Pres Café
International News Presentation: Past and Present - Printable Version

+- Pres Café (https://pres.cafe)
+-- Forum: Pres Café TV and Radio Forums (https://pres.cafe/forumdisplay.php?fid=1)
+--- Forum: News and Sport Presentation (https://pres.cafe/forumdisplay.php?fid=3)
+--- Thread: International News Presentation: Past and Present (/showthread.php?tid=248)



RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - Medianext.MX - 12-09-2023

(11-09-2023, 05:55 PM)Edogawa Ranpo Wrote:  With a new look for Serbia's Prva comes a new look for their news bulletins!
Here's the opener for Vesti Prve u 18h
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dvpXSwYIE8 
(12-09-2023, 07:25 AM)W. Knight Wrote:  And this is the new Jutro open (apologies for the loss of quality in advance - I have to compress it to get it through Metropol!):
https://up.metropol247.co.uk/Knight%20in%20West/Prva%20Jutro%202023%20Compressed.mp4 

For the news service is quite an improvement compared to what they had before. The straps, however, look like a direct copy of RTP Telejornal. And for Jutro, it looks like a jumbled mess: they wanted to retain the GMB-like headline sequence, but they changed the intro, straps and (the somewhat bland) music. I don't mind the new Vesti music, even if it replaced the custom piece of music they commissioned at considerable cost from the Belgrade Philharmonic Orchestra.


RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - Edogawa Ranpo - 17-09-2023

Over to Switzerland and RSI's Telegiornale has a new look!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdKhmJpf2eQ 


RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - Medianext.MX - 19-09-2023

Today is an important day for Mexico, as it is the anniversary of two deadly earthquakes which happened in 1985 and 2017 and rocked most of the central part of the country, including Mexico City. As a result, today the country is having country-wide national emergency dry runs in order to make citizens prepared for any earthquake or natural disaster that might risk their communities.

Here’s how the national media covered the 1985 earthquake. That earthquake had serious ramifications for the national broadcasters, specially television channels: Televisa’s downtown Chapultepec HQ was heavily destroying, leaving the broadcaster’s four national channels dark for most of the morning and afternoon, before eventually resuming programming after installing makeshift galleries and a newsroom at their San Ángel Inn (Coyoacán) studios; in contrast, then-state-owned Canal 13/Imevisión, located at the much more earthquake-prone zone of the Ajusco mountains, suffered only from a power cut and was able to quickly resume broadcasting thanks to an emergency power outlet, and began informing for hours on the situation.

On the radio side, Radio Fórmula was the most affected, as the broadcaster had its building destroyed, and leaving most of its stations silent for days; only the FM stations (located out of the Torre Latinoamericana, in the downtown zone) remained on air simulcasting rival Radio Centro in a temporary basis; other radio conglomerates (including Radio Centro) resumed broadcasting after the power cut, dropping their normal programming in favour of continuous coverage.

Radio Red (then owned by Monterrey media mogul Clemente Serna Martínez) was a notable case, as it was the only station which remained on-air during the quake and was the first to report on the seriousness of the situation, even if News Director José Gutiérrez Vivó was away in Japan, preparing for a special series of programmes analyzing the situation of the country. The station had continuous coverage of the situation for nearly a week, leading to increased ratings and credibility, plus a boom on talkback radio formats which still continues to date in Mexico City.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jZlMu1g5UzQ 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBQ9Rw-FV8I 

In 2017, the quake was felt much harsher in Mexico City, but, given the increased level of security and civil defence plans, the death toll was much less serious; however, saying the level of damage was minor is an understatement. On the TV side, Televisa and TV Azteca courted strong controversy over the level of coverage, by moments rousing the tabloid and hyperbolic; this was quickly showcased (the day after the quake) by the supposed case of a disappeared girl; over time, TV Azteca was forced to tone down the level of the coverage, but Televisa continued exploiting the case for longer, with reporter Danielle Dithurbide on the scene of a school destroyed by the quake, where the victim was (supposedly) lingering.

However, two days later, TV Azteca was the first to break the news that the victim was inexistent and was not a casualty of the destruction; it was soon followed by investigations from independent news outlets Proceso and Aristegui Noticias over inconsistencies on the supposed identity of the non-existent victim. By the afternoon, the National Army confirmed the inexistence of the disappeared girl; the aftermath of this led to Televisa’s ratings dramatically sinking, on the benefit of TV Azteca, whose ratings skyrocketed (at times, its news channel ADN40 was even beating all the classic national FTA networks); newcomer Imagen and the public media also received a strong boost in viewer figures from the debacle of the situation.

