestically sourced programming, including The Ellen DeGeneres Show and Alive and Cooking; however, since 2021, WIN has broadcast a direct feed from Nine, excluding WIN News.

The only local programming broadcast by the WIN Network as of 2023 consists of half-hour local WIN News bulletins for its Nine stations in Regional Queensland, Southern New South Wales, Griffith, Regional Victoria, and Tasmania, as well as short news updates for its Ten station in northern New South Wales.

News and current affairs edit

 
WIN News Riverina reporter, Erin Willing interviewing Major Jeff Cocks.

WIN News is the network's local news service. Fourteen regional bulletins and news updates are presented from studios in Wollongong, with reporters and camera crews based in district newsrooms.[24] In most markets, WIN News may compete with Seven News or Nightly News.

WIN has produced independent news reports and bulletins since 1962 for its original Wollongong station. As well as the flagship nightly bulletin, WIN Television has in the past produced current affairs programming, including the community affairs programme Roving Eye, and Sunday Review, a weekly review of international, national, and local stories.[10]

WIN also broadcast WIN's All Australian News at 7 a.m. weekdays and weeknights at late nights, which featured highlights from news bulletins from its regional stations that ceased in June 2021 due to Nine's new affiliation agreement with WIN.

Sport edit

On most of the WIN Network's stations, it relays sports coverage broadcast from Nine's Wide World of Sports. On WIN's Northern New South Wales 10 station and other 10 stations in Griffith, Mildura, Regional WA, and Eastern SA owned by WIN and affiliated with 10, it relays sports coverage provided by 10 Sport. The Seven stations in Griffith, Mount Gambier, and the Riverland carry Seven Sport sports coverage.

Availability edit

WIN Television's transmissions are available from both free-to-air terrestrial transmitters in major regional centres and free-to-view satellite transmissions across regional and remote Western Australia on the Viewer Access Satellite Television service. WIN News bulletins are carried on the VAST service to allow viewers in remote areas of Central and Eastern Australia, as well as terrestrial reception blackspots, to obtain news local to their area.

Subscription cable is also provided by TransACT in the Australian Capital Territory and Neighbourhood Cable in Ballarat and Mildura.[60][61]

WIN broadcasts to a geographically large portion of regional and remote Australia[1] through owned-and-operated stations including RTQ Queensland, NRN Northern New South Wales, WIN Southern New South Wales & ACT, VTV Victoria, TVT Tasmania, MTN Griffith, STV Mildura, SES Mount Gambier, RTS Riverland, and WOW Western Australia.

WIN HD edit

WIN's high-definition channel, WIN HD, originally launched on 17 March 2008 as a sister to the Nine Network's rebranded high-definition simulcast, 9HD. WIN HD broadcast in 1080i high definition and was available on WIN's regional stations, RTQ Queensland, WIN Southern New South Wales and ACT, VTV Victoria, and TVT Tasmania. The channel broadcast breakaway programming from launch until 3 August 2009, when it was turned into a straight HD simulcast. WIN HD fully ceased broadcasting on 26 September 2010 with the launch of the HD multi-channel GEM (now 9Gem).

On 10 February 2016, WIN announced that it would launch its own HD simulcast in the coming months in response to Nine Network relaunching 9HD as its second high-definition channel.[22] WIN HD re-launched on 1 March 2016.[23] Four WIN regions were excluded from the 1 March launch date, although in four regions the launch was delayed: Griffith, Mildura, Eastern South Australia (2 March due to technical issues), and Regional Western Australia (10 March).[62][63] On 1 July 2016, with WIN's new programme supply agreement, the channel's programme schedule changed in line with WIN.[34] The channel ceased on 30 June 2021 with WIN's new programme supply agreement with Nine. WIN now re-broadcasts Nine HD across its Nine stations and 10 HD across Northern New South Wales.

