ITV News At Ten
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''ITV News at Ten'' (or more commonly ''News at Ten'') is the flagship evening
news News is information about current events. This may be provided through many different Media (communication), media: word of mouth, printing, Mail, postal systems, broadcasting, Telecommunications, electronic communication, or through the te ...
programme on British
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ITV, produced by
ITN Independent Television News (ITN) is a UK-based media production and broadcast journalism company. ITN is based in London, with bureaux and offices in Beijing, Brussels, Jerusalem, Johannesburg, New York City, New York, Paris, Sydney and Washin ...
and founded by news editor Geoffrey Cox in July 1967. The bulletin was the first permanent 30-minute news broadcast in the United Kingdom, and although initially scheduled for only thirteen weeks due to fears that its length would turn viewers off,' the bulletin proved to be highly popular with audiences and became a fixture of the ITV schedule. ''News at Ten'' rose to popularity for its winning combination of in-depth, analytical news coverage and populist stories,' as well as for its use of Big Ben's chimes to separate news headlines in its opening sequence. It simultaneously helped popularise newscasters such as Alastair Burnet, Andrew Gardner, Reginald Bosanquet, Sandy Gall, Anna Ford, John Suchet, Mark Austin, Alastair Stewart and Trevor McDonald into well-known television personalities. When the bulletin was axed in 1999 in order for primetime entertainment programming to air uninterrupted, there was a public outcry. ITV reluctantly brought the programme back – under the name ''ITV News at Ten'' – in 2001, airing it at 10pm for a minimum of three nights per week, but eventually replaced it with the '' ITV News at 10.30'' in 2004. It was not until January 2008 that ''News at Ten'' was reinstated to the ITV schedule. The programme has been anchored by Tom Bradby since 2015.


