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TNQ

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Television station in Regional Queensland, Australia
TNQ
Channels
Branding10
Programming
Affiliations10
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
1 November 1962; 62 years ago (1962-11-01)
Independent (1 November 1962 – 31 December 1990)
Nine Network (1990, 1 July 2016 – 30 June 2021)
Network Ten (31 December 1990 – 30 June 2016 and
since 1 July 2021)
Call sign meaning
Telecasters
North
Queensland
Technical information
Licensing authority
Australian Communications and Media Authority
ERPsee table below
HAATsee table below
Transmitter coordinatessee table below

TNQ is an Australiantelevision station, licensed to, and serving the regional areas ofQueensland. The station isowned and operated byNetwork 10.

History

[edit]

Southern Cross 10 in Queensland began in 1978 asNorth Queensland Television, a partnership between two regional stations:

  • TNQ-7Townsville (launched on 1 November 1962)
  • FNQ-10Cairns (launched on 7 September 1966)

In 1984 NQTV adopted a localised version of NBC'sJust Watch Us Now theme and slogan, which had also been used by various metropolitanSeven Network stations the previous year. The station'sThe Place to Be slogan was used from the mid-1980s until 1993.

Whenaggregation was announced in the late 1980s, NQTV was planning to be theNine Network affiliate for regional Queensland. NQTV had a write-in competition for their name and logo[citation needed]. The nameQTV was chosen and because of the intended Nine affiliation, it adopted a logo with the Nine dots (similar toWIN andNBN's logos). Unfavourable viewer response forced the station to change logos within a few months. The station ran with a Nine-based identification package in the year leading up to aggregation.

However, the station faced a crisis in the days leading up to aggregation whenWIN Television bought theToowoomba andRockhampton-basedStar Television, and switched the affiliation from Ten to Nine, in line with WIN's NSW station. This meant that QTV had to change its logo and affiliation in a hurry. QTV picked up the vacant Ten affiliation, instead. The station originally broadcast a licence-wide one-hour news bulletin when Queensland was aggregated, but this was soon axed outside the North Queensland television market.

The station's owners, Telecasters North Queensland (later Telecasters Australia), joined theTen Group Consortium in 1992–1993. This led to a change from QTV toTen Queensland, and they began to use generic Ten branding.

In 2001, Telecasters was purchased by Southern Cross. In that same year,Ten Local News in North Queensland was axed (along withTen Capital News in Canberra) and replaced withTen News Brisbane – one of the many decisions which led to the local news inquiry by the ABA. In 2002, like the other Southern Cross-owned Ten affiliates, the station was rebranded toSouthern Cross Ten.

On 1 July 2016, Southern Cross switched its primary affiliation from Network Ten to the Nine Network, TNQ's supposed affiliate for the region prior to aggregation. The Southern Cross Ten branding was retired and replaced by generic Nine branding.[1][2]

On 1 July 2021, Southern Cross again switched its primary affiliation from the Nine Network to Network 10, the Nine branding was replaced by 10 branding.

On 17 December 2024, Southern Cross Austereo announced they are selling their regional television licenses in Regional Queensland, Southern NSW/ACT and Regional Victoria over to their affiliateNetwork 10.[3] The sale was completed on 1 March 2025.[4]

News & Current Affairs

[edit]
Judi Hogan hostingState Focus, acurrent affairs program broadcast in Queensland by TNQ.

From the 1970s to late 1990s, the station maintained regional news coverage through its 5:30pm half-hour local news bulletin and, later, its 6pm one-hour news bulletin. In addition from the late 1970s the station produced its own 30-minute, weekly current affairs programNewsweek[5] andfocus, the first live TV debate of its kind in North Queensland.[6] Both programs were founded and produced by the NQTV News Director,Rick Anderton, in Townsville.[7][8] Newsweek aired weekly for more than 10 years and became one of Australia's longest running current affairs shows of its time, winning over 16 nationalThorn EMI awards for its contribution to current affairs journalism in Australia.[9]

In the lead-up to aggregation, with NQTV (which soon after became QTV) gearing up to become the Nine Network affiliate, the look and feel of the news was changed to match that ofNational Nine News and became known asQTV News in 1990. However, this was short lived, as the station was instead left withNetwork Ten affiliation due toWIN Television purchasing a rival station which, in turn, took the Nine Network affiliation for the region. The look and feel of QTV News was subsequently changed to reflect that ofTen Eyewitness News and its name changed toQTV Eyewitness News.

When Queensland was first aggregated, QTV broadcast a licence-wide one hour bulletin but this was scaled back to north Queensland due to low ratings.

In 1993, the news service becameTen North Queensland News after the station was rebranded as Ten Queensland.

In January 2000, Ten Queensland revamped its news format in response to viewer demand for more local news. The 6pm news bulletin was reduced to 30 minutes and became a solely regional news bulletin with the introduction ofTen News Brisbane into North Queensland, and changed its name toTen Local News to reflect the new format.