Logos edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "About WIN Corporation". WIN Corporation. from the original on 9 February 2006. Retrieved 5 June 2007.
  2. ^ . Department of Communications, Information Technology and the Arts. 11 April 2007. Archived from the original on 1 September 2007. Retrieved 19 August 2007.
  3. ^ "Local TV on 18 March". Illawarra Mercury. 1 March 1962.
  4. ^ "WIN boasts list of firsts". Illawarra Mercury. 31 March 1989.
  5. ^ Tanner, Stephen (1 January 1995). "The Rise and Fall of Edmund Rouse" (PDF). Australian Studies in Journalism. University of Queensland. Retrieved 19 August 2007.
  6. ^ "WIN TV: A new rural view". The West Magazine. 20 March 1999. p. 51. Retrieved 19 August 2007.
  7. ^ . ACNielsen. Australian Film Commission. Archived from the original on 30 August 2007. Retrieved 18 August 2007.
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  9. ^ . Australian Communications & Media Authority. 21 July 2001. Archived from the original on 23 October 2007. Retrieved 18 August 2007.
  10. ^ a b c d e . University of Wollongong. 10 July 2007. Archived from the original on 2 March 2011. Retrieved 18 August 2007.
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  13. ^ "PBL talks with Gordon on regional TV close to collapse". Sydney Morning Herald. 11 August 2007. Retrieved 16 August 2007.
  14. ^ "WIN boss threatens to sever Nine link". Sydney Morning Herald. 6 August 2007. Retrieved 16 August 2007.
  15. ^ a b c . The Australian. 16 August 2007. Archived from the original on 10 December 2007. Retrieved 16 August 2007.
  16. ^ . The Australian. 5 September 2007. Archived from the original on 7 September 2007. Retrieved 5 September 2007.
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  18. ^ Meade, Amanda (30 June 2010). . The Australian. p. 4. Archived from the original on 12 May 2011. Retrieved 30 June 2010.
  19. ^ Knox, David (1 May 2012). "WIN Gold launches on Channel 84 | TV Tonight". TV Tonight. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  20. ^ Knox, David (13 July 2013). "WIN launches GOLD2". TV Tonight. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
  21. ^ Knox, David (26 November 2015). "Viewers in the bush kept waiting for 9HD as WIN cites "short notice"". TV Tonight. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  22. ^ a b Knox, David (10 February 2016). "No 7flix for Prime, new channels "soon" for WIN". TV Tonight. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  23. ^ a b Knox, David (26 February 2016). "WIN HD, 9Life launch for regional viewers March 1st". TV Tonight. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  24. ^ a b . WIN Corporation. 5 February 2007. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 2 March 2008.
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  26. ^ Christensen, Nic (10 February 2016). "WIN takes Nine to court to try and block its live streaming service 9Now in regional areas". mUmBRELLA. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
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  29. ^ White, Dominic (29 April 2016). "Nine and Southern Cross in multi-year affiliation deal". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  30. ^ Mitchell, Jake (29 April 2016). "Nine win shows media law absurdity: WIN chief Andrew Lancaster". The Australian. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  31. ^ Mitchell, Jake; Davidson, Darren (2 May 2016). "Nine, Ten to swap affiliate partners". The Australian. Retrieved 2 May 2016.
  32. ^ (PDF). Ten Network Holdings. 23 May 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 June 2016. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
  33. ^ Mitchell, Jake (23 May 2016). "Bruce Gordon's WIN confirms affiliate deal with Ten Network". The Australian. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
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  38. ^ Knox, David (3 July 2016). "Nine reaches regional WA agreement with WIN / Prime". TV Tonight. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  39. ^ Debelle, Penny (18 June 2016). "Nine and WIN-TV shows might be axed from screens in the Riverland and South-East". The Advertiser. Retrieved 19 June 2016.
  40. ^ Davidson, Darren (31 January 2017). "WIN in talks to buy northern NSW TV station". The Australian. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  41. ^ "Asset swap! SCA & WIN trading regional TV for cash, FM licence". Mediaweek. 1 February 2017. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  42. ^ Bingemann, Mitchell (20 February 2017). "Southern Cross pulls plug on regional deal talks with WIN". The Australian. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  43. ^ Ward, Miranda (20 February 2017). "Southern Cross Media withdraws from discussions with WIN over assets media deal". Mumbrella. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  44. ^ Burrowes, Tim (28 March 2017). "SCA sells northern NSW television assets to WIN for $55m". Mumbrella. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  45. ^ Bingemann, Mitchell (28 March 2017). "Southern Cross Media sells northern NSW TV operations to WIN". The Australian. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  46. ^ Mason, Max (28 March 2017). "Southern Cross to sell northern NSW TV business to WIN". The Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  47. ^ "Southern Cross Austereo: Agreement of Sale of NNSW TV Operations and Trading Update" (PDF). Australian Securities Exchange. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  48. ^ Knox, David (20 May 2017). "WIN completes deal for Southern Cross Northern NSW". TV Tonight. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  49. ^ "WIN is Coming to Northern NSW and The Gold Coast on September 1". WIN Television. 17 August 2017. Retrieved 17 August 2017.[dead link]
  50. ^ a b Cronin, Seanna (4 August 2018). "Foxtel to launch 24 hour news on WIN". Cairns Post. Cairns. Retrieved 4 August 2018.
  51. ^ Mason, Max (28 May 2018). "Australian News Channel and WIN partner to bring Sky News to free-to-air for first time". The Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  52. ^ Rolfe, John (28 May 2018). "Free Sky News will be shown on regional TV". News.com.au. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  53. ^ "TVSN Changes". WIN Television. 26 August 2018. from the original on 1 September 2018. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
  54. ^ "WIN Channel 8 changing to HD". WIN Television. 26 March 2021. Retrieved 10 June 2023.[dead link]
  55. ^ Mediaweek (11 March 2021). "Nine changes regional TV partners and signs deal with WIN". Mediaweek. Retrieved 16 May 2021.
  56. ^ Knox, David (20 March 2022). "WIN TV turns 60 | TV Tonight". TV Tonight. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  57. ^ . WIN Television. Archived from the original on 23 August 2023. Retrieved 25 April 2023.
  58. ^ Knox, David (28 July 2023). "WIN upgrades 9GEM to HD | TV Tonight". TV Tonight. Retrieved 29 July 2023.
  59. ^ "WIN Network Technology Improvement | WIN Television". WIN Television. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
  60. ^ . TransACT. Archived from the original on 20 August 2007. Retrieved 19 August 2007.
  61. ^ . Neighbourhood Cable. Archived from the original on 2 March 2007. Retrieved 19 August 2007.
  62. ^ "WIN HD and 9LIFE". WIN Television. 1 March 2016. from the original on 1 March 2016. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  63. ^ @WIN_TV (1 March 2016). "To our Tas, Griffith & S.A viewers, the roll-out of #WINHD & @9LIFE will be delayed until tomorrow, we apologies for the inconvenience" (Tweet) – via Twitter.[dead link]

