Everything about Anglia Television totally explained
Anglia Television is the
ITV station for
East Anglia, which has been broadcasting since
27 October 1959. The station is based in
Norwich, with regional news bureaux in
Ipswich,
Chelmsford,
Peterborough,
Cambridge,
Luton and
Northampton.
About Anglia, first broadcast in
1960, was the station's flagship
television news magazine for over thirty years.
Programmes were transmitted across the Anglia region which comprised
Norfolk,
Suffolk,
Essex,
Cambridgeshire,
Northamptonshire,
Bedfordshire,
Hertfordshire,
Buckinghamshire,
Lincolnshire and south and east
Yorkshire. From
January 1 1974, Lincolnshire and parts of Yorkshire and North Norfolk were transferred to
Yorkshire Television.
Identity
Anglia's original
ident was a short film of a rotating silver statue of a
knight on horseback. At the end, the camera zoomed in on the
pennon atop the knight's
lance, which showed the station's name. An arrangement, by
Malcolm Sargent, of
Handel's
Water Music was played over the film. The
Anglia knight logo became so closely identified with the station that when, in
1999, the station produced a book to mark its fortieth anniversary, it was entitled
A Knight On The Box (ISBN 0-906836-40-9).
With the introduction of
colour television in the
1970s, the ident was remade with constant lighting, and the knight constantly rotating on a
turntable. In
1988 the knight was replaced by the
Lambie-Nairn designed quasi-
heraldic stylised 'A' made of triangles, which faded in and out on a fluttering flag during
continuity announcements. This was used until
1999, when (along with most other ITV companies), Anglia took the Hearts idents (which featured the stylised "A", albeit in a square, rather than a flag), which were used until
2002.
Its flagship news and current affairs programme was
About Anglia.
In
2002, as with all companies now owned by
ITV plc, the station lost its separate identity, becoming branded as ITV Anglia.
Ownership
Anglia was an independent company for much of its existence. In
1994, it was bought by
MAI (owners of
Meridian Broadcasting), who merged with United Newspapers to form
United News and Media. They were joined by HTV in 1996. In
2000, following United's aborted merger attempt with Carlton, Granada bought the TV assets of United (but sold the broadcasting arm of HTV). In
2004,
Granada finally merged with Carlton to form
ITV plc, which ended Anglia's existence as a separate brand. During its period of UBM ownership, a 'youth' channel was launched to cable and satellite from Anglia's facilities,
Rapture TV; some productions for the ITV network were also shared with Rapture, which was retained by UBM after the sale to Granada, but later closed down and its assets sold.
In
1993, the station took over the cartoon studio
Cosgrove Hall, when it was sold off by its original owners,
Thames Television. Although the station no longer makes a significant content contribution to ITV nationally (the last major programme being
Trisha, before she defected to Five), the semi-independent Anglia Factual brand now runs a thriving international business supplying content for
Discovery Channel in the USA,
Channel 4 and
Five in the UK, and other broadcasters worldwide. Notable series include
Animal Precinct and
Animal Cops for
Animal Planet, and
Real Crime for
ITV (credited as Granada Anglia).
Commercial Breaks
, the commercial production agency owned by ITV's sales division is also based in Norwich.
In 2006, Anglia sold its other major studio complex (which included its newsroom and twin news studios) in Magdalen Street, Norwich to Norfolk County Council, who, with the help of the East of England Development Agency, have created EPIC - the East of England Production Innovation Centre
(External Link
). Intended as an "incubator" for small creative and media enterprises, Studio E (formerly home to
Trisha) is now available for hire as an independent facility
(External Link
). One of the first tenants of EPIC is Televirtual, a company formed out of
Broadsword Productions who made Anglia's legendary children's show
Knightmare(External Link
). A major education partner at EPIC in the shape of
Norwich School of Art and Design
will be housing a new
Foundation Degree in Film and Video
at the centre from September 2007. As a consequence of the sale,
Anglia News, which moved to Magdalen Street in 1999, has moved back to a new state-of-the-art facility at Anglia House.
Coverage areas
Anglia originally covered mainly
Norfolk,
Suffolk, the northern and more rural parts of
Essex and
Cambridgeshire before expanding to the less rural areas of
Bedfordshire and
Northamptonshire with the opening of the Sandy Heath transmitter in
1965, covering an area which had previously been an awkward gap in ITV's coverage of the UK. Later in 1965, the Belmont transmitter opened, bringing Anglia's signals to
Lincolnshire and the
East Riding of Yorkshire, also being available to some viewers in cities such as
Nottingham,
Leicester and
Sheffield.
The
Independent Broadcasting Authority decided that Anglia's coverage area was now too large for a "minor" company, and
Yorkshire Television's was too small for a "major" company, so YTV was given the
Belmont transmitter from
January 1,
1974, even though it also covered the northern parts of Norfolk, which now found themselves watching television from
Leeds (subsequently, Anglia-only relay stations would be built, restoring the station to parts of north Norfolk). Also, with the transition from VHF to UHF signals, Anglia gained coverage of much of south Essex, including
Southend, which had previously been considered part of the
London region.
The Anglia region is currently split into two sub-regions:
East (Aldeburgh, Burnham, Creake, Felixstowe, Gorleston on Sea, Linnet Valley, Little Walsingham, Overstrand, Sudbury, Sudbury B, Tacolneston, Thetford, Wells next Sea, West Runton, Wivenhoe Park and Woodbridge transmitters) and
West (Darlington Park, Kimpton, Kings Lynn, Luton, Madingley (Cambridge) and Sandy Heath transmitters).
Future
In
September 2007, chief executive
Michael Grade announced proposals that would see Anglia broadcasting a single regional service rather than separate news services for the east and west of the region. . These are subject to
Ofcom consultation and are not expected to be implemented until
2009.
Trivia
- Was parodied by Benny Hill as Angela Television instead of Anglia in the Women's Lib Television sketch.
Notable programmes
Tales of the Unexpected (TV series)
Knightmare
Sale of the Century (UK game show)
Heirloom (TV series)
Vanessa
Trisha
Survival
BygonesFurther Information
Get more info on 'Anglia Television'.
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