GTV (Australian TV station)


GTV is a commercial television station in Melbourne, Australia, owned by the Nine Network. The station is currently based at studios at 717 Bourke Street, Docklands. GTV-9 is the home of the Australian Open tennis coverage.

History

GTV-9 was amongst the first television stations to begin regular transmission in Australia. Test transmissions began on 27 September 1956, introduced by former 3DB radio announcer Geoff Corke, based at the Mount Dandenong transmitter, as the studios in Richmond were not yet ready. The station covered the 1956 Summer Olympics which Melbourne hosted., the 1956 Carols By Candlelight and the Davis Cup tennis as part of its test transmissions.
The station was officially opened on 19 January 1957 by Victorian Governor
Sir Dallas Brooks from the studios in Bendigo Street, Richmond. GTV-9 was the third television station to launch in Victoria after HSV-7 and ABV-2, on 19 January 1957. A clip from the ceremony has featured in a number of GTV-9 retrospectives, in which the Governor advises viewers that if they did not like the programs, they could just turn off.
The Richmond building, bearing the name Television City, had been converted from a Heinz tinned food factory, also occupied in the past by the Wertheim Piano Company. A cornerstone, now visible from the staff canteen courtyard, was laid when construction of the Piano factory began.
Eric Pearce was appointed senior newsreader in the late 1960s, after having been the first newsreader at rival station HSV-7. He held that position for almost twenty years. In 1957, GTV-9's first large-scale production was the nightly variety show In Melbourne Tonight, hosted by Graham Kennedy. Kennedy was a radio announcer at 3UZ in Melbourne before being 'discovered' by GTV-9 producer Norm Spencer, when appearing on a GTV-9 telethon. Bert Newton moved from HSV-7 to join Kennedy. IMT continued for thirteen years, dominating Melbourne's television scene for most of that time. It set a precedent for a number of subsequent live variety programmes from the station.
Ownership has changed over the decades. The station was first licensed to the General Television Corporation Ltd., a consortium of two newspapers, The Argus and The Age, together with cinema chains Hoyts, Greater Union, Sir Arthur Warner's Electronic Industries, JC Williamson's Theatres, Cinesound Productions, and radio stations 3XY, 3UZ, 3KZ. In early 1957 The Argus was acquired by The Herald and Weekly Times Ltd, and the paper was closed on the same day that GTV-9 officially opened. The Herald in turn sold its interests in the station to Electronic Industries, later acquired by UK television manufacturer Pye, in 1960. Because of the restriction on foreign ownership of television stations, GTV-9 was then sold to Frank Packer's Australian Consolidated Press, which already owned TCN-9 in Sydney, resulting in the formation of the country's first commercially owned television network. Prior to this GTV-9 was affiliated with ATN-7 in Sydney. Son Clyde Packer ran the network for some time, until a falling out led to a handover to younger son Kerry Packer. In the 1980s the network was sold to Alan Bond, but later bought back at a much lower price.
Following the death of Kerry Packer, his son James Packer progressively sold down his stake in the network.
Along with most Australian TV stations, GTV-9 commenced colour test transmissions in October 1974. The official changeover took place at 12.00am on Saturday 1 March 1975. In 1976, GTV-9 became the first Australian television station to commence permanent 24-hour transmission. In 2001 the station commenced digital television broadcasting, in line with most other metropolitan stations. GTV-9 continued broadcasting in analogue on VHF9, with a digital simulcast on VHF8.
In 2010 it was announced to public and then staff, that after 54 years at Bendigo Street, Richmond, GTV-9 would move day-to-day operations including News and commercial sales to 717 Bourke Street, Docklands. On 25 October 2010, it was announced that GTV-9 would begin producing larger scale studio productions, such as The Footy Show, Hey Hey its Saturday, and Millionaire Hotseat from the new Docklands Studios Melbourne.
On 28 February 2011, GTV-9 broadcast its final live program – the 6pm edition of Nine News – from the Richmond Television City studios, and the following day began broadcasting news bulletins from 717 Bourke Street, Docklands. Also while their new fibre link to their transmission site was being completed, a temporary DVB-S2 link was put up on Optus D1, which ceased at the end of the year.
In 2012, no new programming has been produced out of the new studios. The network opted to move A Current Affair and its host Tracy Grimshaw to TCN-9 in Sydney.
In May 2012, a lower powered permanent backup DVB-S2 link for their transmission site was re-established on Optus D1, which requires at least a two-metre solid receiving dish.

Digital multiplex

Source:

Programming

Locally produced programs by or with GTV-9 Melbourne.