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Corporate Site

television, this, article, about, australian, television, network, network, flagship, station, station, other, television, networks, called, australian, television, network, owned, corporation, that, based, wollongong, south, wales, commenced, transmissions, m. This article is about the Australian television network For the network s flagship station see WIN TV station For other television networks called WIN see WIN TV WIN Television is an Australian television network owned by WIN Corporation that is based in Wollongong New South Wales WIN commenced transmissions on 18 March 1962 as a single television station covering the Wollongong region The WIN Network has since grown to cover much of regional Australia The network s name WIN originates from its first station Wollongong s WIN 4 WIN has a programme supply agreement with metropolitan broadcaster Nine Network covering its stations in Regional Queensland Southern and Western New South Wales Griffith Regional Victoria Mildura Tasmania Eastern South Australia and Regional Western Australia WIN also has a programme supply agreement with third placed metropolitan broadcaster Network 10 for its Northern New South Wales station 1 WIN also produces and broadcasts weeknight half hour local news bulletins across its Queensland southern New South Wales Victoria and Tasmania markets as WIN News 2 WIN TelevisionCountryAustraliaBroadcast areaRegional Queensland Northern NSW amp Gold Coast Southern NSW amp ACT Griffith Regional Victoria Mildura Tasmania Eastern SA Regional WAAffiliatesNine NetworkSeven Network Griffith and Eastern SA Network 10 Gold Coast Northern NSW Griffith Mildura Eastern SA and Regional WA HeadquartersWollongong head office Ingleburn Sydney national play out centre ProgrammingLanguage s EnglishPicture format1080i HDTV downscaled to 16 9 576i for the SDTV feed OwnershipOwnerWIN CorporationSister channelsWIN HD9Gem9Go 9LifeTVSNGOLDHistoryLaunched18 March 1962 62 years ago 1962 03 18 LinksWebsitewintv wbr com wbr auAvailabilityTerrestrialFreeview WIN owned virtual 8 88 5 in Northern NSW and Gold Coast Freeview WIN HD virtual 80 50 in Northern NSW and Gold Coast Contents 1 Regional services 2 History 2 1 Early years in Wollongong 2 2 1980 1999 aggregation and expansion 2 3 2000 2016 Nine affiliation 2 4 2016 2021 10 affiliation 2 5 2021 present Return to Nine affiliation 3 Programming 3 1 News and current affairs 3 2 Sport 4 Availability 4 1 WIN HD 5 Logos 6 References 7 External linksRegional services editThrough its many television broadcast licences WIN re broadcasts metropolitan network content into regional Australian markets as follows WIN Network service areas Licence area Affiliation Call signNorthern New South Wales Network 10 NRNSouthern New South WalesAustralian Capital Territory Nine Network WINGriffith Seven Network MTNNine Network AMNNetwork 10 MDN a Regional Queensland Nine Network RTQEastern South Australia Seven Network SES RTSNine Network SDS RDSNetwork 10 MGS LRSTasmania Nine Network TVTNetwork 10 TDT b Mildura Nine Network STVNetwork 10 MDV c Regional Victoria Nine Network VTVRegional Western Australia Nine Network WOWNetwork 10 GDW SDW VDW WDW d Supplementary licence owned entirely by WIN Supplementary licence jointly owned by WIN and Southern Cross Austereo Supplementary licence jointly owned by WIN and Seven West Media Supplementary licence jointly owned by WIN and Seven West MediaHistory editEarly years in Wollongong edit Main article WIN TV station Television Wollongong Transmission Limited TWT was incorporated on 4 October 1955 by a group of local businessmen Five years later it was awarded a licence by the Postmaster General s Department over a number of other groups aligned to Sydney based stations ATN 7 and TCN 9 to broadcast to the Illawarra and South Coast regions 3 The new station was to broadcast on the VHF 4 frequency using the callsign WIN which stood for Wollongong Illawarra New South Wales in line with other Australian call signs 1980 1999 aggregation and expansion edit nbsp The West Magazine reporting WIN Television as the second commercial broadcaster in regional Western Australia During this period WIN expanded through the purchase of stations in Victoria Queensland and New South Wales In 1984 WIN became the first regional television station to transmit stereophonic sound 4 Close links between WIN Television and the Nine Network ensured the Nine Network affiliation for southern New South Wales when aggregation occurred in March 1989 The changes meant that WIN expanded into the rest of southern New South Wales launching new stations in Canberra Orange Bathurst Dubbo and Wagga Wagga with new buildings and studios built in Orange Wagga and Canberra Aggregation also provided the network with two additional competitors The Prime Network and Capital Television In 1990 WIN purchased Queensland station Star TV with stations in Rockhampton RTQ and the Darling Downs DDQ and SDQ just weeks before aggregation was to occur in regional Queensland The station had already been set to become a Network 10 affiliate under its previous owners however WIN s links with the Nine Network enabled it to clinch the Nine Network affiliation away from QTV which was then forced to affiliate with third placed Network Ten with