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Channel M

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Channel m
Launched 14 February 2000
Owned by Guardian Media Group
Country United Kingdom
Formerly called Manchester Student Television
Website www.channelm.co.uk
Availability
Terrestrial
UK Analogue UHF Channel 39 (Manchester only)
Satellite
Sky Digital Channel 203
Freesat Channel 981
Eurobird 1 11527V 27500 2/3
Service ID: 50315
Cable
Virgin Media Channel 878 (Greater Manchester only)
Internet television
Channel M Online Watch online

Channel M is a regional television station, based in Manchester. The channel's output is specifically designed for Greater Manchester, United Kingdom and the surrounding area. It began broadcasting on 14 February 2000 as Manchester Student Television. The channel produces a range of news, current affairs, features and sports programming. Most of the output, including the flagship Channel M News service, is produced in-house. Channel M is owned and operated by the Guardian Media Group, owner of Manchester Evening News.

Contents

[edit] Coverage

As an RSL station Channel M was primarily available free to air on terrestrial in parts of Greater Manchester. In 2004 Channel M launched on the NTL platform (now part of Virgin Media), and launched on the digital satellite in April 2006 - the first RSL channel to be broadcast on satellite. The channel is available on the Sky Digital service, giving the station UK-wide coverage, as well as FTA availability to broadcast across Western Europe on Astra 28.2°E.

The channel can be received on analogue television, on channel 39 (615 MHz) in many western & southern areas of the region, on Virgin Media Channel 878 around Greater Manchester, mid-Lancashire & Cheshire and nationwide on Sky channel 203. In January 2009, the broadcasting regulator OFCOM announced that Channel M would receive a licence to broadcast on Freeview after digital switchover.

The channel also become the first broadcaster in the region to offer its programmes on demand via broadband TV on its award-winning website.

[edit] Channel M News

The flagship output of the station is its regional news service, Channel M News, which covers stories from the ten boroughs of Greater Manchester.

  • Channel M News Live is broadcast live between 1700 and 1900 every weekday evening, presented by Andy Crane. The programme is repeated between 1800 & 1900 and 2100 & 2200. Originally, a half-hour programme was pre-recorded at 1700 and repeated half-hourly until 1900 until live broadcasts began in May 2006. Between September 2007 and early 2009, the programme was transmitted live for two hours. The 5pm news was originally pre-recorded from small temporary studios at The Triangle and The Printworks before moving to Urbis in 2005.
  • Channel M News Review is also produced by the news team. The programme consists of a half-hour overview of the week's news from Greater Manchester and features replays of reports featured in the main weekday bulletins. This programme, regularly presented by Andy Crane, usually transmits over the weekend as no live news programmes are currently produced on Saturday or Sunday.

[edit] Non-news Programming

Originally, the main sources of programming were CHUM, Euronews, Channel M's own productions and the University of Salford. Gradually, the Canadian-sourced was replaced by in-house Channel M Productions as the station invested and developed more local programming, following the station's launch on digital satellite services in April 2006.

The channel's biggest audiences are for its news bulletins and sports programmes. Sport programming such as Talking Sharks, Seconds Out and Sports Central broadcast news, highlights and features from Greater Manchester's sporting teams. The Great Manchester Football Show includes a weekly hour-long round up of features on the region's league and non-league teams. Highlights of selected non-league and friendly matches are also broadcast.

At 4pm and intervals throughout the day, Channel M Playlist airs music videos, usually from the alternative and indie genres. Originally, CHUM Television's North American music output was shown during the day.

The station also continues to produce The Jobsmine, a weekly round-up of vacancies in the region and The Homesmine, a regular property magazine show. Both programmes are broadcast as commercial presentations.

[edit] Past programming

Up until May 2009, Channel M also produced highly acclaimed entertainment output including the comedy talk-show Frank Sidebottom's Proper Telly Show and regular music coverage. Programming such as the weekly entertainment show City Life Social and video/computer game review series Re:Loaded helped Channel M to gain interest nationally.

City Life Social, The Great Northern Music Show and In Session were Channel M's main music programmes, often presented by Gerry McLaughlin with Clint Boon as a stand-in host. These programmes usually featured live, acoustic or unplugged studio and outside broadcast performances from alternative and indie bands.

Former BBC Radio Manchester host, Granada presenter and Factory Records boss Tony Wilson was due to present a Friday evening music and entertainment show called The New Friday, produced by former Granada producer and BBC Radio Manchester host Eamonn O'Neill. However, this programme was postponed after Wilson became terminally ill with cancer. Wilson died in August 2007 and the plans for The New Friday were soon abandoned.

City Life Social (previously City Centre Social) then became the station's flagship music show, as Channel M shifted towards a greater focus on live performances within programmes. This policy continued until the music department ceased production in May 2009, shortly after the station announced severe cutbacks in staff and programming.

The cutbacks also affected the station's three-hour breakfast programme Channel M Breakfast, which had been airing on weekdays since 16 April 2007 and included regional news, weather, travel, sport, features and entertainment. Other programmes to be axed included Style in the City, City Life and Reel North.

In terms of broadcast awards, University of Salford productions Hitting Home and Reel North have received multiple nominations from the Royal Television Society since 2001, respectively winning Best Regional Current Affairs Programme in 2005 and Best Regional Programme in 2006.

[edit] Advertising

Channel M's extremely localised audience is unusual for a British television channel. This has promoted an opportunity for local advertising on a Greater Manchester-wide scale.

The majority of the commercials shown on Channel M are produced by local companies attempting to attract this localised audience. One can recognise that many of these commercials are extremely low budget. Large companies like Ikea and DFS have also advertised on Channel M, the former during the opening of Greater Manchester's first Ikea store in Ashton-Under-Lyne. Many of these adverts are also shown on ITV1 in the Granada Television Region. Channel M offers businesses an opportunity to create a television advertisement, as the channel also films, edits and produces commercials.

