GE
Yes, though that said, there is a bit in the One Day In The Life Of Television where a teenager reviews the Six and says what they don't like is how they tell you what they're going to tell you, then tell you some of it, then tell you what they've just told you, then tell you what they're going to tell you, then tell you that, then tell you what they've told you again. And so on.
On the radio, WATO and PM still do that. (Though yesterday WATO had the interesting problem of the top story changing while the newsreader was reading the summary, and the lead pre-recorded interview being out of date by the time they got to it)
Although for the Six it was ditched in 1993 and hasn't returned. Pre the virtual look, it was "coming up... but now the time is 6:16" followed by the headlines recap. From 1993 onwards it was "It's 6:16, and still to come..." followed by a teaser but no headlines recap.
Sometime in 2004, the script was "a look at the time now, it's a quarter past six". The fact that the line was identical every day annoyed me so much that I complained to the duty office, and they did alter it very slightly...
thegeek
Founding member
Yes, though that said, there is a bit in the One Day In The Life Of Television where a teenager reviews the Six and says what they don't like is how they tell you what they're going to tell you, then tell you some of it, then tell you what they've just told you, then tell you what they're going to tell you, then tell you that, then tell you what they've told you again. And so on.
On the radio, WATO and PM still do that. (Though yesterday WATO had the interesting problem of the top story changing while the newsreader was reading the summary, and the lead pre-recorded interview being out of date by the time they got to it)
Although for the Six it was ditched in 1993 and hasn't returned. Pre the virtual look, it was "coming up... but now the time is 6:16" followed by the headlines recap. From 1993 onwards it was "It's 6:16, and still to come..." followed by a teaser but no headlines recap.
Sometime in 2004, the script was "a look at the time now, it's a quarter past six". The fact that the line was identical every day annoyed me so much that I complained to the duty office, and they did alter it very slightly...