just days to go ENT Limited a Launceston based company that owned a number of television and radio stations in regional Victoria and Tasmania was taken over by WIN in 1994 5 Television Victoria and TasTV were as a result rebranded as WIN Television The network further expanded to Griffith in 1998 when WIN purchased MTN 9 Griffith and its supplementary station AMN 31 from its local owners As MTN had been affiliated with WIN since the early 1990s the station was easily integrated into the network WIN became regional Western Australia s second commercial television network on 26 March 1999 after winning the rights tender in 1997 6 Prior to the launch of the new station GWN held a commercial monopoly on the market GWN became an affiliate of the Seven Network while WIN took a combination of Nine Network and Network Ten programming Despite Nine s traditional ratings dominance throughout most of the country incumbent GWN has remained the market s most watched station 7 The second ratings survey of 2006 placed WIN Television with a 34 7 commercial audience share in prime time compared to the Golden West Network with 65 3 8 Also in 1999 WIN purchased two stations in South Australia SES 8 in Mount Gambier and RTS 5a in the Riverland region They became known as WIN SA In 2002 supplementary licences were granted under Section 38A of the Broadcasting Services Act allowing the network to launch a WIN Ten service using the MGS call sign in Mount Gambier and LRS in the Riverland This enabled the main SES RTS station to be a sole Nine Network affiliate which lasted until 2007 when a supply agreement was made with Seven 9 As well as the flagship weeknightly WIN News bulletin WIN has been prolific in broadcasting relevant programmes for its audience In the past it produced current affairs programming including the community affairs programme Roving Eye and Sunday Review a weekly review of international national and local stories 10 It produced a mid week rugby league wrap panel show in the mid 1990s while in 1995 WIN Television Queensland produced its own rugby league coverage by televising games featuring the fledgeling North Queensland Cowboys in their maiden ARL Winfield Cup competition season 2000 2016 Nine affiliation edit nbsp A camera operator for WIN News Riverina WIN Television began to introduce digital television soon after it became available to metropolitan areas in January 2001 Under Section 38A of the Broadcasting Services Act the network was able to introduce in partnership with other stations additional digital only Network Ten affiliates These included Tasmania s TDT launched in late 2003 in partnership with Southern Cross Broadcasting and Mildura s MDV in January 2006 with Prime Television On 30 May 2007 WIN purchased NWS from Southern Cross Broadcasting for A 105 million Similarly STW Perth owned by Sunraysia Television and affiliated with the Nine Network was purchased on 8 June 2007 for A 163 1 million 11 Despite the station s ownership of Nine Perth the regional WIN WA service continued to broadcast Ten News Perth produced for and shown on rival Perth station Ten Perth until 27 August 2007 when Ten West came into service 12 A conflict between WIN and its long time metropolitan partner the Nine Network arose in mid 2007 with PBL Media Nine s parent company requesting 40 percent of the network s advertising revenue in return for programme supply WIN s owner WIN Corporation rejected this offer expecting to pay only 29 a 3 decrease from the previous contract and in line with many of the network s competitors such as Prime Television and Southern Cross Ten 13 The network s owner Bruce Gordon subsequently threatened to sever the network s affiliation after negotiations stagnated stating that his previous position at Paramount Pictures meant he could programme the network independently 14 On 16 August 2007 WIN Television dropped key Nine Network programmes from its daytime television schedule including Mornings with Kerri Anne and National Nine News Morning Edition 15 WIN also secured a new programme supply agreement for its regional South Australian station with Nine s rival Seven Network Announced on 4 September 2007 the new programme schedule included a mixture of Seven and existing WIN programming commencing on 1 October 2007 16 WIN also started producing some local Australian programmes to replace key Nine content including Alive and Cooking and Susie 15 17 as well as the independently sourced The Ellen DeGeneres Show WIN also produced Fishing Australia as part of its local content output on the WIN Network Two years later WIN officially reinstated its supply of Nine content to regional South Australia with a new supplementary channel WIN SA relaying NWS from Adelaide On 9 August 2009 WIN began transmission of the new digital channel GO on channel 88 in Southern NSW Regional Victoria Tasmania and Regional Queensland It soon reached Mildura in 2010 and regional SA in 2011 In June 2010 playout was moved from WIN s Wollongong headquarters to its new Media Hub facility in the south west Sydney suburb of Ingleburn co owned with ABC Television 18 On 26 September 2010 WIN began transmission of the HD digital channel GEM on channel 80 in Southern NSW Regional Victoria Tasmania and Regional Queensland On 1 May 2012 WIN began transmission of an SD digital infomercial