Unlike the 1985 quake, TV was the dominant medium this time: all TV networks remained on the air during the situation, and eventually canceled their normal programming for at least five days to cover the ongoing situation, whilst only the talkback radio stations set aside its daily programming for rolling coverage (with music and entertainment stations sticking to normal scheduling). However, most stations interrupted its regular schedule (at least in Mexico City) to trigger their emergency alert system, which much more basic than the ones existing (for example) in Japan and Taiwan, consisting only of a sound alert.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2EoaLNX8cZU 

Last year, and for the third time round, another earthquake struck the central part of the country, just only minutes after the national dry run. That quake was much less violent than the other, as its epicentre was located in the state of Colima (with the harshest aftermath limited to the immediate zone of the aftershock). The quake caused the national networks’ afternoon news bulletins to begin earlier than planned.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tyLnEZ_KAac 


RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - W. Knight - 21-09-2023

Along the same lines, today marks the 24th year since the 1999 earthquake in Central Taiwan.

Here's a look at how local TV channels reported on the quake. Since the quake occured at the early hours of the day, there wasn't instant live news coverage - an on-screen roller would be suffice.
https://youtu.be/gRP8-iX5PbA 
[list]
[*]TTV, then still controlled by the government, displayed a roller of text on the side, denoting the earthquake.
[*]CTV, then controlled by KMT, put up a newsflash caption stating the quake's epicenter, the resulted power outage and damages (around 1 minute in).
[*]FTV, the island's first publicly-owned commercial station, simulcast CNN's coverage, despite having their own cable news channel for 2 years (around a minute and half in, in terrible signal).
[/list]

This is a detailed report from another government broadcaster CTS' Evening News that night:
https://youtu.be/pvoAw6zOOCo 

And this is TTV's special report, specifically 30 hours after the fact.
https://youtu.be/nQKVCLuT8Fo 

Over in Hong Kong, this was how TVB News reported the earthquake that evening, utilizing footage of their sister cable channel, TVBS-N.
https://youtu.be/72qTCAS1UTE 


RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - Edogawa Ranpo - 27-09-2023

From Monday, TV 2 Denmark's news departments, one for TV 2 and the other for the TV 2 News channel, which have produced their own news, will merge into one unified television department for both channels. This means the bulletins on TV 2 will have a new look and new name.

The TV 2 bulletins, "18 Nyhederne", "19 Nyhederne" and "21.30 Nyhederne" will become "18 News", "19 News" and "21.30 News".

Also from the beginning of October, TV 2 News will now be broadcasting from studios in Odense in the evening, whilst continuing to broadcast from Copenhagen for the morning, afternoon on the News channel and for News magazine programmes on TV 2.

Later in the week, they'll be launching a new programme called "Newsroom". "Newsroom" will be an hour-long programme from Mondays to Thursdays from 10pm on TV 2 News, which will also be broadcast on the main TV 2 channel at 10.20pm after the regional news.

So there's set to be a lot of changes to come according to this article (in Danish).
https://nyheder.tv2.dk/2023-09-20-store-aendringer-i-nyhedsudsendelserne-paa-tv-2-og-tv-2-news 


RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - JamieMurph25 - 30-09-2023

(27-09-2023, 02:06 PM)Edogawa Ranpo Wrote:  [...]
Also from the beginning of October, TV 2 News will now be broadcasting from studios in Odense in the evening, whilst continuing to broadcast from Copenhagen for the morning, afternoon on the News channel and for News magazine programmes on TV 2.
[...]
So does that mean they'll be using the facilities from the regional TV 2 station, TV 2/Fyn, in the evenings?


RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - Medianext.MX - 30-09-2023

(30-09-2023, 05:13 PM)JamieMurph25 Wrote:  So does that mean they'll be using the facilities from the regional TV 2 station, TV 2/Fyn, in the evenings?

TV 2/Fyn is not based in Copenhagen; it is the regional station serving precisely TV 2’s home market of Odense (and all of the Funen district). The Copenhagen district is served by Kosmopol (formerly TV 2 Lorry). Additionally, the network and regional facilities are separate in both cases: TV 2 network HQ is a former cattle house in Kvægtorvet, whilst TV 2/Fyn is based in a modern building in the southwest outskirts.

TV 2 News' Copenhagen studio is based in the broadcaster's main office in Teglholm (near the shore); Kosmopol operates out of an old indoor amusement park building in Frederiksberg; the station is the main tenant of three (alongside a theatre and a restaurant), and has been based there since 1989 (hence the TV 2 Lorry name, Lorry was the name of the amusement park based there).


RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - W. Knight - 01-10-2023

RTV BN in Bosnia has debuted new graphics and seemingly a new set, replacing the one used since 2022.

Before:
https://youtu.be/vVeIc2VqeH0 

After:
https://youtu.be/S8AQ23Gu9iA 


RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - Edogawa Ranpo - 02-10-2023

The new look TV 2 News has arrived!
https://youtu.be/Bnf2cH0Jkzs?si=nJ54v6ippj2rpHmH 


RE: International News Presentation: Past and Present - Edogawa Ranpo - 02-10-2023

The intro for the new 12 News, now with a darker red intro. Seems like they're using light red for mornings, a darker red for afternoons.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4ZsgiYEbpk