This is a timeline of the history of Sky News, a British free-to-air television news channel and organisation.
1980s
edit- 1988
- 8 June – Rupert Murdoch announces plans to launch a four-channel service on the soon to be launched Astra satellite. One of the channels will be a continuous news channel.[1][2]
- 1989
- 5 February – At just after 6pm, Sky News launches. It begins broadcasting a few minutes after the launch of Sky Television.
1990s
edit- 1990
- 2 December – Following the merger of Sky TV and BSB,[3] Sky News launches on the Marco Polo satellite although arts programmes are shown for a short time as a weekend opt-out service from Sky News.
- 1991
- 16 January-2 March – Sky News provides rolling coverage of the Gulf War.
- 1992
- February – Ahead of TV-am losing its licence to broadcast, it closes its in-house news service and contracts out its news provision to Sky News. This is the first time that output from Sky News is seen on terrestrial television. This continues until 31 December, TV-am's last day on air.
- 31 December – Sky, and Sky News, stops broadcasting via the Marco Polo satellite.
- 1993
- No events.
- 1994
- No events.
- 1995
- No events.
- 1996
- No events.
- 1997
- 31 August – Television schedules are dominated by coverage of the Diana, Princess of Wales's car accident and Sky News provides rolling coverage for much of the following week, culminating in her funeral on 6 September.
- 9 November – Sky News faces competition for the first time when the BBC launches a news channel, BBC News 24.
- 1998
- 1 October – Sky Digital launches.
- 1999
- 8 March – Following the axing of ITV's News at Ten, Sky News launches Sky News at Ten.[4][5]
- June – Sky News Radio is launched.
2000s
edit- 2000
- March – Sky News Active launches.
- 2001
- 11 September – Viewers around the world witness a terrorist attack on the United States, and the collapse of the Twin Towers in New York City. Sky News provides rolling coverage with some of the coverage coming from Fox News.
- 2002
- 7 January – Sky News content becomes available on terrestrial television for the first time in a decade when Channel 5 begins simulcasting part of its breakfast news programme Sunrise.[6]
- February – Sky News Today is launched. It is the new name for Sky News' weekday morning slot.
- 30 October – Freeview launches as a replacement for the failed ITV Digital and Sky News is one of three channels that Sky provides for the new service.
- 2003
- 20 March – As the 2003 invasion of Iraq begins, Sky News provides continuous live coverage of unfolding events.
- 2004
- 24 May – Sky News Ireland is launched as a bespoke news broadcast for the Republic of Ireland.
- 2005
- 1 January – Sky News replaces ITN as news provider to Channel 5. Consequently, the channel's output is seen on a terrestrial channel for the first time, both in early morning scheduled slots and during major news events, such as Sky News' overnight coverage of the results of the 2005 General Election.[7]
- Sky News launches an overnight global bulletin Sky World News. It broadcasts each weeknight between 3am and 5.30am.
- 24 October – The first edition of global news programme World News Tonight is broadcast on Sky News as part of a revamp of the channel which sees rolling news replaced by presented-led programming. The new show co-insides with a move to new studios in Isleworth, Greater London. The new studio is integrated with the newsroom.[8] New music was scored by Adelphoi Music and recorded with a full orchestra at Air Studios, Hampstead, and mastered at Metropolis Studios.[9] Other new shows, in a schedule designed around "appointment to view" programmes rather than continuous rolling news, include Julie Etchingham presenting The Sky Report, Kay Burley presented a new programme called Lunchtime Live from 12 to 2 pm, the daytime show Sky News Today introduces a three-presenter format and the following weekend, Saturday Live is launched.
- 2006
- 10 July – After less than a year on air, the final edition of World News Tonight is broadcast on Sky News. The programme is dropped due to a poor reception from viewers which had seen BBC News 24 overtake Sky News in the ratings. The evening programmes were replaced by rolling news and an interactive programme, Sky News with Martin Stanford, and the return to a two-presenter format on Sky News Today.
- 3 November – The final edition of Sky News Ireland is broadcast. The programme had been intended to end at the end of the month but finished early following a staff walk-out following the announcement of the decision to end the programme.[10] The walkout was over the handling of the closure by their British Sky News managers in London.
- 2007
- 1 March – The Sky Basics channels, including Sky News, stop broadcasting on Virgin Media when the two companies cannot agree a new carriage deal.[11]
- 1 October – Sky News introduces another new schedule, extending Kay Burley's Lunchtime Live programme and renaming it Afternoon Live. It also switches to a new format for much of the day, with a solo lead presenter and a summary newsreader. Sky News also puts more emphasis on interactive news with Martin Stanford's new SkyNews.com programme; an early evening financial news programme presented by Jeff Randall, was also introduced, initially on Mondays only.[12]
- 2008
- 8 September – Colin Brazier presents the first edition of The Live Desk, and Martin Stanford's Sky.com News became SkyNews.com, moving to 7 pm every weeknight.
- 13 November – After more than 18 months, the Sky Basics channels, including Sky News, return to Virgin Media.[13]
- 2009
- Jeff Randall Live is expanded from a weekly show to being on air four nights each week, Monday to Thursday.