History


1967 to 1999: the original run

ITN had been ITV's news provider since the channel's launch in September 1955. News updates from ITN tended to run 14 minutes in length at most, with no fixed broadcast time. From his arrival in 1956, ITN editor Geoffrey Cox had consistently argued to the Independent Television Authority that ITN should be providing at least one news bulletin of substantial length, in order to cover and analyse major news stories more closely. ITV argued against the idea of a 30-minute evening bulletin, insisting a news programme of such length would eat into its primetime entertainment schedule and turn viewers away from the channel, but the ITA granted Cox's wish in 1967. ITV stations reluctantly agreed to give the proposed bulletin – a Monday-to-Friday programme, fixed at 10pm – a 13-week trial run to test its success. ''News at Ten'' began broadcasting on 3 July 1967 under the editorship of Cox, who stipulated that the aim of the new programme was to "remove the spin and bring facts and the news as it really was." ITV's stance was seemingly confirmed early; the programme had little news to cover in its first few editions, having launched in the middle of summer during a slow news week. However, a reversal of fortunes quickly took place after an "action story" from ITN reporter Alan Hart on the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders re-entering Crater, which ran for a then-unheard-of length of 5 minutes.' A series of similar in-depth reports eventually helped to give ''News at Ten'' a regular viewership of seven million every night, forcing ITV to keep the programme. By 1969, ''News at Ten'' had become the first news bulletin in Britain to enter the top 20 most-watched programmes of the week. It was tied with ''
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'' as the second most popular television show for the week of 27 September 1970 with 6.90 million viewing homes, behind '' Special Branch''. The arrival of the new 30-minute programme allowed ITN to give a more in-depth and detailed treatment of serious news for the first time on British television, as well as coverage of populist stories and issues that would attract the viewing audience. The programme built on these concepts by introducing reporter packages, not the norm then but now a staple of television news, and a team of two newscasters taking turns to read stories instead of a sole presenter: a two-man team would inject personality into television news, as well as allow breaking news to be handed to the newscaster not in vision. The original newscasting team included Alastair Burnet, Andrew Gardner, Reginald Bosanquet, George Ffitch and Leonard Parkin. ''News at Ten'' also employed several other distinctive features which proved popular with viewers: the use of Big Ben's chimes (or "bongs") to separate the news headlines being read in the opening sequence, and the "… And Finally" report – a quirky and often humorous end piece designed to send the viewing audience to bed "on a high note" after 30 minutes of hard news coverage. ''News at Ten'' developed a solid reputation for its extensive coverage of international news stories. Foreign correspondent Sandy Gall, the first ITN journalist to cover the start of the
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in 1965, returned there on several occasions to produce reports for ''News at Ten'' until he was forcibly removed from the country following the
Fall of Saigon The fall of Saigon, known in Vietnam as Reunification Day (), was the capture of Saigon, the capital of South Vietnam, by North Vietnam on 30 April 1975. As part of the 1975 spring offensive, this decisive event led to the collapse of the So ...
in 1975. Michael Nicholson reported in-depth on the 1976 Soweto uprising for ''News at Ten'', and later went on to cover the
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in 1982, after which he was awarded the South Atlantic Medal for his work. ''News at Ten'', by now the UK's most popular news programme, ultimately forced the BBC to follow ITN's lead and extend its own programming to match, although Lord Annan declared in his 1977 ''Committee into the Future of Broadcasting'', "We subscribe to the generally held view that ITN has the edge over BBC News." In the absence of Alastair Burnet (who left ITN in 1972 to pursue a career in print journalism), ''News at Ten'' paired Andrew Gardner and Reginald Bosanquet to create one of the programme's most well-liked newscasting duos. In 1978, Anna Ford became the bulletin's first female newscaster, and Alastair Burnet rejoined the programme in the same year. For more than a decade onwards, Burnet was the newscaster most associated with ''News at Ten'', his "serious persona", "sepulchral tones" and "deferential interviewing style" becoming respected hallmarks of the programme. By the late 1980s, Burnet – now a member of the ITN board of directors and ''News at Tens associate editor – began to draw criticism that he was losing the personal touch with his audience, allowing ''News at Ten'' to settle into a "stodgy" and "old-fashioned" complacency. Nonetheless, the programme continued to maintain a solid high audience during the 1980s and well into the next decade. The development of satellite technology in the 1980s allowed ''News at Ten'' to broadcast live from several locations around the world, including the
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during a visit from the Queen in 1986. Alastair Burnet presented ''News at Ten'' from the United States during several presidential campaigns, as well as the 1984 conventions of the Republican and Democratic parties. Alastair Stewart presented ''News at Ten'' live from Saudi Arabia, the fall of the
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in 1989 and the liberated
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during the 1991
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. Burnet retired from ITN in 1991 after several clashes with the ITV companies over the future of the news organisation. In November 1992, ''News at Ten'' was given its first major relaunch, in part to address the criticism it had attracted over the last few years. In a bid to regain the personal touch that had been lost, the programme dispensed with the dual-presentation team in favour of a sole newscaster, Trevor McDonald, who subsequently became one of the most well-known newscasters in the UK. Julia Somerville, John Suchet and Dermot Murnaghan each presented ''News at Ten'' when McDonald was absent. The bulletin carried this format until March 1999. Despite ''News at Tens continued stature and popularity, ITV announced its intention to axe the bulletin in 1993, proposing two new peak-time bulletins at 6:30pm and 11pm. ITV justified the move as a measure to stem the decline in television viewing audiences and to allow the uninterrupted broadcast of movies, dramas and other entertainment programmes, but the plans were met with widespread criticism from viewers, several Members of Parliament, the then-Prime Minister
John Major Sir John Major (born 29 March 1943) is a British retired politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Conservative Party (UK), Leader of the Conservative Party from 1990 to 1997. Following his defeat to Ton ...
and the National Heritage Committee.' The
Independent Television Commission The Independent Television Commission (ITC) licensed and regulated commercial television services in the United Kingdom (except S4C in Wales) between 1 January 1991 and 28 December 2003. History The creation of ITC, by the Broadcasting Act ...
(ITC) ruled that ITV had not established a solid case for the removal of ''News at Ten'', pointing to BBC News having experienced a larger viewing decline than ITN, but were restructuring the contents of their news programmes rather than move them to different timeslots. The proposals were eventually withdrawn after the ITC threatened ITV with legal action.


