Tyne Tees Television Limited is the ITV television contractor for North East England. It is a part of ITV plc.
Television House also acts as a base for ITV SignPost, 'Britain's biggest supplier of British Sign Language (BSL) services for television, video, CD-ROM, DVD, film and the Internet'. *. Tyne Tees also has smaller studios and offices in Billingham, York, London and within the Media Centre at the University of Sunderland.
The station is named after two of the region's three primary rivers. The other major river, the Wear (which runs between the Tyne and the Tees), was represented within the company's early signature tune "Three Rivers Fantasy", a specially commissioned work by noted composer and arranger Arthur Wilkinson. Tyne Tees Television's flagship regional programme is North East Tonight, a local news programme broadcast at 6.00pm. Although Tyne Tees Television is not a prolific contributor to ITV's network programming, it has produced a range of popular shows, such as adaptations of Catherine Cookson novels and the 100 Greatest... series of clip shows for Channel 4. Previously, it made Face The Press, Crosswits and Supergran, among others, for ITV.
The architecture of the public entrance to the City Road complex gave music show The Tube its title.
On 16 March, 1996, the continuity studios in Newcastle were closed, with continuity being centralised in Leeds. Later that year Yorkshire Tyne Tees Television made the controversial move of dual branding its stations as "Channel 3". (Channel 3 was, for a time, the 'official' name for ITV, but was not used by other stations.) Tyne Tees Television was forced to use the rather long-winded name "Channel 3 North East - Tyne Tees Television". The famous "TTTV" logo was dropped in favour of a large '3'. The name "Tyne Tees Television" was only seen in small letters at the bottom of the screen. Its neighbour, Yorkshire Television, was allowed to keep its own logo alongside the '3', but Tyne Tees was not. The new branding was launched on 2 September 1996.
In 1997, Yorkshire Tyne Tees Television plc was acquired by Granada Group plc (now ITV plc). One of Granada's first moves was to scrap the-often derided Channel 3 branding. The "TTTV" logo returned to television screens in a new form on 9 March, 1998. However, dual branding with the "ITV" name was introduced a year later.
On 28 October 2002, Tyne Tees Television was rebranded as ITV1 Tyne Tees. The name "Tyne Tees" only appears before regional programmes; the rest of the time, only the name "ITV1" is shown. The Tyne Tees logo continued to appear after its own programmes, accompanied by a small Granada logo to identify its parent company. However, on 1 November, 2004, this was replaced with a new Granada endcap, with the words 'A Granada Tyne Tees Production'.
On 9 February, 2005, OFCOM issued a proposed timetable for ending analogue terrestrial television transmissions, as part of the switchover to digital television. 2011 is the target year for Tyne Tees.
On-air names:
Initials used:
Nicknames used:
Most of Tyne Tees Television's surviving output from 1959 to 1988 is preserved by the Northern Region Film and Television Archive.
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