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TNT (Australian TV station)

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TNT is an Australian TV station based in Launceston, Tasmania , owned by Southern Cross Austereo . Originally broadcasting to northern Tasmania, it has broadcast to the whole of Tasmania since aggregation of the Tasmanian television market in 1994.

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17-645: TNT-9 was founded as Northern TV Ltd and broadcast in Launceston and Northern Tasmania; the first day of operation was on 26 May. In 1965, TNT-9 became a part of ENT Ltd (Examiner-Northern TV Ltd). By 1980, TNT-9 adopted a custom version of the Nine Network's "9 Dots" logo. ENT bought TVT-6 in Hobart in 1982 and in 1985, TNT and TVT were officially relaunched as TasTV , with the callsigns remaining for both stations. On 30 March 1988, ENT sold TNT-9 to Tricom Corporation,

34-869: A Launceston family were trained to run the event. Seven Tasmania airs sports coverage from Seven Network , which includes Australian Rules Football , Horse racing , cricket , tennis , golf and motorsport . In the 1990s, the station aired Network Ten 's daily sports program Sports Tonight as part of its dual-affiliation, however this was eventually replaced by Seven's current affairs program, Today Tonight . The station airs three AFL games per round courtesy of its affiliation with Seven. Matches held in Tasmania are broadcast on delay. The station promotes extensive coverage of Tasmanian sports in its news coverage including cricket , athletics , netball and basketball . The station's previous sports reporters were Chris Rowbottom, Alicia Muling, and Trent Dann. Locally, coverage of

51-579: A new uniform logo for all stations it owns. Southern Cross Tasmania loses its Tasmanian Tiger logo to a unified corporate Southern Cross logo. Southern Cross Tasmania became Seven Tasmania in June 2018 as local branding was replaced by network branding. TNT produces the market's number one news bulletin daily plus local lifestyle and sports programming. Previous local programmes produced by TNT-9 include Sports Club (weekly sports review), Quiz Quest (children's game show), The Saturday Night Show (variety), Down

68-459: A part of Southern Cross Broadcasting, changes logo independently of Southern Cross stations on the mainland, adopting a representation of the Tasmanian tiger . Southern Cross and WIN Television launch Tasmanian Digital Television on 23 December 2003, a jointly owned digital-only commercial station based in Hobart relaying Network Ten content. On 17 July 2005, Southern Cross Broadcasting adopts

85-478: Is a private shell company owned by WIN Corporation . In its heyday, ENT was a publicly listed Australian media company based in Launceston, Tasmania . It was run by major shareholder Edmund Rouse until 1994, when a bribery scandal led to Rouse stepping down as managing director and it was taken over by WIN Corporation. TasTV The Six Network (later VIC Television ) Filmpac Holdings

102-542: Is affiliated with the metropolitan Nine Network and TDT ( SCA 10 is also affiliated with the metropolitan Network 10 . Following aggregation in 1994, the station was a combined Seven and Ten affiliate, however the Ten content was gradually removed from the schedule in the late 2000s following the launch of digital-only station TDT in 2003. TDT is a joint-venture between Southern Cross Austereo and WIN. Notes: ENT Ltd ENT Ltd , standing for Examiner-Northern TV Ltd,

119-524: Is the most popular Tasmanian-made program airing and is broadcast Australia-wide. The program is hosted by former news journalists Andrew Hart and Nick Duigan. Renovation Relief is a DIY Program hosted by famous wood-chopper David Foster in which he and a team of people from sponsors (i.e. Gunns ) renovate a house, most commonly for people who have done something for the community or have enabled children. Broadcast every night during Targa Tasmania fortnight, Andrew Hart and Nick Duigan report and review

136-557: The 1990s up to the early 2000s. Outside of this bulletin, Seven Tasmania airs national news and current affairs output from the Seven Network, including: TNT simulcasts the weekday edition of Seven News at 4 from HSV-7 in Melbourne, along with Seven Morning News at 11.30 on weekdays and Seven News at 5 on weekends from ATN-7 in Sydney. The fishing show Hook, Line and Sinker