channel Gold on channel 84 19 The second infomercial channel Gold2 began on 13 July 2013 as a five hour timeshift of Gold 20 Following Nine s launch of 9HD and 9Life on 26 November 2015 and WIN s promise of following suit 21 WIN began broadcasting a coming soon test pattern on channels 85 and 86 on 10 February 2016 Both channels began broadcasting on 1 March 2016 22 23 As a result their channel listing was reshuffled to match Nine s metropolitan with 9Gem on channel 82 9Go on channel 83 9Life on channel 84 Extra on channel 85 and Gold on channel 86 The network continued to produce its own local news service WIN News for most of its markets throughout its Nine affiliation although requests for increased revenue by Nine repeatedly threatened the news division s viability By 2016 only twelve bulletins were being produced and presented 24 2016 2021 10 affiliation edit After Nine launched its new online catch up video on demand and live streaming service 9Now on 27 January 2016 WIN filed a lawsuit against Nine claiming that live streaming into regional areas breached their exclusive affiliation agreement 25 26 Justice Hammerschlag of the NSW Supreme Court dismissed the case on 28 April 2016 ruling that the definition of broadcasting in WIN s affiliation agreement with the Nine Network did not cover internet streaming and that Nine is under no express or implied obligation not to do it 27 28 Shortly after WIN s legal defeat Nine announced a new 500 million five year programme supply agreement with Southern Cross Austereo the Ten affiliate This saw Southern Cross Austereo s stations in Southern NSW the ACT and regional areas in Victoria and Queensland switch to Nine affiliation at midnight on 1 July 2016 29 With that announcement WIN was effectively stripped of its 27 year partnership with Nine In response WIN entered affiliation talks with Network Ten 30 31 in which Gordon held a significant stake reaching a final agreement on 23 May 2016 From 1 July 2016 WIN carried Ten programming into its regional Queensland Southern NSW Victoria Tasmania South Australia and Western Australia markets 32 33 34 Supplementary station deals were left until late due to disagreement over the rate that loss making stations should make to Nine Network With just days left deals were secured for South Australia Griffith and Tasmania 35 36 However no deal was secured for the Western Australia joint venture West Digital Television before 1 July 37 but a deal was later finalised on 2 July 2016 with the relay of Nine content commencing that night 38 39 The channel changes reshuffled WIN s LCN listing with One on LCNs 81 and 86 Eleven on LCN 82 TVSN on LCN 84 and Gold on LCN 85 WIN and WIN HD remained on LCNs 8 and 80 WIN also relocated its SD simulcast from LCN 81 to LCN 88 Negotiations in January 2017 for WIN to acquire Northern New South Wales station NRN in exchange for WIN s Wollongong radio station i98FM with Southern Cross Austereo failed 40 41 42 43 although a deal was secured on 28 March 2017 for the sole sale of NRN to WIN for 55 million 44 45 46 The sale took effect on 31 May 2017 47 48 NRN was rebranded as WIN on 1 September 2017 with playout and transmission transferred to WIN while the LCNs were reshuffled to align with WIN s other stations although they stayed as 5 numbered due to 8 numbering already held by Nine owned NBN Television for Northern NSW 49 On 28 May 2018 WIN announced a new programme supply agreement with the Australian News Channel to carry Sky News Australia content on a new free to air channel Sky News on WIN which launched on 2 September 2018 50 The channel consisted of mixed Sky News and Fox Sports News programming along with WIN s All Australian News while Sky programmes gained access to WIN s regional news stories 51 52 50 WIN converted TVSN to MPEG 4 SD on 30 August 2018 two days before the launch of Sky News on WIN 53 On 31 October 2018 at 6 30 p m during The Project WIN updated its logo launching at the same time as the launch of Network 10 s new logo WIN also rebranded its versions of 10 s multi channels One and Eleven into WIN Boss later changed to WIN Bold in December and WIN Peach On 29 March 2021 the WIN channel in the Illawarra region was converted to MPEG 4 HD as an experiment for other WIN areas 54 On 14 May 2021 it was reverted to the MPEG 2 format in SD after viewers complained that they could no longer get the WIN channel on LCN 8 2021 present Return to Nine affiliation edit On 12 March 2021 Nine announced it had secured a new programme supply agreement with its original partner WIN Network across regional Australia beginning 1 July 2021 in effect dumping Southern Cross Austereo which was forced to return to relaying third placed Ten content The seven year deal sees WIN pay around 50 percent of broadcast advertising revenue to Nine Entertainment Co plus advertising time for Nine s properties on WIN s television and radio assets WIN also integrated advertising sales services for Nine s O amp O regional stations NBN and NTD Nine CEO Hugh Marks explained that while our relationship with Southern Cross has been strong over the last five years the opportunities presented by the WIN Network to both extend the reach of Nine s premium content into more regional markets under one agreement and to work cooperatively with them on a national and