Midlands Today

Midlands Today
Presented by Mary Rhodes
Nick Owen
(Full list)
Theme music composer David Lowe
Country of origin England, United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
Production
Location(s) The Mailbox, Birmingham
England, UK
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 30 minutes
(main 6:30pm programme)
Production company(s) BBC Midlands
Release
Original network BBC One Midlands
Picture format 576i (SDTV 16:9)
Original release 28 September 1964 (1964-09-28) – present
Chronology
Related shows BBC News
East Midlands Today
ITV News Central
The Midland
External links
Website

Midlands Today is the BBC's regional television news service for the West Midlands. It was launched in 1964 and is presented on alternating nights by Mary Rhodes or Nick Owen.

Overview

Midlands Today is produced by BBC Midlands and broadcasts on BBC One seven days a week. The programme is produced and broadcast from the BBC studios in The Mailbox, Birmingham. Journalists are also based at newsrooms in Coventry, Shrewsbury, Stoke-on-Trent and Worcester.

The programme began on 28 September 1964, broadcasting from a small room in the Birmingham Register Office before moving to the custom-built Pebble Mill broadcasting centre in Edgbaston on 10 November 1971. It remained there until the studios closed on 22 October 2004 when the BBC Birmingham operations were switched to the current Home at The Mailbox.

Up until 1991, Midlands Today also served the East Midlands, which has since received its own BBC regional news service. The programme's editorial area consists of the West Midlands, Warwickshire, Staffordshire, Shropshire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire and northern parts of Gloucestershire.

Midlands Today is broadcast from the Sutton Coldfield transmitter in the West Midlands and can be watched in any part of the UK on Sky, Freesat and in the rest of Europe via Astra 2E at 28.2° East (10788V 22000 5/6). The latest edition is also available to view again on the Midlands Today website.

On air

On weekdays, Midlands Today broadcasts five 3-minute opt-outs and a 1.5-minute opt-out during BBC Breakfast at around 25 and 55 minutes past each hour. A fifteen-minute lunchtime programme follows at 1:30pm before the main half-hour edition at 6:30pm. The late update is shown Monday to Thursday at 10:30pm and Friday at 10:25pm, following the BBC News at Ten.

At weekends, there are Saturday and Sunday early evening and Sunday late night bulletins, running for 10 minutes each. Broadcast times for these bulletins vary.

Presenters

News

Person Other Notes
Mary Rhodes Main anchor (alternating)
Nick Owen Main anchor (alternating)
Michael Collie Cover presenter (alternating)
Joanne Malin (freelance) Monday breakfast/lunchtime bulletins
Trish Adudu Saturday bulletin

Weather

Person Other Notes
Shefali Oza Sunday bulletin presenter
Kaye Forster Freelancer
Rebecca Wood

Reporters

General News Reporters
Person Other Notes
Elizabeth Glinka Also Newsreader
Sarah Falkland Also Newsreader
Amy Cole Also Newsreader
Ben Godfrey
Bob Hockenhull
Giles Latcham
Ben Sidwell
Nicola Beckford

Past presenters

Former presenters have included Tom Coyne, Kay Alexander (the programme's longest serving presenter), Alan Towers, David Stevens, Alastair Yates, Guy Thomas, Grant Mansfield, David Davies, Kathy Rochford (who transferred to the East Midlands), Sue Beardsmore, Stuart Linnell, Matt Smith, Julian Worricker, Ashley Blake (who was sacked in August 2009 after a criminal court case), Bernardette Kearney, Pauline Bushnell, Michael Buerk, Suzanne Virdee, Ben Rich, Jackie Kabler, Sarah Cruickshank, Peter Sissons and Katie Rowlett.

Senior presenter Alan Towers's on-air departure in July 1997 (after twenty five years) brought about one of the most controversial moments in the programme's history when he shared indignant views on BBC management, describing them as pygmies in grey suits wearing blindfolds.[1]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.