1999 to 2008: axing and the ''News at When?'' era

In September 1998, following intense lobbying from the ITV companies, the ITC finally reviewed plans for a new weekday primetime ITV schedule that saw the removal of ''News at Ten'' (and the 5:40pm ''Early Evening News'') in favour of new 12.30pm 6:30pm and 11:00pm news bulletins. The ITC undertook extensive audience research which found that the public preferred ''News at Ten'' to stay by a proportion of 5 to 3, but nonetheless granted ITV permission to axe ''News at Ten'' for a one-year trial period. The programme's demise in March 1999 coincided with an overhaul of news on ITV, which continued to be produced by ITN, but now branded on screen as ITV News. Trevor McDonald presented the new flagship ''ITV Evening News'' at 6:30pm, a one-minute news summary was broadcast at 10pm, and this was followed by the 30-minute ultimately resulted in a 13.9% decline in overall viewing figures for ITV News. In 2000, the ITC ordered ITV to reinstate ''News at Ten'' to stem the ratings decline. The BBC then decided to cash in on the move by shifting its own long-running '' Nine O'Clock News'' to 10pm. with a dual-presenting team of Dermot Murnaghan and Mary Nightingale replacing McDonald on the ''ITV Evening News''. However, the haphazard scheduling of the revived 10pm bulletin ultimately led to its downfall. While the BBC's ''Ten O'Clock News'' was fixed at 10pm for six nights a week, the ''ITV News at Ten'' was broadcast for only three nights a week, allowing entertainment programmes to be broadcast past 10pm for the rest of the week. In addition, the programme was often delayed by overrunning entertainment programmes on the nights that it was scheduled for 10pm. This inconsistency led to the bulletin being unceremoniously dubbed ''News at When?'' In 2003, ITV received approval from the ITC to axe the programme and replace it with the ''ITV News at 10:30'', fixed at that time every weeknight. McDonald presented this bulletin from its launch on 2 February 2004 until his retirement on 15 December 2005. Mark Austin became the programme's main host from January 2006.


2008 to 2015: reinstatement to ITV schedules

In October 2007, ITV chairman
Michael Grade Michael Ian Grade, Baron Grade of Yarmouth (born 8 March 1943) is an English Media proprietor, television executive and businessman. He has held a number of senior roles in television, including controller of BBC1 (1984–1986), chief executive ...
announced the return of ''News at Ten'', following comments he made in March that the original removal of the programme was "a shocking mistake
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damaged ITV more than anything else." The bulletin returned with its original name on 14 January 2008, broadcast from Monday to Thursday at 10pm, with an 11pm bulletin titled '' The Late News'' airing on Friday evenings. The revived ''News at Ten'' saw the reintroduction of the dual-newscaster team, pairing new presenter
Julie Etchingham Julie Anne Etchingham (born 21 August 1969) is an English journalist who works as a television newsreader with ITV News. A graduate of Newnham College, Cambridge, Etchingham joined the BBC as a trainee after completing her studies, and went on ...
with Trevor McDonald, who had temporarily come out of retirement. Etchingham and Mark Austin presented ''The Late News''. In March 2009, ''The Late News'' was dropped in order for ''News at Ten'' to return to its traditional Monday-to-Friday 10pm slot, giving the programme a "consistent home at the heart of the schedule". McDonald finally retired from ''News at Ten'' in October 2008 after hosting the programme's special US election coverage from Washington and was replaced by Mark Austin in November. Austin presented the ''ITV News at 6:30'' simultaneously until he was replaced on that programme by Alastair Stewart. ''News at Ten'' struggled to regain its high viewing figures following several years out of the 10pm timeslot, its 2008 return watched by 3.8 million viewers in comparison to 4.9m for the BBC. However, the bulletin occasionally beat the ''BBC News at 10'' in the ratings: an overrunning football match on
BBC One BBC One is a British free-to-air public broadcast television channel owned and operated by the BBC. It is the corporation's oldest and flagship channel, and is known for broadcasting mainstream programming, which includes BBC News television b ...
helped deliver ITV 4.3m at 10pm; severe weather conditions on 2 February 2009 saw terrestrial TV news bulletins receive a boost in ratings and ''News at Ten'' was watched by 4.8m; and a week of special '' Britain's Got Talent'' semi-final programmes in May 2009 saw ''News at Ten'' beat the BBC with figures of 6.1m (26 May) and 6.4m (28 May), the latter being the programme's highest audience figure since 2003. In November 2009, the famous Big Ben clock tower was removed from the programme's opening credits after concerns it alienated viewers outside London, but was ultimately reinstated to ''News at Tens opening sequence following a further ITV relaunch in January 2013. From November 2009, the bulletin was known as ''ITV News at Ten'', but known on screen as simply ''ITV News''.