local news operation mean this is the right time for us to return to WIN 55 Also for the first time WIN now broadcasts Nine content under Nine branding WIN s multi channels have again been rearranged with 9Gem on channel 81 9Go on channel 82 and 9Life on channel 83 while TVSN and Gold would continue to broadcast on channels 84 and 85 but despite the return the nine dots were not reinstated on the network logo WIN still broadcasts Network Ten content on its northern New South Wales station On 18 March 2022 WIN Television celebrated 60 years of broadcasting across Wollongong and the Illawarra 56 On 16 June 2022 WIN Television converted 9Gem and 9Go to MPEG 4 SD in Tasmania via WIN s Tasmanian station TVT On 22 March 2023 WIN Television announced that they would be converting all of their remaining MPEG 2 channels to MPEG 4 later that same year On 22 May 2023 9Gem was converted into an MPEG 4 SD channel in most WIN areas except Tasmania Western Australia and Northern NSW On 19 June 2023 9Go was converted into an MPEG 4 SD channel in most WIN areas except Tasmania Western Australia and Northern NSW In most WIN areas except Northern NSW and Western Australia 9Gem was upgraded to an MPEG 4 HD channel on 27 July 2023 57 58 In Northern NSW WIN upgraded 10 Bold and 10 Peach from MPEG 2 to MPEG 4 in November 2023 10 Bold on 21 November 2023 and 10 Peach on 28 November 2023 59 On 6 December 2023 9Go was converted into an MPEG 4 HD channel in most WIN areas except Western Australia and Northern NSW Programming editWIN Television carries the programming of all three commercial television stations in Australia It is a sole affiliate of the Nine Network in all broadcast areas except for Northern NSW but it is also an affiliate of the Seven Network in Griffith New South Wales and eastern South Australia and is an affiliate of Network 10 in Griffith Northern New South Wales and eastern South Australia WIN Television has always produced regional programming including the flagship local news service WIN News that supplements programmes sourced from affiliates Since its inception the network has produced and broadcast notable programmes including Sportsview and Sportsworld a review of international national and local sporting events 10 From the first week of transmissions the children s television series The Channel 4 Club was produced with the children s television programme Stopwatch beginning in 1979 10 The English language educational programme You Say the Word began in 1971 catering to non English speaking immigrants The long running entertainment programme Variety Italian Style premiered in 1974 with Malcom Elliott initially hosting the short lived Tonight Show in 1981 before being replaced by John Tingle a year later To commemorate WIN Television s 21st year of broadcasting a one and a half hour retrospective montage special was produced in 1983 WIN Television also co produced the telemovie Last Chance in 1986 with a Canadian television production company 10 Spanning close to a decade the children s television series Goodsports was produced by WIN Television from 1991 to 2000 WIN Television s current Australian programming productions consist of television shows including Fishing Australia and Alive and Cooking On 17 May 2007 WIN Television announced a new midday programme called Susie however this was subsequently moved to a morning timeslot It lasted until 2009 15 17 WIN Television also broadcasts a range of exclusive overseas and domestically sourced programming including The Ellen DeGeneres Show and Alive and Cooking however since 2021 WIN has broadcast a direct feed from Nine excluding WIN News The only local programming broadcast by the WIN Network as of 2023 update consists of half hour local WIN News bulletins for its Nine stations in Regional Queensland Southern New South Wales Griffith Regional Victoria and Tasmania as well as short news updates for its Ten station in northern New South Wales News and current affairs edit Further information WIN News nbsp WIN News Riverina reporter Erin Willing interviewing Major Jeff Cocks WIN News is the network s local news service Fourteen regional bulletins and news updates are presented from studios in Wollongong with reporters and camera crews based in district newsrooms 24 In most markets WIN News may compete with Seven News or Nightly News WIN has produced independent news reports and bulletins since 1962 for its original Wollongong station As well as the flagship nightly bulletin WIN Television has in the past produced current affairs programming including the community affairs programme Roving Eye and Sunday Review a weekly review of international national and local stories 10 WIN also broadcast WIN s All Australian News at 7 a m weekdays and weeknights at late nights which featured highlights from news bulletins from its regional stations that ceased in June 2021 due to Nine s new affiliation agreement with WIN Sport edit On most of the WIN Network s stations it relays sports coverage broadcast from Nine s Wide World of Sports On WIN s Northern New South Wales 10 station and other 10 stations in Griffith Mildura Regional WA and Eastern SA owned by WIN and affiliated with 10 it relays sports coverage provided by 10 Sport The Seven stations in Griffith Mount Gambier and the Riverland carry Seven Sport sports coverage