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GMTV Newshour

GMTV
GMTV 2009 Title Card.png
Also known as GMTV Today (2000 - 2009)
Presented by John Stapleton
Penny Smith
Ben Shephard
Kate Garraway
Andrew Castle
Emma Crosby
(See full list)
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
Production
Location(s) The London Studios,
London, England, United Kingdom
Running time Monday - Thursday,
150 minutes
Friday,
235 minutes
(includes adverts)
Production company(s) GMTV
(ITV Studios)
Release
Original network ITV (ITV Breakfast slot)
Original release 1 January 1993 – 3 September 2010
Chronology
Preceded by TV-am (1983–1992)
Followed by Daybreak (2010-2014)
Related shows GMTV with Lorraine
External links
(no longer exists) Website
GMTV with Lorraine
GMTV with Lorraine 2009 Title Card.png
Also known as 'Top of the Morning (1993)
Quarter to Nine (1994)
Nine O'Clock Live (1994-?)
Lorraine Live (?-2000)
LK Today (2000-08)
Presented by Lorraine Kelly
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
Production
Location(s) The London Studios,
London, England, United Kingdom
Running time Monday - Thursday,
55 minutes
(includes adverts)
Production company(s) GMTV
(ITV Studios)
Release
Original network ITV (ITV Breakfast slot)
Original release 4 January 1993 – 2 September 2010
Chronology
Followed by Lorraine
Related shows GMTV
External links
Website

The following details are for the programmes that GMTV (Good Morning Television) broadcast on ITV.

GMTV is the former breakfast television franchise for the UK's ITV network. It began broadcasting on Friday 1 January 1993 and finished on Friday 3 September 2010, being replaced by ITV Breakfast.

GMTV is the original brand for GMTV's weekday breakfast magazine programme from 6:00 am. It included national and international news stories, regional news, weather, interviews, cookery and health features, human-interest and showbiz stories, and competitions. In spring 1993, shortly after the channel's launch, a separate news-focused programme was introduced between 6:00 am and 7:00 am, which in early 1994 became The Reuters News Hour. The main 6:00–9:00 am programme remained named GMTV but as part of the show's new look for the millennium, this main programme later became GMTV Today.

On 3 January 2000, GMTV relaunched and changed the names of each of their programmes. This now meant that the programme GMTV did not exist. This was then split up into The Newshour and GMTV Today. This titling for the programmes remained until January 2009 when GMTV relaunched. The first presenters were:

GMTV underwent a major revamp on 5 January 2009, reverting to its original title, and incorporating the GMTV Newshour into the show as well. The show returned with a new set and new onscreen graphics. For the first time since the station's launch the logo was changed from the 'sun' logo. Despite the changes, the same theme music and headline beds were still used throughout the programme and nothing altered with the weather until 18 January 2010. However, on 9 March 2009, GMTV introduced new theme music and headline beds to its main programmes, replacing the previous music that had been in use since 2000. On 31 August 2009, GMTV saw the introduction of 3D graphics, graphic animations, through the use of a new system called VizRT, and a voice-over announcer to introduce presenters at the top of the hour. These were later slightly revised in October of that year.

The show had previously been criticised for its poor journalistic approach although from 2009 it took on a more confident approach, with 7-minute bulletins at the top of the hour, a detailed bulletin at half-past the hour, and the Top Stories at 15 and 45 minutes past each hour. These replaced the hour and half-hour bulletins which featured previously.

Fiona Phillips and Andrea McLean left the show in late 2008. In November 2008 it was announced that Sky News business presenter Emma Crosby would replace Phillips, and the BBC's Kirsty McCabe would replace McLean as weather presenter. Aside from the new members of the team, previous presenters continued to present in their previous slots and, from August 2009, a voice-over at the top of the hour referred to the show as GMTV with .... This continued until Penny Smith left on 4 June 2010, with the same presenters on air from 6:00–8:35/9:25 am.


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