153-474: The Line (morning talk/local events), The Saturday Morning Fun Show (kids), Tasmanian New Faces (talent) and annual coverage of Targa Tasmania and The Launceston Cup . The station produces its flagship news program, Nightly News (formerly Southern Cross News ), broadcast live every night at 6:00pm and presented from the Launceston and Hobart studios. Short news updates are also produced and broadcast throughout

170-465: The day alongside the national Seven News Updates . The bulletin is consistently the highest rating television program in Tasmania. A shortened version of the day's bulletin is upload by the station's YouTube channel, featuring only local news and sport reports alongside weather forecasts. The station originally planned to retitle the bulletin Seven News Tasmania on 1 July 2018 to coincide with

187-467: The events of the day. Holiday at Home is a lifestyle program which promotes places to stay and things to do in Tasmania. For the ten weeks leading up to the Burnie Ten , Mark Connelly trains a group of people in a program sponsored by Seven Tasmania. Weekly updates are broadcast during commercial breaks. In the early years of the program, people who took part were well known in Tasmania, however in 2006,

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204-484: The international road race Targa Tasmania is produced and aired each year. The station also produces live coverage of the Launceston and Hobart Cup . Regular updates on the annual Boxing Day Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race are broadcast during the duration of the race. The station is affiliated with the metropolitan Seven Network and also broadcasts most of Seven's sub-channels ( 7TWO , 7mate , SBN , and Racing.com ). Rival Tasmanian stations TVT-6 ( WIN Television )

221-461: The name Filmways Home Video , starting with a deal with Video Classics , then as a partnership with Video Tape Center under the name Filmways VTC , with K-TEL Video distributing the titles from 1984 to 1985, and Vestron Video International distributing titles by Filmways Home Video/Filmpac from 1985 to 1988 before it became an independent video distributor for two years. Ironically enough, both Vestron and Filmways were Video Classics members before

238-884: The second largest regional television broadcaster in Australia at the time, for $ 40 million, after buying a parcel worth 19.9% in shares. Under aggregation laws, ENT had to sell one of its two stations to a suitor of its choice by 1992. Ahead of the separation, TNT opened relay station TNT-8 in King Island on 9 September 1988, Tricom was rebranded Southern Cross Broadcasting ; the station became known on-air as Southern Cross Network from 1 January 1989. Federal aggregation caused Southern Cross Television to broadcast in Hobart while TasTV, later renamed WIN Television, started broadcasting to Launceston. With both stations carried statewide, both Southern Cross and TasTV/WIN were now competing against each other. In 1999, Southern Cross Tasmania, while still

255-456: The station's rebrand as Seven Tasmania. But the relaunch was delayed without any notice given. When asked by ABC 's Media Watch , the CEO of SCA Grant Blackley stated that the Seven Network did not want their name featured on any output they do not control, so SCA was coming up with a new brand. On 3 December 2018, the bulletin changed its title to Nightly News , a brand the station formerly used from

272-471: Was a film and video distributor. ENT acquired a 40 per cent stake in 1988 from its purchase of Victoria-based media company Associated Broadcasting Services. From 1986 to 1990, Filmpac released a total of 69 films theatrically making it the country's largest independent mainstream theatrical distributor. The company collapsed in 1990 with its film library purchased by Village Roadshow , along with certain assets from another defunct distributor Seven Keys . It

289-488: Was originally known as Filmways Australasian Distributors , and it was originally formed by the founders of Dendy Theaters, Mark Josem and Robert Ward in 1971 to release movies in the box office to the Australian market. Mark Josem died in 1986 after a series of heart attacks from a surgery the previous year. The company would soon be renamed to Filmpac Holdings . The company also had a home video division on its own under

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