September – Five years after television came to Northern Ireland, TheIndependent Television Authority, advertises the franchise for Northern Ireland.[1] Two consortia apply and the ITA persuades the applicants to merge their bids to obtain the new franchise, on the provision that a greater stake of investment in the station was offered toCatholic sources.
1959
31 October – Ulster Television launches at 4.45pm. However only one main transmitter -Black Mountain - is operational meaning that coverage is not widespread, especially in western areas.
3 August – A technicians strike forces ITV off the air for several weeks although management manage to launch a temporaryITV Emergency National Service with no regional variations. The strike ends on 18 August.
14 September – The final edition of Ulster Television's listings magazineTV Post is published. Listings are subsequently carried in an Ulster edition ofTVTimes which now becomes a national publication on 21 September.
1969
UTV Reports replacesRoundabout as Ulster's regional news programme.
14 September – Ulster launches a colour television service, but only from theDivis transmitter. To mark the change, the logo is redesigned.[3]
1971
The music used as part of the station's daily start-up routine is changed whenThe Antrim Road, a classical symphony composed by Wayne Hill and Earl Ward, replacedSeamus, written by the American musician, composer and bandleader Van Phillips, which had been used since the station's launch.
1972
16 October – Following a law change which removed all restrictions on broadcasting hours, ITV is able to launch an afternoon service.
1973
No events.
1974
The 1974 franchise round sees no changes in ITV's contractors as it is felt that the huge cost in switching to colour television would have made the companies unable to compete against rivals in a franchise battle.
1975
1 December – TheLimavady transmitting station starts broadcasting a colour service to the north west of Northern Ireland, with additional coverage provided by the Londonderry transmitter. Consequently, colour broadcasts from Ulster Television are now available in the North West.
31 October – To celebrate its 21st anniversary, Ulster commissions a new ident featuring a model of the station logo embedded on four faces of a cube, coated in silver with a pole skewering the top and bottom of the cube. The logo is nicknamed "The Lollipop".[4]
1981
No events.
1982
Ulster restores all-day broadcasting hours. For the last few years it had broadcast reduced hours, not coming on air until 12.00pm during the week when no schools programmes were being broadcast and closing down every evening at 11.30pm.
1983
1 February – ITV's breakfast television serviceTV-am launches. It is a UK-wide service and therefore contains no Northern Irish-specific content. Consequently, Ulster's broadcast day now begins at 9.25am.
1984
No events.
1985
3 January – Ulster's last day of transmission using the405-lines system.
1986
No events.
1987
7 September –
To coincide with the launch of the station's evening magazine programme,Six Tonight, a new ident was used to introduce the programme, featuring a computer-animated silver station logo on a blue/green backdrop.[3]
Following the transfer ofITV Schools to Channel 4, ITV provides a full morning programme schedule, with advertising, for the first time. The new service includes regular five-minute national and regional news bulletins.
1988
3 October –Ulster begins 24-hour broadcasting.[5] Ulster had planned to commence 24-hour transmissions a month earlier but a last minute decision to take the overnight service provided byGranada, rather than that provided byCentral, caused the delay.
1989
1 January – A revisedcomputer animation is introduced and is the last to feature the logo first seen in 1970.[3]
16 October – Ulster retains its licence. There were three applicants for the licence and the other two had tabled higher bids. However, Television Northern Ireland (TVNI) was rejected because of its business plan and Lagan Television failed to meet the quality threshold.
1992
No events.
1993
4 January – Ulster's news service is renamedUTV Live. The programme broadcasts for 60 minutes, instead of 30.
4 June –
At 6.00pm, UTV unveils a new logo to coincide with the station now being known asUTV. Since the start of 1993, continuity announcements and trailers referred increasingly to "UTV". It also drops ITV network promotions and introduces locally produced trails.[3]
11 November – UTV introduces a new series of idents which showcase scenic locations in Northern Ireland. These include theGiant's Causeway, a waterfall at Glenarriff, andPortaferry harbour. Some of the idents featured UTV personalities.[3]
1997
No events.
1998
12 January – The 1996 logos are supplemented with a set of idents featuring people playing the UTV jingle on various musical instruments.[3]
8 March – Following the introduction of theITV Evening News, UTV Live is brought forward by half an hour to start at 5.30pm. The first half-hour sees feature reports, light-hearted stories and the weather forecast branded as part of a separate programme,UTV Life, which airs before the main evening news which starts at 6.00pm and is branded asUTV Live at Six.