[edit] Studios

The channel was originally based at smaller studios in The Triangle shopping mall and the later at The Printworks entertainment complex, both of which in Manchester City Centre. Until Channel M moved to the Urbis museum in August 2005, Channel M News was pre-recorded - bulletins were first broadcast live in May 2006. The studio's position on the ground floor of Urbis in Manchester City Centre gives a live elevated background shot of the area around Cathedral Gardens and the Manchester Victoria Railway station. The channel's main production team is based beside and below the studio in on the ground floor and basement. Visitors to Urbis can see the studios, as they are located behind glass adjacent to the museum's entrance. American style Newschasers adorned in the channel's logo are also based at the museum.

[edit] Manchester Media

The Guardian Media Group, which is based at offices in the Spinningfields district of Manchester, owns and operates Channel M. Much of the news-gathering operations are synchronised with the Manchester Evening News. News stories gathered by GMG can be distributed in The Guardian and The Observer national newspapers, the MEN, Greater-Manchester's weekly Advertiser newspapers, Channel M, plus the Mancunian GMG Radio stations (Smooth Radio, Century FM and 106.1 Rock Radio).

Over the past two years, the company has invested greatly in publicising Channel M in a billboard, taxi wrap-around, adshel and local weekly newspaper campaign. This access is advantageous to the profile of the station - it means that cross-reference advertising can be established for a very small cost. On the cover of the MEN every day where on the right hand column, a news feature or programme on Channel M that evening is referred to. It can also be noted that in the MEN TV Guide, full Channel M listing are shown beside those of BBC1, BBC2, Granada Television, Channel 4 and Five. Channel M advertisements are often placed throughout the MEN, Greater Manchester's local free-sheets and the Greater Manchester's edition of Metro. Commercial brands such as City Life, The Jobsmine and The Homesmine also feature across the Manchester Evening News, Greater Manchester's Weekly Newspapers and Channel M.

Channel M's local news rivals include ITV Granada and BBC North West. These channels broadcast Granada Reports and BBC North West Tonight respectively. Other broadcasting headquarters in Manchester include ITV franchisee Granada Television which is located on Quay Street and BBC's Northern England hub on Oxford Road where North West Tonight and BBC Radio Manchester are based. Piccadilly Radio 261's offspring Key 103 and Magic 1152 broadcast from Castlefield.

In 2005, the channel won the "Best Newcomer" award at the Royal Television Society Awards.

[edit] The Future

Channel M's former dependence on imported programmes (mainly music and entertainment programming from CHUM Television) in Canada, was down to the amount of original output created by Channel M with Canadian programming previously making up much of the station's schedule. With the increase of in-house production from its launch on Sky Digital until May 2009, the station was able to broadcast up to 21 hours a day of local programming. The Euronews breakfast slot was moved back to early morning due to the creation of Channel M Breakfast, resulting in a full 24-hour service. The Euronews simulcast was originally dropped in August 2008 owing to technical problems but was restored four months later.

On 27 April 2009, Channel M's chief executive Mark Dodson announced that the station was looking to make 41 redundancies from its 74 staff and restrict weekday live programming from four programmes (totalling six hours of output) to one three-hour news magazine programme, broadcast between 4pm and 7pm, in order to cut losses.[1] The new live programme is due to launch in July. A company review carried out by the Guardian Media Group before the announcement recommended that the station should focus on news and general sport programming.[2]

Since the announcement, Channel M has axed all of its entertainment and features programming as well as the weekday breakfast show and the 9pm Late News.

[edit] Programmes

  • The Jobsmine (previously Jobsearch)
  • The Lancashire Cricket Show
  • Manchester Fight Night
  • Seconds Out
  • Sports Central
  • Talking Sharks
  • The United Debate Show

[edit] Previous in-house programmes

  • 30 Minutes of...
  • 4 Manchester
  • The Biker Show
  • Channel M Breakfast
  • Channel M Lunchtime News
  • Channel M Late News
  • City Centre Social
  • City Life Comedian of the Year
  • City Life Social
  • Code XIII
  • Code XIII: Grassroots
  • Community Focus
  • Cookin' Impossible
  • Crime Team
  • Fashion Face Off
  • FC United
  • Frank Sidebottom's Proper Telly Show
  • Gloves Off
  • The Great Northern Music Show
  • Hitting Home
  • I Love Manchester
  • In Session
  • Inside MCFC
  • The Latics Football Show
  • Made in Manchester
  • Manchester Exchange
  • Manchester Unlimited
  • M:usic Live
  • The Phoenix Ice Hockey Show
  • Reel North
  • Re:Loaded
  • The Run
  • Style In The City
  • Zeitgeist

[edit] Imported programmes

Programmes produced by CHUM TV included:

  • Star at The Movies
  • Arts and Minds
  • In Fashion
  • Best! Movies! Ever!

N.B. Imported programmes are no longer broadcast.

[edit] Presenters

[edit] Channel M News

  • Beverley Walkden
  • Nina Warhurst
  • James Webster

[edit] Non-news programming

  • Sian Astley (The Homesmine)
  • Claire Dixon (Sports Central)
  • Martyn Hindley (The Lancashire Cricket Show)
  • Ian Irving (The Great Manchester Football Show, also Channel M News)
  • Alistair Mann (The United Debate Show)
  • Andy Barney McHugh (Seconds Out)
  • Kirstie McNamara (The Great Manchester Football Show)
  • Will Perry (Talking Sharks)
  • Chris Sharples (The Great Manchester Football Show commentator)
  • Jimmy Wagg (The City Debate Show)
  • Glen Williams (Manchester Fight Night)

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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