- 3 March – Independent Radio News switches its main supplier of news from ITN to Sky News Radio, expanding its customer client list by more than 280 stations and giving it a near-monopoly in UK commercial radio news provision. The first Sky News produced bulletin is broadcast at 2pm.[14]
2010s
edit- 2010
- 6 May – Sky News HD launches.
- 21 May – Sky News confirms that it is to ditch weather presenters, apart from during breakfast programme Sky News Sunrise, and replace them with headline bulletins read by the news presenter.[15] The move comes at the same time as Sky News slims down its sports reporting in favour of bulletins from Sky Sports News.[16]
- 10 September – The final edition of SkyNews.com is broadcast.[17]
- December – The final edition of Sunday Live with Adam Boulton is broadcast. It is replaced in the new year with a similar show presented by Dermot Murnaghan.[18] Boulton moved to a new weekday show at 13:00 on Sky News.[18]
- 2011
- 15 January – The final edition of Saturday Live is broadcast.
- 17 January – The first edition of Boulton & Co is broadcast.
- April – Live at Five is dropped from the schedule following a change in branding policy, and the majority of Sky News output is rebranded as simply Sky News. The name had been in use since the channel's first day on air. Also disappearing from the schedule in 2011 is The Live Desk.
- December – Sky News produces the Queen's Christmas Day broadcast for the first time.[19]
- December – Today is the final day in which Sky News provides Channel 5 with its news coverage as the following day sees the contract return to ITN.
- 2012
- 23 October – Digital switchover is completed in the UK meaning that Sky News is now available in around 90% of UK homes.
- 26 November – A 60-second bespoke news bulletin from Sky News is launched on Pick and is broadcast nightly at 21:00.[20]
- 2013
- No events.
- 2014
- 27 March – The final edition of business news programme Jeff Randall Live is broadcast.[21]
- 1 August – The final edition of weekday lunchtime programme Boulton & Co is broadcast.
- 1 September – Sky News launches a new flagship evening bulletin Sky News Tonight.[22]
- 2015
- Following the 2015 general election, Sky News is rebranded, with a new top-of-the-hour sequence and on-screen graphics. The traditional opening voiceover, read by Bruce Hammal, is dropped after two decades in use.
- 2016
- 21 April – The first edition of discussion programme The Pledge is broadcast. It is broadcast each Thursday evening at 8pm.[23]
- 24 October – Sky News begins broadcasting from a new studio (Studio 21) at Sky Central, Sky's new headquarters in West London.[24]
- 2017
- 8 January – Sophy Ridge on Sunday launches.[25] Also launching in 2017 is weekday show All Out Politics.
- 2018
- 24 September – The first edition of teatime programme The News Hour with Mark Austin is broadcast.[26][27]
- 2019
- 13 October – Sky News Sunrise is broadcast for the final time. The programme, which launched with Sky News first went on air more than 30 years ago, is broadcast. It is replaced the following day with two new shows – The Early Rundown and Sky News @ Breakfast.[28]
- 16 October – 1 November – Sky News operates a pop-up channel called Sky News Brexit-Free. On air on weekdays from 17:00 to 22:00, it broadcasts news which isunrelated to the United Kingdom's exit from the European Union. Sky News head John Ryley cited viewer fatigue over the near-constant coverage of Brexit as justification for the channel.[29][30]
2020s
edit- 2020
- March – The Pledge is suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The programme has not subsequently returned.
- 23 September – The weekday editions of Sky News @ Breakfast are renamed Kay Burley.
- 10 December – Sky News Breakfast replaces Kay Burley after Burley stepped back from presenting the show for six months, as a result of breaching London's tier 2 coronavirus restrictions.[31]
- 2021
- 7 April – Sky News launches a weekday climate news programme The Daily Climate Show.[32]
- 3 June – Sky News updates its top-of-the-hour sequence, soundtrack and on-screen graphics package. A Sky News source denies the move is related to the launch of GB News.[33]
- 7 June – The Kay Burley branding reappears following Burley's return to the channel.[34]
- 2022
- No events.
- 2023
- 24 May – Sky News launches an audio-only feed, making it available on the TuneIn service.[35]
- 3 July – Sky News makes major changes to its weekday line-up. Sky News Today now airs from 10am until 4.30pm with Ian King Live renamed Business Live and broadcasting in two half-hour slots at 11.30am and 4.30pm.[36]
- 16 July – Sophy Ridge on Sunday is broadcast for the final time.[37]
- September – A new weeknight show Politics Hub launches, airing on weeknights at 7pm, and be presented by Sophy Ridge. [38] Trevor Phillips will take over the Sunday morning show.[39]
- 2 October – UK Tonight with Sarah-Jane Mae launches, broadcasting Mondays to Thursday, 8pm to 9pm.[40]
- 2024
- 8 January – The weekday editions of Sky News Breakfast are refreshed. The programme starts at the earlier time of 6am, and new presents join the programme.[41]
- 22 January – The World launches. The hour-long international news programme airs Monday to Thursday at 9pm and is part of Sky News' evening sequence of individually branded, and focussed, hour-long programmes.[42]
- 21 June – Sky News stops broadcasting in standard definition on Virgin Media.[43]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ The £199 dish that will launch a television revolution. by Richard Evans Media Editor. The Times, Thursday, 9 June 1988
- ^ "Sky News Success Story". www.successstory.com. Retrieved 2019-10-15.
