3:44 - The TV-am newsroom would remain open until 1st Feb 1992. This edition aired just two weeks after TV-am knew they had lost their franchise come 1st Jan 1993. The budget had been set for the 1991 - 1992 year, so when the new budget started on 1st Feb 1992, TV-am closed their newsroom and contracted their news output to Sky News for a one off fee of £500,000.
@@MatgoStyles I did originally think that (there’s quite a few edits in this tape), but why put an edit there just to rid a couple of black frames. Then I saw this video that seemed to confirm a nice synced play out at Anglia versus the rest of the ITV network: ruclips.net/video/Q7HnGb7YsIw/видео.htmlsi=o1bdOMJ7mPPQSUWk
That opening show in TV-am, First Report, was created solely to up the hard news content as a persuader to the ITC to retain the franchise. They lost 14% of their audience, as it wasn't what the viewers wanted to watch, but TV-am hoped to help save the company with it. As soon as they got the news that the franchise had been lost, they swiftly got rid and extended GMB to maximise profits in their final year.
and also by the time tv-am extended GMB which was known as tv-am. Kathy Taylor return from having her first baby even though Kathy Taylor would be out of a Job at tv-am in 13 months. Kathy was still doing the Holiday programme on the BBC
It was horrible, wasn't it? That, and the endlessly layered moving collage of the titles are so absolutely of their time. Meanwhile the Good Morning Britain title sequence remained unchanged from day one, and the actual TVam logo still screamed Early Eighties, demonstrating why it's not always wise to be perfectly on trend unless you want (and can afford to) change things regularly.
3:44 - The TV-am newsroom would remain open until 1st Feb 1992. This edition aired just two weeks after TV-am knew they had lost their franchise come 1st Jan 1993. The budget had been set for the 1991 - 1992 year, so when the new budget started on 1st Feb 1992, TV-am closed their newsroom and contracted their news output to Sky News for a one off fee of £500,000.
The transitions from Anglia to TV-am and back again - there’s no picture roll! Very smooth.
I think that might be an edit that was made later.
@@MatgoStyles I did originally think that (there’s quite a few edits in this tape), but why put an edit there just to rid a couple of black frames. Then I saw this video that seemed to confirm a nice synced play out at Anglia versus the rest of the ITV network: ruclips.net/video/Q7HnGb7YsIw/видео.htmlsi=o1bdOMJ7mPPQSUWk
Lorriane Kelly and Mike Morris
True breakfast T.V. legends!
That opening show in TV-am, First Report, was created solely to up the hard news content as a persuader to the ITC to retain the franchise. They lost 14% of their audience, as it wasn't what the viewers wanted to watch, but TV-am hoped to help save the company with it. As soon as they got the news that the franchise had been lost, they swiftly got rid and extended GMB to maximise profits in their final year.
and also by the time tv-am extended GMB which was known as tv-am. Kathy Taylor return from having her first baby even though Kathy Taylor would be out of a Job at tv-am in 13 months. Kathy was still doing the Holiday programme on the BBC
All the viewers wanted was Roland Rat Fraiser and cartoons.
Should've shown Alex "Hurricane" Higgins interview! 🤪
I wonder what someone had said to Martin Frizell over the talkback just as he came on air? He was rather failing to keep a straight face!
Is Lorraine Kelly a robot. She’s still there 30 odd years later and looking pretty good.
T.V. am. Rather like Johnson and Hancock.
Wrong people at very much the wrong time.
Lorraine Kelly on the foothills of her twinkly insincerity, not yet reaching it's full Beaufort Scale-12 magnitude yet.
Why did the logo to First Report look like a poison pen letter?
It was horrible, wasn't it? That, and the endlessly layered moving collage of the titles are so absolutely of their time. Meanwhile the Good Morning Britain title sequence remained unchanged from day one, and the actual TVam logo still screamed Early Eighties, demonstrating why it's not always wise to be perfectly on trend unless you want (and can afford to) change things regularly.