South Today

South Today
Also known as South Today Oxford
BBC Oxford News
Presented by Main Programme
Sally Taylor
Tony Husband Sport
Alexis Green Weather

Oxford opt-out
Geraldine Peers
Jerome Sale Sport
Theme music composer David Lowe
Country of origin England, United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
Production
Editor(s) Richard Spalding
Location(s) Southampton, England, UK
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 30 minutes
(main 18:30 programme)
Production company(s) BBC South
Release
Original network BBC One South
Picture format 576i (SDTV 16:9)
Original release 7 January 1961 (1961-01-07) – present
Chronology
Related shows BBC News,
ITV News Meridian
External links
Website

South Today is the BBC's regional television news service for the south of England, covering Hampshire, West Sussex, much of Dorset and Berkshire and parts of Surrey and Wiltshire.

Since 2000, an opt-out of the main programme has also covered most of Oxfordshire, eastern Gloucestershire, western Buckinghamshire and southern Northamptonshire.

Overview

The BBC began broadcasting a regional TV news programme for the South of England (then known as South at Six, but changing to the current title in the mid 1960s) in January 1961, getting on air four months before the launch of Southern Television's rival magazine programme Day by Day. Originally, the BBC's Southampton operations were based in South Western House, the former Cunard shipping line headquarters near the city's docks. In 1991, the programme moved to purpose-built studios in Havelock Road.

The original presenter was Martin Muncaster. Bruce Parker joined the programme in 1967 and remained as a regular presenter until 1989, continuing to provide holiday cover and present weekend bulletins until 1997. The current main presenter, Sally Taylor, started co-presenting the programme in 1987 (replacing Debbie Thrower), initially alongside Parker and then successively with Paddy Haycocks, Mark Longhurst, Harry Gration, Andrew Harvey and Roger Finn, but in recent years she has been the regular solo presenter of the main programme.

Currently, South Today produces eleven bulletins each weekday: 6 bulletins in the morning during BBC Breakfast, a short bulletin at 15:00, a 15-minute programme at 13:30, the half-hour main programme at 18:30, a headlines update at 20:00 and a 7-minute late night bulletin at 22:25. An additional four bulletins air during the weekend: a lunchtime bulletin on Saturday, early evening bulletins on Saturday & Sunday and a late night bulletin on Sundays, following the BBC News at Ten. The times of these bulletins usually vary.

The programme is broadcast live from studios in Southampton.

Prior to September 2001, South Today's region included areas served by the Heathfield Transmitter and its relays which covered eastern Sussex and southern Kent. These areas are now covered by the BBC's South East Today.

Following digital switchover on 7 March 2012, the Whitehawk Hill transmitter[1] (which serves the Brighton, Hove, Shoreham and Worthing area) now carries BBC South East output instead of BBC South.[2]

Oxford opt-out

Since 16 October 2000, BBC South has produced a distinct news service for the area served by the Oxford transmitter. Previously, the area was covered by Newsroom South East, which also served Greater London and the South East. As part of a three-tier restructure of regional coverage, the Oxford transmitter area was transferred to the BBC South region and began dedicated opt-out bulletins within South Today. A year later, London and the South East split into two distinct regions: BBC London and BBC South East.

The main anchors of the opt-out are Geraldine Peers and Jerome Sale, occasionally being covered by Adina Campbell and Sinead Carroll. Originally, South Today Oxford was broadcast from BBC South's studios in Southampton and presented by Heather McCarthy and Caroline Richardson on a rotating basis. Peers became the main anchor of the opt-outs in 2001 and studio production of the bulletins was transferred to a new television studio in Oxford in 2004.

On 21 April 2008, the South Today Oxford opt-out service was renamed as BBC Oxford News (referred to on-screen as BBC Oxford). New titles and graphics were introduced as part of an on-screen overhaul across the BBC's national, international and regional news services. From 29 October 2012, this has been re-branded back to South Today.

Weekday bulletins

The Oxford sub-opt covers the first 10–15 minutes of the main evening South Today at 18:30, before joining Sally Taylor for the latter part of the Southampton edition of the programme. Until April 2013, a full 30-minute Oxford edition was produced every Friday evening, but this has since been scaled back to 10–15 minutes. Special half-hour Oxford editions are still occasionally broadcast if there is a major news story in the sub-region.

Viewers in these areas also receive dedicated bulletins at 20:00 and after the BBC News at Ten, but see pan-regional bulletins from Southampton at breakfast and lunchtime and on weekends.

Presenters

Main anchors

Newsreaders

Sport

Weather

Reporters

News

  • Roger Finn
  • Tom Hepworth
  • Steve Humphrey
  • James Ingham
  • Briony Leyland
  • Edward Sault
  • Charlotte Stacey
  • Jeremy Stern
  • Stuart Tinworth
  • Laura Trant
  • Sinead Carroll (Oxford)
  • Katherine DaCosta (Oxford)
  • Tom Turrell (Oxford)
  • Adina Campbell (Oxford)

District and specialist

  • Peter Henley - Political Editor
  • Emma Vardy - Home Affairs Correspondent
  • Paul Clifton - Transport
  • Alistair Fee - Business
  • David Fenton - Health
  • Tony Husband - Sports Editor
  • Jo Kent - Sports Correspondent
  • Kris Temple - Sports Correspondent
  • Jerome Sale - Sports Correspondent (Oxford)
  • Joe Campbell - Berkshire
  • Ben Moore - Berkshire
  • Nikki Mitchell - Berkshire
  • Sean Killick - West Sussex

Former presenters

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, May 02, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.