2015–present: refocus on reputation

As part of a move to enhance the reputation of ITV's news and current affairs output, ''News at Ten'' was restructured and redeveloped across a number of months: the new format launched in October 2015, placing more emphasis on analysis, context and a more "conversational" presentation style under new presenter Tom Bradby, former ITV News political editor; then the appointments of former BBC News journalists
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(as political editor) and Allegra Stratton (as national editor), who both reiterated in the press ITV's newfound intention to challenge the dominance of BBC News; and a refreshed set and opening title sequence in January 2016, which saw the reinstatement of the ''News at Ten'' name on screen. In November 2015, it was reported that tension had developed between senior figures at the BBC and ITV following comments made about the viewing figures for both 10pm news bulletins: prior to the ''News at Ten'' relaunch, Bradby commented on the powerful nature of BBC News during an interview with
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, saying that the scheduling of BBC One's 10pm news against ITV's ''News at Ten'' was not in the public interest and that the corporation should "mount a strategic retreat". The BBC's Huw Edwards posted on
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that ITV should end its "creative handling of audience figures". A senior ITV News executive said to The Guardian that the BBC's attitude "is such
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they are trying to smash and crush us" and that the corporation's "arrogance has got to such a level." Nigel Dacre, editor of ITV News between 1995 and 2001, criticised the channel's use of "junction management", which involves the deliberate overrunning of the 9pm programme so that viewing figures for ''News at Ten'' are inflated. As an experiment to try and boost ITV's viewing figures at the 10pm slot, on Monday 27 February 2017, ''News at Ten'' moved to 10.30pm for eight consecutive weeks to make way for new entertainment programme '' The Nightly Show''. The bulletin returned to its original 10pm time slot from 24 April 2017. For a number of weeks in the run-up to the 2017 general election ''News at Ten'' was extended by 15 minutes, pushing the late regional news to 10:45pm. On 3 January 2018, a fire alarm forced ITV News staff to evacuate the building during the live broadcast of ''News at Ten''. By the time crew members were allowed into the studio, the following programme was already on air. On 26 April 2024, presenter Rageh Omaar became unwell whilst the programme was on air. Omaar could be heard stumbling over and slurring his words, sparking viewer concern for his wellbeing. Omaar received medical care in hospital thereafter, before being discharged to complete his recovery at home. The planned rerun of this bulletin on time-shift channels ITV1 +1 and STV +1 was pulled from broadcast


Theme music and opening sequence

''News at Ten'' is famed for its use of the Big Ben clockface, the headline "bongs" and the dramatic and familiar theme music, all retained and reworked into various guises across five decades. From 1967 to 1992, its opening and closing themes were straightforward excerpts from ''The Awakening'', a piece of library music composed by
Johnny Pearson John Valmore Pearson (18 June 1925 – 20 March 2011) was a British composer, orchestra leader and pianist. He led the ''Top of the Pops'' orchestra for sixteen years, wrote a catalogue of library music, and had many of his pieces used as the ...
. In 1992, composer Dave Hewson was appointed to produce a new arrangement of ''The Awakening''. Since April 1995, Hewson has produced several rearrangements of the famous theme for all ITV News programmes. The story of the adaptation of ''The Awakening'' was featured in an official TV tie-in book, although incorrectly referring to the title music as ''Arabesque'': The most memorable series of ''News at Ten'' title sequences launched in 1969: a camera pan across the
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and up the Westminster Clock Tower, followed by a sharp zoom into the tower clockface and the programme's name appearing on screen in time to the strident beats of ''The Awakening'', with the headline "bongs" playing directly afterwards. (If the bulletin started significantly after 10pm, the "bongs" were dispensed with.) Further refreshes of the opening sequence continued to use this basic concept for several years afterwards, even after the introduction of computer-generated titles in 1988, which incorporated a virtual flyover over nighttime London. As part of the programme's 1992 revamp, the familiar sequence was replaced by simple camera shots of the clock tower and ITN's headquarters. In 2008, ''News at Ten'' reworked its 1988 flyover sequence for its relaunch. The programme used the same opening titles as other ITV News bulletins from 2001 to 2004 and again from 2009 to 2016, all loosely based on elements established by ''News at Ten'' title sequences from its early days. In 2016, a new title sequence was introduced, focusing more closely on the traditional image of the Big Ben clockface.