In November 2001,Ten Local News in North Queensland was axed by new ownersSouthern Cross Broadcasting due to cost-cutting measures along with Ten Capital News in Canberra.

As Southern Cross Ten, TNQ also produced its own public affairs programme,State Focus, tackling issues across the state.

Local news was reintroduced to the station in 2004 in the form of three-minute updates at various times of the day. The updates were produced bySouthern Cross News and were branded asSouthern Cross Ten Local News until the change of network affiliation to Nine in July 2016, when they were rebranded as "Local News Headlines".

TNQ broadcastNine News editions from Sydney and Brisbane (national and state) as well asA Current Affair and60 Minutes. The new SC9 served as theNine News regional broadcaster to regional Queensland viewers, with the state level news provided by QTQ-9 in Brisbane. In addition, TNQ served, from 2017 to 2020, as co-producer of the Brisbane-based weekday editions ofNine News Darwin that are aired within the Northern Territory, until NTD resumed production.

The first of the new Nine News regional editions produced from Brisbane premiered for the Sunshine Coast viewers on 21 August 2017.

Main Transmitters

[edit]
Region servedCityChannels
(Analog/
Digital)
First air dateERP
(Analog/
Digital)
HAAT
(Analog/
Digital)
1
Transmitter CoordinatesTransmitter Location
Cairns,Innisfail andMourilyan plus surrounding areas2Cairns10 (VHF)3
6 (VHF)
7 September 1966200kW
50 kW
1177 m
1190 m
17°15′51″S145°51′14″E / 17.26417°S 145.85389°E /-17.26417; 145.85389Mount Bellenden Ker
Darling DownsToowoomba41 (UHF)3
40 (UHF)
31 December 19901300 kW
500 kW
515 m
520 m
26°53′28″S151°36′18″E / 26.89111°S 151.60500°E /-26.89111; 151.60500 (analog)
26°53′27″S151°36′21″E / 26.89083°S 151.60583°E /-26.89083; 151.60583 (digital)
Mount Mowbullan
MackayMackay33 (UHF)3
32 (UHF)
31 December 19901300 kW
360 kW
612 m
630 m
21°1′56″S148°56′36″E / 21.03222°S 148.94333°E /-21.03222; 148.94333Mount Blackwood
RockhamptonRockhampton34 (UHF)3
36 (UHF)
31 December 19902000 kW
500 kW
523 m
523 m
23°43′48″S150°32′9″E / 23.73000°S 150.53583°E /-23.73000; 150.53583Mount Hopeful
Southern DownsWarwick39 (UHF)3
52 (UHF)
31 December 1990600 kW
500 kW
301 m
301 m
28°32′9″S151°49′58″E / 28.53583°S 151.83278°E /-28.53583; 151.83278Passchendaele, QLD
TownsvilleTownsville7 (VHF)3
36 (UHF)
1 November 1962200 kW
200 kW
612 m
655 m
19°20′34″S146°46′56″E / 19.34278°S 146.78222°E /-19.34278; 146.78222 (analog)
19°20′36″S146°46′50″E / 19.34333°S 146.78056°E /-19.34333; 146.78056 (digital)
Mount Stuart
Wide BayMaryborough33 (UHF)3
9 (VHF)
31 December 19901000 kW
60 kW
646 m
646 m
25°25′37″S152°7′3″E / 25.42694°S 152.11750°E /-25.42694; 152.11750Mount Goonaneman

Notes:

  • 1.HAAT estimated fromhttp://www.itu.int/SRTM3/ using EHAAT.
  • 2. The Cairns station was an independent station with the callsign FNQ from its 1966 sign-on until aggregation in 1990.
  • 3. Analogue transmissions ceased on 6 December 2011 as part of the national shutdown of analogue television.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Hayes, Alex (29 April 2016)."Nine Entertainment and Southern Cross Austereo sign 'landmark' affiliate agreement". mUmBRELLA. Retrieved29 April 2016.
  2. ^White, Dominic (29 April 2016)."Nine and Southern Cross in multi-year affiliation deal".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved29 April 2016.
  3. ^Patterson, Sarah (17 December 2024)."SCA to sell 3-Agg television licences to Network 10".Radio Today. Retrieved19 December 2024.
  4. ^"Television assets sold, improved financial results for SCA".RadioInfo Australia. 26 February 2025. Retrieved27 February 2025.
  5. ^(1988/12/13). "Newsweek's 10th Birthday".The Townsville Bulletin.
  6. ^(2010/01/30)."Waiting for the World".The Townsville Bulletin. Weekend Extra. page 46.
  7. ^(1988/12/13). "Newsweek's 10th Birthday".The Townsville Bulletin.
  8. ^(1988/02/14). "North's news force".Scene on TV. The Sunday Mail. page 3.
  9. ^(1988/02/14). "North's news force".Scene on TV. The Sunday Mail. page 3.
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