Availability editWIN Television s transmissions are available from both free to air terrestrial transmitters in major regional centres and free to view satellite transmissions across regional and remote Western Australia on the Viewer Access Satellite Television service WIN News bulletins are carried on the VAST service to allow viewers in remote areas of Central and Eastern Australia as well as terrestrial reception blackspots to obtain news local to their area Subscription cable is also provided by TransACT in the Australian Capital Territory and Neighbourhood Cable in Ballarat and Mildura 60 61 WIN broadcasts to a geographically large portion of regional and remote Australia 1 through owned and operated stations including RTQ Queensland NRN Northern New South Wales WIN Southern New South Wales amp ACT VTV Victoria TVT Tasmania MTN Griffith STV Mildura SES Mount Gambier RTS Riverland and WOW Western Australia WIN HD edit WIN s high definition channel WIN HD originally launched on 17 March 2008 as a sister to the Nine Network s rebranded high definition simulcast 9HD WIN HD broadcast in 1080i high definition and was available on WIN s regional stations RTQ Queensland WIN Southern New South Wales and ACT VTV Victoria and TVT Tasmania The channel broadcast breakaway programming from launch until 3 August 2009 when it was turned into a straight HD simulcast WIN HD fully ceased broadcasting on 26 September 2010 with the launch of the HD multi channel GEM now 9Gem On 10 February 2016 WIN announced that it would launch its own HD simulcast in the coming months in response to Nine Network relaunching 9HD as its second high definition channel 22 WIN HD re launched on 1 March 2016 23 Four WIN regions were excluded from the 1 March launch date although in four regions the launch was delayed Griffith Mildura Eastern South Australia 2 March due to technical issues and Regional Western Australia 10 March 62 63 On 1 July 2016 with WIN s new programme supply agreement the channel s programme schedule changed in line with WIN 34 The channel ceased on 30 June 2021 with WIN s new programme supply agreement with Nine WIN now re broadcasts Nine HD across its Nine stations and 10 HD across Northern New South Wales Logos edit nbsp 30 January 2006 14 January 2008 nbsp 14 January 2008 present nbsp 1 July 2016 31 October 2018References edit a b About WIN Corporation WIN Corporation Archived from the original on 9 February 2006 Retrieved 5 June 2007 Local content on regional TV Department of Communications Information Technology and the Arts 11 April 2007 Archived from the original on 1 September 2007 Retrieved 19 August 2007 Local TV on 18 March Illawarra Mercury 1 March 1962 WIN boasts list of firsts Illawarra Mercury 31 March 1989 Tanner Stephen 1 January 1995 The Rise and Fall of Edmund Rouse PDF Australian Studies in Journalism University of Queensland Retrieved 19 August 2007 WIN TV A new rural view The West Magazine 20 March 1999 p 51 Retrieved 19 August 2007 Trends in audience share ACNielsen Australian Film Commission Archived from the original on 30 August 2007 Retrieved 18 August 2007 7 Years on and GWN is still at the top PDF Press release Prime Television 15 January 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 20 August 2006 Retrieved 16 January 2007 ABA determines simulcast start dates for regional digital TV services Australian Communications amp Media Authority 21 July 2001 Archived from the original on 23 October 2007 Retrieved 18 August 2007 a b c d e WIN4 Company Records and News Film University of Wollongong 10 July 2007 Archived from the original on 2 March 2011 Retrieved 18 August 2007 WIN buys Channel 9 Adelaide The Age 8 June 2007 Retrieved 8 June 2007 Klinger Peter 21 June 2007 Poor state of Perth 9 shocks new owner The West Australian PBL talks with Gordon on regional TV close to collapse Sydney Morning Herald 11 August 2007 Retrieved 16 August 2007 WIN boss threatens to sever Nine link Sydney Morning Herald 6 August 2007 Retrieved 16 August 2007 a b c War as WIN junks key Nine shows The Australian 16 August 2007 Archived from the original on 10 December 2007 Retrieved 16 August 2007 WIN turns to Seven The Australian 5 September 2007 Archived from the original on 7 September 2007 Retrieved 5 September 2007 a b WIN Television to produce new regional daytime program Susie WIN Television ebroadcast com au 17 May 2005 Archived from the original on 26 June 2007 Retrieved 17 May 2007 Meade Amanda 30 June 2010 ABC s problem hit tech centre opens to criticism The Australian p 4 Archived from the original on 12 May 2011 Retrieved 30 June 2010 Knox David 1 May 2012 WIN Gold launches on Channel 84 TV Tonight TV Tonight Retrieved 29 April 2023 Knox David 13 July 2013 WIN launches GOLD2 TV Tonight Retrieved 22 January 2016 Knox David 26 November 2015 Viewers in the bush kept waiting for 9HD as WIN cites short notice TV Tonight Retrieved 10 February 2016 a b Knox David 10 February 2016 No 7flix for Prime new channels soon for WIN TV Tonight Retrieved 10 February 2016 a b Knox David 26 February 2016 WIN HD 9Life launch for regional viewers March 1st TV Tonight Retrieved 26 February 2016 a b WIN Television Increases News Production Capability WIN Corporation 5 February 2007 Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 2 March 2008 Mason Max 10 February 