Awards

''News at Ten'' won its first award from the National Viewers and Listeners Association in August 1968. The programme has been honoured over the years by the prestigious RTS Television Journalism Awards, including the ''News – International coverage'' award in 1997 and the coveted ''News Programme of the Year'' in 1998, 2010, 2014 and 2021. The programme has received the
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''News Coverage'' award twice: in 2009 for their coverage of the
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; and in 2010 for the
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. ''News at Ten'' has also won awards in the television/news programme categories at the International Emmy awards (2009) and the Plain English Awards (2010).


On air staff


Lead newscaster

* Tom Bradby (2015–)


Deputy newscaster

*
Julie Etchingham Julie Anne Etchingham (born 21 August 1969) is an English journalist who works as a television newsreader with ITV News. A graduate of Newnham College, Cambridge, Etchingham joined the BBC as a trainee after completing her studies, and went on ...
(2015–); lead newscaster (2008–2015)


Other newscasters

* Paul Brand (2023–) * Gamal Fahnbulleh (2023–) * Nina Hossain (2009–) * Lucrezia Millarini (2021–) * Chris Ship (2022–) * Geraint Vincent (2012, 2024–) * Romilly Weeks (2010–) * Charlene White (2014–2015, 2020–)


Former newscasters

* Pamela Armstrong (1984–1986) * Mark Austin (2002–2004, 2008–2015) * Carol Barnes (1985–1992) * Reginald Bosanquet (1967–1979) * Alastair Burnet (1967–1972, 1978–1991) *
Andrea Byrne Andrea Byrne (née Benfield; born 1978) is an English journalist and News presenter, presenter, currently working for ITV Cymru Wales, where she presents ''Wales at Six'' and ''Wales This Week''. Personal life Born in Guildford, Surrey, Byrne gr ...
(2011–2012) * Katie Derham (2001–2004, 2008–2010) * George Ffitch (1967–1968) * Anna Ford (1978–1981) * Sandy Gall (1972–1991) * Andrew Gardner (1967–1977) * Gordon Honeycombe (1967–1982) * Natasha Kaplinsky (2011–2015) * Martyn Lewis (1980–1986) * James Mates (2008–2015) * Trevor McDonald (1982, 1989–1999, 2001–2004, 2008) *Graham Miller (weekend sport) (1993–1999) * Dermot Murnaghan (1993–1999; 2001–2002) * Mary Nightingale (2008–2015) * Rageh Omaar (2015–2024) * Nicholas Owen (1989-1991, 2001–2004) * Leonard Parkin (1968–1976) * Selina Scott (1980–1982) * Ranvir Singh (2014–2015, 2020) * Julia Somerville (1988–1999) * Alastair Stewart (1986–1992, 2009–2020) * John Suchet (1989–1999, 2001–2004) * Kirsty Young (2001)


See also

*'' BBC News at Ten''


References


External links

* * {{ITV News 1967 British television series debuts 1960s British television series 1970s British television series 1980s British television series 1999 British television series endings 2001 British television series debuts 2004 British television series endings 2008 British television series debuts 2010s British television series 2020s British television series BAFTA winners (television series) British television news shows British television series revived after cancellation British English-language television shows Flagship evening news shows ITN ITV news shows