:-(
A former member
I've got a few questions about the 1985 rebrand for the Six and Nine O'Clock News programmes, and the 1986 (?) relaunch of the News After Noon as the One O'Clock News. I'd appreciate whatever detailed info anyone with a good historical knowledge of this can provide. Thanks in advance!
Firstly:
(1) With the Chinese latern look only four years old, why did the BBC decide to rebrand its news programmes? Was the network ident refresh in 1985 the prime motivator?
(2) After deciding to rebrand, why did BBC News scrap the uniformity of their 1981 corporate news branding? Was there a decision to differentiate between the three bulletins to the extent that they would be seen as very different? And, by extension, were presenters assigned to work on only one bulletin? And if so, why?
(3) Why were the titles for the Nine allowed to be so very over the top? The 1980s rock music and cheesy computer graphics are really quite showy without really having much to do with BBC tradition or identity. (With the only exception that the font looked a lot like the one used circa 1972-1976.)
(4) I know that the titles for the 1, 6 and 9 were clearly different and the formats relatively different, but were editorial decisions also made in segregation?
(5) Why was the Nine rebranded again in 1988, after only three years, and the One and Six allowed to retain their mid-1980s titles well into the following decade? Don't get me wrong, I think the 1988-1993 titles for the Nine are really good, but I don't understand why that programme itself (and the generic BBC News titles) required an image update and the others didn't. What was that decision based on?
Firstly:
(1) With the Chinese latern look only four years old, why did the BBC decide to rebrand its news programmes? Was the network ident refresh in 1985 the prime motivator?
(2) After deciding to rebrand, why did BBC News scrap the uniformity of their 1981 corporate news branding? Was there a decision to differentiate between the three bulletins to the extent that they would be seen as very different? And, by extension, were presenters assigned to work on only one bulletin? And if so, why?
(3) Why were the titles for the Nine allowed to be so very over the top? The 1980s rock music and cheesy computer graphics are really quite showy without really having much to do with BBC tradition or identity. (With the only exception that the font looked a lot like the one used circa 1972-1976.)
(4) I know that the titles for the 1, 6 and 9 were clearly different and the formats relatively different, but were editorial decisions also made in segregation?
(5) Why was the Nine rebranded again in 1988, after only three years, and the One and Six allowed to retain their mid-1980s titles well into the following decade? Don't get me wrong, I think the 1988-1993 titles for the Nine are really good, but I don't understand why that programme itself (and the generic BBC News titles) required an image update and the others didn't. What was that decision based on?
Last edited by A former member on 26 November 2004 12:44am - 2 times in total