From bye-bye hugs with loud applause (1:30-1:41) to lights out (1:42), and finally the era ended with the "Copyright Screen" (1:44) which terminated the GMTV from the air permanently (1:46). I think ITV plc was already excited to do this after it purchased the company which previously owned the studio that produced this show. Also notice the gallery video on the right of the video above (as you see the monitors shown). Why did they turned on the lights again while clapping loudly after the Copyright Screen was cut to the teaser of Daybreak (1:49)? For me, the best way is to cut-off all the mixing systems inside the gallery immediately after the GMTV's closing Copyright Screen (1:46) followed a brief black screen so that the GMTV era had ended PERMANENTLY.
I still find the axing of GMTV a bizarre move. I can appreciate why ITV wanted to drop the name, but I remember being really surprised that they were replacing the show altogether. Even though the viewing figures had been declining, it was proven to be what the ITV audience wanted since the days of the near identical TV-am. Daybreak wasn't as bad as people said it was, but it had some unfortunate teething problems which were never sufficiently corrected, and the whole thing quickly decayed fom within. The second version of Daybreak was a laughable GMTV clone, which seemed like a sensible move on paper but there was too much damage done already for it to quickly turn things around. GMB still hasn't returned ITV to pole position, and it all makes me wonder why they ever inflicted themselves with such a massive fight back to the top, when GMTV could really have been easily turned around with a little attention.
I think it was very telling they wanted to replicate the success and fortune of GMTV when the later and final Daybreak logo was literally just a carbon copy of the GMTV logo. God, that early era of Daybreak was hard to watch and even dreadful at times. The choice of a "purple" colour scheme, when it feels more in line with something that belongs on a night programme, rather than one of a morning show, poaching Adrian and Christine from the One Show, a show no one really watched all too much, the fact it was launched in the winter months didn't help matters either as the whole set felt like you were watching something akin to an evening programme, again with the mixture of that purple colour scheme feeling less warm and inviting... It baffles me how ITV have found it hard to find a format that really just sticks with it's viewers. GMB feels very news driven and coming back to the show itself when I woke up really early one morning this year, it feels disheartening how bossy it feels. BBC Breakfast at least knows how to balance it's programme with heavy news and feel-good stories, but GMB hardly feels like it, apart from the cheerful competition segments that feel like an obligatory requirement for ITV and to recoup their losses. GMTV didn't feel like JUST a programme, it felt like a genuine network with it's own programming, output and personalities. And now that is considered ITV Daytime. Bleugh. It's all the ITC's fault. All them.
@@MarkPentler Yes but I think they mean that you can hear the director calling certain camera shots but certainly not all of those that are being cut on air.
@@ernest3957 I can’t hear any that aren’t subsequently cut on the programme out, and it sounds like the man is self-vision mixing because he says “coming to” which is usually meaning “I’m pushing the button” and he also says “I’m gonna come off you for a second” There’s only two voices anyway and the other is the Production Assistant
i'll miss you GMTV you are the best ever
Goodbye Gmtv I miss you😭
That's amazing keep up the good work
I laughed at the Bye bye bye bit
From bye-bye hugs with loud applause (1:30-1:41) to lights out (1:42), and finally the era ended with the "Copyright Screen" (1:44) which terminated the GMTV from the air permanently (1:46). I think ITV plc was already excited to do this after it purchased the company which previously owned the studio that produced this show.
Also notice the gallery video on the right of the video above (as you see the monitors shown). Why did they turned on the lights again while clapping loudly after the Copyright Screen was cut to the teaser of Daybreak (1:49)? For me, the best way is to cut-off all the mixing systems inside the gallery immediately after the GMTV's closing Copyright Screen (1:46) followed a brief black screen so that the GMTV era had ended PERMANENTLY.
Hataw PUP because after you’re off-air people still need to see and work in the studio.
I still find the axing of GMTV a bizarre move. I can appreciate why ITV wanted to drop the name, but I remember being really surprised that they were replacing the show altogether. Even though the viewing figures had been declining, it was proven to be what the ITV audience wanted since the days of the near identical TV-am. Daybreak wasn't as bad as people said it was, but it had some unfortunate teething problems which were never sufficiently corrected, and the whole thing quickly decayed fom within. The second version of Daybreak was a laughable GMTV clone, which seemed like a sensible move on paper but there was too much damage done already for it to quickly turn things around. GMB still hasn't returned ITV to pole position, and it all makes me wonder why they ever inflicted themselves with such a massive fight back to the top, when GMTV could really have been easily turned around with a little attention.
I think it was very telling they wanted to replicate the success and fortune of GMTV when the later and final Daybreak logo was literally just a carbon copy of the GMTV logo.
God, that early era of Daybreak was hard to watch and even dreadful at times. The choice of a "purple" colour scheme, when it feels more in line with something that belongs on a night programme, rather than one of a morning show, poaching Adrian and Christine from the One Show, a show no one really watched all too much, the fact it was launched in the winter months didn't help matters either as the whole set felt like you were watching something akin to an evening programme, again with the mixture of that purple colour scheme feeling less warm and inviting...
It baffles me how ITV have found it hard to find a format that really just sticks with it's viewers. GMB feels very news driven and coming back to the show itself when I woke up really early one morning this year, it feels disheartening how bossy it feels. BBC Breakfast at least knows how to balance it's programme with heavy news and feel-good stories, but GMB hardly feels like it, apart from the cheerful competition segments that feel like an obligatory requirement for ITV and to recoup their losses. GMTV didn't feel like JUST a programme, it felt like a genuine network with it's own programming, output and personalities. And now that is considered ITV Daytime. Bleugh.
It's all the ITC's fault. All them.
The current itv Good Morning Britain just doesn't compare
Hey, you in the gallery - why didn't you play the '93 sax music? :)
They played a very good version of the original theme. A nod to the past.
Was the director only calling some camera shots, and the vision mixer/switcher was doing the rest?
You're hearing a PA counting and the director calling the shots.
@@MarkPentler Yes but I think they mean that you can hear the director calling certain camera shots but certainly not all of those that are being cut on air.
@@ernest3957 I can’t hear any that aren’t subsequently cut on the programme out, and it sounds like the man is self-vision mixing because he says “coming to” which is usually meaning “I’m pushing the button” and he also says “I’m gonna come off you for a second”
There’s only two voices anyway and the other is the Production Assistant
@@MarkPentler You don't hear him call the very first mix in the clip plus there's 5 cuts from 12 to 20 seconds in that occur with no direction called?
@@ernest3957 it’s a fair point but I wonder if it’s because they’re all static and no danger of camera moves at that point?
Bananon