Current

717 Bourke Street

  • Nine News Melbourne
  • Nine Afternoon News Melbourne
  • Nine News: First at Five
  • TAC Cup Future Stars
  • The AFL Sunday Footy Show
  • ''Footy Classified''

    Docklands Studios Melbourne

  • ''Tipping Point Australia''

    Other Location

  • Lego Masters
  • The Block
  • Family Food Fight
  • Postcards
  • Paramedics
  • Bad Mothers
  • ''Carols by Candlelight''

    Sport

  • Super Netball coverage
  • NRL coverage: Melbourne Storm
  • Australian Open coverage
  • French Open and US Open tennis coverage

    Past

2010s
  • Millionaire Hot Seat – previously filmed in Studio 9
  • Nine News Victoria replaced by WIN News from July 2021.
  • Weakest Link
  • Your Domain
  • Australian Ninja Warrior
  • Talkin' 'Bout Your Generation
  • The Logies
  • House Husbands
  • Underbelly
  • A Current Affair
  • This Is Your Life
  • The Million Dollar Drop
  • Between the Lines
  • Ben Elton Live From Planet Earth
2000s
  • 20 to 1
  • Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? New Zealand – The show was tapped at GTV set for New Zealand Viewers.
  • Australia's Funniest Home Videos: Daily Edition
  • The Singing Bee
  • Here's Humphrey
  • Temptation
  • Underbelly series 1
  • Canal Road
  • Million Dollar Wheel of Fortune
  • Power of 10
  • Hole in the Wall
  • The Mint
  • 1 vs. 100

  • The Nation
  • Kids’ WB Australia
  • Quizmania
  • Bert's Family Feud
  • Shopping for Love
  • Comedy Inc
  • Magda's Funny Bits
  • Any Given Sunday
  • Celebrity Golf Shoot-Out
  • StarStruck
  • Australia's Funniest Home Video Show

  • Micallef Tonight
  • Test Australia: The National IQ Test
  • AFL
  • Shafted
  • Pass the Buck
  • Surprise, Surprise
  • Russell Gilbert Live
1990s
  • Pig's Breakfast
  • Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
  • Stingers
  • The Russell Gilbert Show
  • Burgo's Catch Phrase
  • This is Your Life
  • Don't Forget Your Toothbrush
  • The Footy Show – previously filmed in Studio 9
  • The Price Is Right
  • The Bob Morrison Show
  • Banjo Paterson's The Man From Snowy River: The McGregor Saga
  • Saturday at Rick’s
  • Chances
  • All Together Now
1980s
1970s
  • The Don Lane Show
  • The Ernie Sigley Show
  • The Graham Kennedy Show
  • A Current Affair
  • Hey Hey It's Saturday, 2009
  • The Sullivans
  • The Daryl and Ossie Cartoon Show
  • Cartoon Corner
  • No Man's Land
1957 – 1960s
  • The Big Game
  • New Faces
  • World Championship Wrestling
  • In Melbourne Tonight
  • The Tarax Show
  • Boomerang
  • It Could Be You
  • The Adventures of Gerry Gee
  • Concentration
  • Toddy Time
  • Let Me Read to You
  • Bongo
  • The Bert Newton Show
  • On the Spot
  • Geoff and Judy with Geoff Corke and Judy Jack
  • The Astor Show
  • Face the Nation
  • Keeping Company
  • Personal Album
  • The Peters Club with Rod McLennan, Judy Banks & Joff Ellen
  • The Shirley Abicair Show
  • Anything Goes
  • Do You Trust Your Wife?
  • Eric Welch's Sports Album
  • Football Inquest
  • The Happy Go Lucky Show
  • Hillbilly Requests
  • The Jack Perry Show
  • Juke Box Saturday Night
  • Lovely to Look At
  • Mannequin Parade
  • Neptune Presents
  • Open House
  • Thursday at One
  • Raising a Husband
  • * Studio 9 was used as the primary studio.

    News

Nine News Melbourne is produced in, and presented from, the GTV-9 studios in Docklands by Alicia Loxley and Tom Steinfort and Peter Hitchener with sport presenters Tony Jones and Natalie Yoannidis and weather presenters Scherri-Lee Biggs and Madeline Spark.
The 6PM main bulletin is also simulcast on community radio station Light FM and also streamed online. Nine News nationwide bulletins are produced in, and presented from, the studios of TCN-9 in Sydney although late night news updates at the weekend are produced at GTV-9 and presented by Peter Hitchener.
In May 2017, the station launched its first local afternoon news bulletin, Nine Afternoon News Melbourne, putting it head-to-head with rival station HSV-7's local afternoon news. The bulletin is presented by Brett McLeod.
Brett McLeod is the main fill-in news presenter for Loxley and Steinfort on weeknights, with Stephanie Anderson being the main fill-in presenter for Hitchener on weekends. Natalie Yoannidis and Trent Kniese are the fill-in sport presenters, and Stephanie Anderson and Isabel Quinlan are the fill-in weather presenters.