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TNT (Australian TV station)





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TNT is an Australian TV station based in Hobart, Tasmania, owned by Southern Cross Austereo. Originally broadcasting to northern Tasmania, it has broadcast to the whole of Tasmania since aggregation of the Tasmanian television market in 1994.

TNT
Channels
  • Virtual: 6
  • BrandingSeven
    Programming
    AffiliationsSeven
    Ownership
    Owner
  • (Southern Cross Television Pty Ltd)
  • History

    First air date

    26 May 1962[1]

    Former channel number(s)

    Analog: 9 (VHF) (1962–2013)

    Former affiliations

    Independent (1962–1994)
    TasTV (1985–1989)
    Southern Cross Network (1989–1994)
    Network Ten (1994–2008)

    Call sign meaning

    Television
    Northern
    Tasmania
    Technical information

    Licensing authority

    Australian Communications and Media Authority
    ERPsee table below
    HAATsee table below
    Transmitter coordinatessee table below

    History

    edit

    Local programming

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    TNT produces the market's number one news bulletin daily plus local lifestyle and sports programming.

    Previous local programmes produced by TNT-9 include Sports Club (weekly sports review), Quiz Quest (children's game show), The Saturday Night Show (variety), Down the Line (morning talk/local events), The Saturday Morning Fun Show (kids), Tasmanian New Faces (talent) and annual coverage of Targa Tasmania and The Launceston Cup.

    News

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    The station produces its flagship news program, Nightly News (formerly Southern Cross News), broadcast live every night at 6:00pm and presented from the Launceston and Hobart studios. Short news updates are also produced and broadcast throughout the day alongside the national Seven News Updates. The bulletin is consistently the highest rating television program in Tasmania.[7] A shortened version of the day's bulletin is upload by the station's YouTube channel, featuring only local news and sport reports alongside weather forecasts.

    The station originally planned to retitle the bulletin Seven News Tasmania on 1 July 2018 to coincide with the station's rebrand as Seven Tasmania. But the relaunch was delayed without any notice given.[8] When asked by ABC's Media Watch, the CEO of SCA Grant Blackley stated that the Seven Network did not want their name featured on any output they do not control, so SCA was coming up with a new brand.[9] On 3 December 2018, the bulletin changed its title to Nightly News, a brand the station formerly used from the 1990s up to the early 2000s.

    Outside of this bulletin, Seven Tasmania airs national news and current affairs output from the Seven Network, including:

    TNT simulcasts the weekday edition of Seven News at 4 from HSV-7 in Melbourne, along with Seven Morning News at 11.30 on weekdays and Seven News at 5 on weekends from ATN-7 in Sydney.

    Current presenters

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    Main anchors
    Sport presenter


    Weather presenters

    Non-news output

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    Hook, Line and Sinker

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    The fishing show Hook, Line and Sinker is the most popular Tasmanian-made program airing and is broadcast Australia-wide. The program is hosted by former news journalists Andrew Hart and Nick Duigan.

    Renovation Relief

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    Renovation Relief is a DIY Program hosted by famous wood-chopper David Foster in which he and a team of people from sponsors (i.e. Gunns) renovate a house, most commonly for people who have done something for the community or have enabled children.

    Targa Torque

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    Broadcast every night during Targa Tasmania fortnight, Andrew Hart and Nick Duigan report and review the events of the day.

    Holiday at Home

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    Holiday at Home is a lifestyle program which promotes places to stay and things to do in Tasmania.

    Burnie Ten – Ten Week Challenge

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    For the ten weeks leading up to the Burnie Ten, Mark Connelly trains a group of people in a program sponsored by Seven Tasmania. Weekly updates are broadcast during commercial breaks. In the early years of the program, people who took part were well known in Tasmania, however in 2006, a Launceston family were trained to run the event.

    Sports coverage

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    Seven Tasmania airs sports coverage from Seven Network, which includes Australian Rules Football, Horse racing, cricket, tennis, golf and motorsport. In the 1990s, the station aired Network Ten's daily sports program Sports Tonight as part of its dual-affiliation, however this was eventually replaced by Seven's current affairs program, Today Tonight.

