Network Ten is one of Australia's three commercial television networks. Ten is available in major markets across Australia.
In 1980, the 0-10 Network became known as Network Ten to reflect ATV-0's transition to ATV-10 - although the Brisbane station continued to broadcast as TVQ-0 until 1988.
In 1987, Adelaide's SAS-10 gave ADS-7 the hands of the Ten Network (as ADS-10).
It was nearly folded into the Seven Network in the early 1990s, but due to the lobbying power of billionaire Kerry Packer, owner of the Nine Network, this was successfully resisted.
In 2005, it was revealed CanWest was in discussions with newspaper publisher John Fairfax Holdings about a possible sale of the network, after the federal government had indicated it may consider relaxing Australia's media cross-ownership laws. Currently, newspaper owners cannot own television stations in the same city. Fairfax owned the Seven Network until the mid 1980s, and has been looking for a way back into television for a long time.
Ten is Australia's most profitable station, mostly due to tight spending habits. Its main focus is on viewers under 40 and for the last four ratings years has won this demographic, in spite of being the lowest rating of the 3 commercial Australian television stations overall.
Ten has headquarters in the Sydney suburb of Pyrmont, which is where all national news programming and the network feed are broadcast from.
Network Ten's overseas product includes:
The local content that Ten does produce is mostly reality television, including:
The Ten Network also holds the broadcast rights to the following sporting events:
Network Ten's news service is called Ten News. Ten News operates on a much smaller budget than its competitors, it produces the following bulletins/programs:
Network TEN was criticised by conservative groups and Liberal backbenchers in 2005 for its reality TV show Big Brother. Ten was criticised for selecting particularly promiscuous housemates for that season of the show in an attempt to boost ratings. There were three main objections, all broadcast on it's Big Brother Uncut show. One was footage of a housemate with his fly open whilst giving a massage to a female housemate. Another was where a housemate wrote a fetish song about "skidmarks". There was also a "cumulative" rating where various elements of a particular episode together pushed it above the 'MA15+' rating (the highest rating allowed on TV in Australia). There were calls for TV to be rated by an independent body rather than in-house, but the proposal was scraped after the controversy died down. For the 2006 series Ten appointed two censors to review the show instead of one. Federal Minister for Communications Senator Helen Coonan is reported to say she would be keeping a "close watch on the show's 2006 series" *. This controversy resulted in the "Uncut" show being renamed "Adults Only - AO" for the 2006 season.
In two seperate findings, the Australian Communications and Media Authority determined Network Ten breached clause 2.4 of the Commercial Television Industry Code of Practice. These two breaches were in relation to the broadcast of Big Brother Uncut on 30 May, 13 June and 4 July 2005. The Broadcasting material was not classified according to the Television Classification Guidelines.[
Despite toning down "Adults Only - AO" significantly in comparison to 2005, the series continued to attract controversy. After "Adults Only - AO" was abruptly cancelled several weeks early, a subsequent incident of alleged sexual assault in the house saw the removal of two housemates and a huge public outcry calling for the series to be cancelled entirely.
Media companies of Australia | Australian television networks | CanWest Global Communications | Companies of Australia | Companies listed on the Australian Stock Exchange
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Network Ten".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world