- ^ "Maggie Brown on the early years of Sky Television". The Guardian. London.
- ^ "You're wrong to bong, ITN tells Sky News". Daily Record. 1 March 1999. Retrieved 2016-03-13.
- ^ Holmwood, Leigh (8 October 2008). "Former Sky News presenter Bob Friend dies aged 70". Guardian Online. Retrieved 2016-03-13.
- ^ "Sky News debuts on Channel 5". BBC News. BBC. 7 January 2002. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
- ^ "Five to take Sky News bulletins". BBC News. 9 March 2004. Retrieved 29 September 2007.
- ^ Owen Gibson (21 October 2005). "Sky News unveils new studios and beefed up schedule". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
- ^ "Adelphoi Music – Music Composition and Sound Design".
- ^ "Ray Kennedy presents the final Sky News Ireland programme". YouTube. October 3, 2009.
- ^ "Virgin customers wake up to no Sky channels". The Guardian. 2007-03-01. Archived from the original on 2021-12-06.
- ^ Dowell, Ben (6 September 2007). "Jeff Randall given own Sky News show". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 November 2009.
- ^ "Sky and Virgin Media resolve distribution row". The Guardian. 2008-11-04. Archived from the original on 2021-09-18.
- ^ "Radio news bulletins cut under Sky IRN deal - Press Gazette". www.pressgazette.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2011-06-16.
- ^ "Sky News ditches weather presenters". The Guardian. 2010-05-21. Archived from the original on 2022-04-25.
- ^ Sky News sports operation to be streamlined
- ^ so skynews.com is the only tv show with the web agenda for only another 10 days... then I cede 7pm to Randall and occupy 8-10pm instead! Martin Stanford, Twitter, 1 September 2010
- ^ a b Sky News Announces New Shows for Boulton and Murnaghan Sky Press Office, 6 January 2011
- ^ Queen's Christmas message to be produced by Sky for first time
- ^ "Sky News bulletins coming to Pick TV". Digital Spy. 26 November 2012. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
- ^ Sweney, Mark (18 July 2013). "Jeff Randall to leave Sky News role". The Guardian.
- ^ Boulton, Adam (1 September 2014). "Sky News Tonight: Show Takes Fresh Approach". Sky News. Retrieved 2016-03-13.
- ^ "Sky News to launch Question Time rival The Pledge". The Guardian. 5 April 2016. Retrieved 3 November 2018.
- ^ "Sky Central now open." 18 July 2016. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
- ^ Sweney, Mark (16 November 2016). "Sophy Ridge to host new Sunday morning show on Sky News". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
- ^ "Sky News unveils new daytime line-up, with brand new programming and on-air talent". Sky. Retrieved 12 August 2019.
- ^ "Sky's Kay Burley and Mark Austin launch new shows". Sky News. Retrieved 3 November 2018.
- ^ Twitter, Freddy Mayhew (23 September 2019). "Sky News announces new morning slate as Kay Burley moves to breakfast show". Press Gazette. Retrieved 12 October 2019.
{{cite web}}
:|last=
has generic name (help) - ^ "Sky News Brexit-Free closes down". Retrieved 2020-04-21.
- ^ "The Brexit-Free TV Channel Is Meant to Solve News Fatigue – It Made Mine Worse". Vice. 2019-10-22. Retrieved 2020-04-20.
- ^ "Kay Burley off air at Sky News for six months over Covid rule breach". the Guardian. 10 December 2020. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
- ^ Sky News to launch first daily news programme dedicated to climate change and the environment
- ^ "Sky News welcomes back Kay Burley and undergoes rebrand before launch of TV rival GB News". inews.co.uk. 2021-06-04. Archived from the original on 4 June 2021. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
- ^ "Kay Burley returns to Sky News after six-month Covid breach absence". BBC News. 7 June 2021. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
- ^ Martin, Roy (24 May 2023). "Television without pictures – Sky News now available on TuneIn". Radio Today. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
- ^ Sky News make changes to weekday daytime schedule
- ^ Final Sophy Ridge on Sunday this weekend - Politics Hub starts on September
- ^ Final Sophy Ridge on Sunday this weekend - Politics Hub starts on September
- ^ Trevor Philips replaces Spy Ridge on Sky News Sunday mornings
- ^ [ https://www.skygroup.sky/en-gb/article/sky-news-announces-new-show---the-uk-tonight-with-sarah-jane-mee- Sky News Announces New UK Show - UK Tonight with Sarah Jane Mee]
- ^ Sky News Breakfast starts earlier, adds presenters and has a brand new look
- ^ The World starts 22 January on Sky News
- ^ "Sky News now HD-only on Virgin Media". 21 June 2024.