2016 Bruce Gordon s WIN takes Nine to court over streaming The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 29 April 2016 Christensen Nic 10 February 2016 WIN takes Nine to court to try and block its live streaming service 9Now in regional areas mUmBRELLA Retrieved 29 April 2016 McDonald Philippa 28 April 2016 Regional broadcaster WIN loses bid to stop Channel Nine streaming programs Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 29 April 2016 Knox David 28 April 2016 Nine victory in 9NOW streaming lawsuit filed by WIN TV TV Tonight TV Tonight Retrieved 29 April 2016 White Dominic 29 April 2016 Nine and Southern Cross in multi year affiliation deal The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 29 April 2016 Mitchell Jake 29 April 2016 Nine win shows media law absurdity WIN chief Andrew Lancaster The Australian Retrieved 29 April 2016 Mitchell Jake Davidson Darren 2 May 2016 Nine Ten to swap affiliate partners The Australian Retrieved 2 May 2016 TEN And WIN Network Announce New Program Supply Agreement PDF Ten Network Holdings 23 May 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 19 June 2016 Retrieved 23 May 2016 Mitchell Jake 23 May 2016 Bruce Gordon s WIN confirms affiliate deal with Ten Network The Australian Retrieved 23 May 2016 a b Knox David 23 May 2016 WIN and TEN confirm five year affiliate deal TV Tonight Retrieved 30 May 2016 Mitchell Jake 29 June 2016 Nine signs affiliate deals with WIN The Australian Retrieved 29 June 2016 Jones Erin 29 June 2016 Nine Network television programs to remain on air in the Riverland and South East The Advertiser Retrieved 30 June 2016 Benuik David 18 June 2016 Tasmania could go from Channel 9 to Channel Nein as network yet to sign deal to broadcast in state Sunday Tasmanian Retrieved 19 June 2016 Knox David 3 July 2016 Nine reaches regional WA agreement with WIN Prime TV Tonight Retrieved 3 July 2016 Debelle Penny 18 June 2016 Nine and WIN TV shows might be axed from screens in the Riverland and South East The Advertiser Retrieved 19 June 2016 Davidson Darren 31 January 2017 WIN in talks to buy northern NSW TV station The Australian Retrieved 23 February 2017 Asset swap SCA amp WIN trading regional TV for cash FM licence Mediaweek 1 February 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Bingemann Mitchell 20 February 2017 Southern Cross pulls plug on regional deal talks with WIN The Australian Retrieved 23 February 2017 Ward Miranda 20 February 2017 Southern Cross Media withdraws from discussions with WIN over assets media deal Mumbrella Retrieved 23 February 2017 Burrowes Tim 28 March 2017 SCA sells northern NSW television assets to WIN for 55m Mumbrella Retrieved 28 March 2017 Bingemann Mitchell 28 March 2017 Southern Cross Media sells northern NSW TV operations to WIN The Australian Retrieved 28 March 2017 Mason Max 28 March 2017 Southern Cross to sell northern NSW TV business to WIN The Australian Financial Review Retrieved 28 March 2017 Southern Cross Austereo Agreement of Sale of NNSW TV Operations and Trading Update PDF Australian Securities Exchange Retrieved 20 May 2017 Knox David 20 May 2017 WIN completes deal for Southern Cross Northern NSW TV Tonight Retrieved 20 May 2017 WIN is Coming to Northern NSW and The Gold Coast on September 1 WIN Television 17 August 2017 Retrieved 17 August 2017 dead link a b Cronin Seanna 4 August 2018 Foxtel to launch 24 hour news on WIN Cairns Post Cairns Retrieved 4 August 2018 Mason Max 28 May 2018 Australian News Channel and WIN partner to bring Sky News to free to air for first time The Australian Financial Review Retrieved 28 May 2018 Rolfe John 28 May 2018 Free Sky News will be shown on regional TV News com au Retrieved 28 May 2018 TVSN Changes WIN Television 26 August 2018 Archived from the original on 1 September 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2023 WIN Channel 8 changing to HD WIN Television 26 March 2021 Retrieved 10 June 2023 dead link Mediaweek 11 March 2021 Nine changes regional TV partners and signs deal with WIN Mediaweek Retrieved 16 May 2021 Knox David 20 March 2022 WIN TV turns 60 TV Tonight TV Tonight Retrieved 29 April 2023 WIN Network Technology Improvement WIN Television WIN Television Archived from the original on 23 August 2023 Retrieved 25 April 2023 Knox David 28 July 2023 WIN upgrades 9GEM to HD TV Tonight TV Tonight Retrieved 29 July 2023 WIN Network Technology Improvement WIN Television WIN Television Retrieved 2 November 2023 TransTV Channel Lineup TransACT Archived from the original on 20 August 2007 Retrieved 19 August 2007 Neighbourhood Cable Channel Lineup Neighbourhood Cable Archived from the original on 2 March 2007 Retrieved 19 August 2007 WIN HD and 9LIFE WIN Television 1 March 2016 Archived from the original on 1 March 2016 Retrieved 1 March 2016 WIN TV 1 March 2016 To our Tas Griffith amp S A viewers the roll out of WINHD amp 9LIFE will be delayed until tomorrow we apologies for the inconvenience Tweet via Twitter dead link External links edit nbsp Television portal nbsp Australia portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to WIN Television Official website Corporate Site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WIN Television amp oldid 1193533910, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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