28 June – UTV launches a second television channel,TV You. It is available only to viewers of digital terrestrial andNTL cable.
22 January – UTV2 closes following a deal withITV Digital to replace UTV2 withITV2.[6]
UTV Live andUTV Life are merged into a single hour-long programme, running from 5.30pm.
28 October – UTV adopts the new celebrity idents as network ITV1. However, these were gradually replaced with local versions featuring notable personalities and broadcasters from Northern Ireland.[3]
2003
20 November – UTV replaces its network-inspired graphics with a series landscape films of Northern Ireland in their idents, in the form of apanorama shot as the camera revolved around a location.[7]
2004
No events.
2005
16 December – After more than 16 years on air, the final edition of UTV's regionaltalk andvariety showKelly is broadcast.[8] At around the same time, UTV axes the rest of its local entertainment programming as part of cutbacks to the station's local output.
2006
16 January – To coincide with the introduction of a new identity acrossITV plc stations, UTV replaces its 2003 idents with a brand new set.[9] The new idents featured newly recorded films shot across Northern Ireland, again in the form of panoramas.[9] The landscape films used in these idents are updated in July 2007 and October 2008.
26 May – The registered company name is changed from 'Ulster Television plc' to 'UTV plc'. The company believed that the existing name no longer reflected the full scope of the company's business.[10]
2007
February –UTV Live andUTV Life are split into separate programmes and all bulletins outside of the main early evening programme are retitledUTV News. This continues until April 2009.
2008
No events.
2009
February – Mid-morning weekday and weekend lunchtimeUTV Live bulletins are axed when the station is permitted to reduce their weekly news output from five hours and twenty minutes to four hours.[11]
6 February – Cost-cutting measures and a reduction in regional programming at the station result in the end ofUTV Life.
27 April – UTV launches a 30-minute late evening news and current affairs programme,UTV Live Tonight, which follows theNews at Ten on Monday to Thursday nights and incorporates the station's late news bulletin alongside extended political and business coverage.
Having scaled back in-vision to weekend evenings in recent years, UTV reintroduces in-vision continuity to weekday evenings.
1 January –UTV Ireland is launched and four days later, a news and current affairs programme for the channel,Ireland Live launches, broadcasting a half-hour early evening newscast and an hour-long programme at 10.00pm, also produces local news updates during UTV Ireland's simulcasts ofGood Morning Britain.[15]
14 May – UTV Ireland begins broadcasting hourlyIreland Live news updates throughout the day.[16][17]
19 October – UTV Media announces that it will sell its ITV franchise and the UTV brand toITV plc for £100 million, subject to regulatory approval.[18] The sale is completed on 29 February 2016.[19]
2016
January –UTV Life returns as a weekly 30-minute Friday night programme, airing after the late UTV Live bulletin and presented byPamela Ballantine.
29 September – The 30-minute longUTV Live Tonight is axed and replaced by a shorter ten-minute bulletin and a Monday night hour-long current affairs programme calledView from Stormont.[21] September also seesUTV Life returning to a weekly primetime slot at 8.00pm.[21]
16 October – At 11.15pm, the last live in-vision announcement is made ahead of the launch the following day of a brand new look which sees an alignment of the UTV brand more closely with that of theITV network.[22]
2017
9 January –UTV Ireland is closed and is replaced by a substantially new channel calledBe3, focussing on children's and female-orientated programming. The closure also sees the ending after two years of UTV-produced news and current affairs programme for the channel,Ireland Live.
2018
1 July – ITV closes UTV'sHavelock House studios and UTV begins broadcasting from a new broadcast centre at City Quays 2 in the Belfast Harbour Estate.[23]
2 April – UTV begins broadcasting full ITV branding and presentation from London including network announcements, idents, promos and end credit sequences, initially as a temporary measure due to the impact of theCOVID-19 pandemic on staff at the Belfast studios.[24] This became officially permanent in November with the departures of the announcing team from the station.[25]
26 November – Local continuity is officially abandoned with the departures of the announcing team.[25]
2021
25 April – A local voice-over is reinstated to introduce some local programmes.[citation needed] A new bumper with the UTV logo and the tagline "Part of ITV" is also shown for a short time before some – but not all – commercial breaks.[26]
2022
15 November – ITV reverts its flagship channel's name back toITV1 in all ITV plc-owned regions, and the UTV name continues to be used for local programming and in on-air promotions for local non-news programmes.[27]