    The station airs three AFL games per round courtesy of its affiliation with Seven. Matches held in Tasmania are broadcast on delay. The station promotes extensive coverage of Tasmanian sports in its news coverage including cricket, athletics, netball and basketball. The station's previous sports reporters were Chris Rowbottom, Alicia Muling, and Trent Dann.

    Local sport

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    Locally, coverage of the international road race Targa Tasmania is produced and aired each year. The station also produces live coverage of the Launceston and Hobart Cup. Regular updates on the annual Boxing Day Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race are broadcast during the duration of the race.

    Affiliation

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    The station is affiliated with the metropolitan Seven Network and also broadcasts most of Seven's sub-channels (7TWO, 7mate, SBN, and Racing.com). Rival Tasmanian stations TVT-6 (WIN Television) is affiliated with the metropolitan Nine Network and TDT (SCA 10 is also affiliated with the metropolitan Network 10.

    Following aggregation in 1994, the station was a combined Seven and Ten affiliate, however the Ten content was gradually removed from the schedule in the late 2000s following the launch of digital-only station TDT in 2003. TDT is a joint-venture between Southern Cross Austereo and WIN.

    Main transmitters

    edit
    Region served City Channels
    (Analog/
    Digital)
    First air date ERP
    (Analog/
    Digital)
    HAAT
    (Analog/
    Digital)
    1
    Transmitter Coordinates Transmitter Location
    Hobart Hobart 31 (UHF)
    10 (VHF)
    30 April 1994 1300 kW
    50 kW
    1061 m
    1030 m
    42°53′51S 147°14′10E / 42.89750°S 147.23611°E / -42.89750; 147.23611 (TNT) (analog)
    42°53′42S 147°14′10E / 42.89500°S 147.23611°E / -42.89500; 147.23611 (TNT) (digital)
    Mount Wellington
    North Eastern Tasmania Launceston 9 (VHF)
    45 (UHF)
    26 May 1962 300 kW
    600 kW
    809 m
    839 m
    41°23′27S 147°25′29E / 41.39083°S 147.42472°E / -41.39083; 147.42472 (TNT) (analog)
    41°23′27S 147°25′28E / 41.39083°S 147.42444°E / -41.39083; 147.42444 (TNT) (digital)
    Mount Barrow

    Notes:

    See also

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    References

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    1. ^ a b c d e f Burch, Nigel (22 May 2022). "TNT9 helped north of state find its voice ... and it was loud". The Examiner. Launceston: Australian Community Media. p. 31. ProQuest 2667266019.
  • ^ a b Burgess, Julilan (19 May 2012). "Fear and excitement as television begins". The Examiner. Launceston: Fairfax Media. p. 38. ProQuest 1014176776.
  • ^ Darby, Andrew (30 March 1988). "ENT sells TNT9 to Tricom for $40m". The Age. Melbourne. p. 25. Retrieved 1 April 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  • ^ a b Ross-Hulands, Brooklyn. "Southern Cross Television History". AusTVHistory. Archived from the original on 24 December 2007. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  • ^ "TV network sticks with Ten". The Mercury. Hobart: News Corp Australia. 23 December 2003. p. 11. ProQuest 353237919.
  • ^ Kinniburgh, Chanel (9 June 2018). "Rebadge for Southern Cross". The Mercury. Hobart: News Corp Australia. p. 21. ProQuest 2051772469. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  • ^ Martain, Tim (10 March 2018). "Set for future". The Mercury. Hobart: News Corp Australia. p. 12. ProQuest 2012190447.
  • ^ Martain, Tim (12 July 2018). "Delay in Southern Cross TV renaming". The Mercury. Hobart: News Corp Australia. ProQuest 2068050391. THE planned renaming of Southern Cross Television to Seven Tasmania has been postponed, due to ongoing negotiations between Southern Cross Austereo and Channel 7.
  • ^ "Not Seven news". Media Watch. 9 July 2018. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=TNT_(Australian_TV_station)&oldid=1227711989"
     



    Last edited on 7 June 2024, at 11:39  





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    This page was last edited on 7 June 2024, at 11:39 (UTC).

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