| Country | United Kingdom |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | |
| Headquarters | Leeds |
| Ownership | |
| Owner | Local TV Ltd |
| Sister channels | |
| History | |
| Launched |
|
| Former names | Made Television (2014-2021) |
| Links | |
| Website | uklocal.tv |
Local TV (formerlyMade Television) is alocal television network in the United Kingdom, operating nine[1] channels serving theBirmingham,Bristol,Cardiff,Leeds,London,Liverpool, North Wales, Teesside andTyne and Wear areas.
In September 2012, the broadcast regulatorOfcom awarded two licences to Made Television to broadcast local TV services in the Bristol and Cardiff areas.[2][3] Three months later, the company was granted a third licence to serve theNewcastle,Sunderland andGateshead areas,[4] followed in February 2013 by a licence for the Leeds area.[5] In November 2013, the company gained a fifth local TV licence to serve theMiddlesbrough andTeesside areas.[6]
Made in Bristol was the first of the company's channels to launch, at 8 p.m. on Wednesday 8 October 2014, followed a week later by its sister station inCardiff.[7]Made in Leeds began broadcasting on Thursday 6 November 2014 andMade in Tyne & Wear launched six days later. The channels launched an on-demand service,OnView, in March 2015[8] followed in August by live streaming.
In 2016, the company bought two independently run local TV channels:Bay TV Liverpool, shortly after it went into administration in August, followed by Walsall-basedBig Centre TV in October.[9] Bay TV was reopened and relaunched as 'Made in Liverpool' at 6 p.m. on Wednesday 19 October 2016, followed by the relaunch of Big Centre as 'Made in Birmingham' on Tuesday 8 November 2016.[10]
Two further channels launched during the spring of 2017 –Made in Teesside for the Middlesbrough area on Thursday 30 March 2017[11] followed byMade in North Wales for Mold and surrounding areas on Wednesday 26 April 2017.[12]
On Thursday 25 May 2017, all Made channels began carrying acquired programming from the UK and Ireland version of factual entertainment channelTruTV as part of a supply agreement withSony Pictures Television. The channels simulcast TruTV in two daily blocks from 13:00 to 17:00 and 21:00 to 01:00 (20:00 to 00:00 on Tuesdays to accommodateAmerica's Got Talent).[13][14] From November 2017, the Made channels began simulcastingCBS Reality for 11 hours a day.
In November 2017, following a restructuring of the Made network's operations,[15] local programming was cut and studio production of daily news and magazine programmes was centralised at Made's Leeds and Birmingham channels. Around forty staff across the network were reportedly made redundant.
Following the cutbacks, the network began producing two weekday programmes -Made TV News (broadcast from Leeds) andThe Big Daily (initially produced from Birmingham), both including local and networked content. Both programmes were axed in February 2018 and replaced by separate rolling blocks of pre-recorded local news, sport and features
On 2 January 2018, Made Television ceased broadcasting its localised services in Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds, Liverpool and Tyne & Wear on digital satellite. They were replaced by a single, genericMade Television feed featuring a daily three-hour block of local news programming.Made in Cardiff ceased broadcasting on all platforms and was replaced by the generic network feed.[16]
The channels aired a block of localised news and sport alongside networked simulcasted programming from factual entertainment channelCBS Reality.[17][18][19]
In January 2021, Local TV Limited began broadcasting a service targeting viewers inManchester. Unlike the group's other channels, Manchester TV is not the official local-TV service provider;That's Manchester occupies the Comux local multiplex slot and LCN 7, with LTV's Manchester TV occupying a lower berth (LCN 99 at launch) and transmitting on the legacy Greater Manchester multiplex originally set up for the defunctChannel M service. When transmissions began, the channel relayed the network Local TV service as provided on satellite.[20]
On 15 December 2021, Local TV Manchester abruptly closed on Freeview with the released space given to a Greater Manchester channel from On Demand 365.[21]
In 2023, the channels started simulcasting TalkTV's news programmes during the day, with hour long local news bulletins at 13:00, 18:00 and 21:00 (which were also looped overnight) and it was later decided to rebrand all eight channels under the TalkTV name, a move which took place on 18 October 2023.[22]
In 2024, the channels were rebranded back to their previous branding following the closure of TalkTV on broadcast television.[23]
In January 2025, Local TV acquired the licence ofLondon Live that broadcast to London and surrounding areas.[24] London Live closed at 23:59 on 19 January and was replaced with London TV immediately afterwards.[25][26]
On 20 October 2021, all of the 5 Local TV versions on channel 117 were removed on Sky. Local TV Cardiff was on channel 135 due toS4C previously occupying channel 117. Local TV Cardiff was renamed Local TV and moved to channel 195, the lowest ranked slot in the EPG's entertainment section and began broadcasting to all of the United Kingdom.[27] All six Local TV services (not Manchester or North Wales) were merged into this new channel with various local news broadcasts over a 2 hour period instead of just one news broadcast.
Local TV Limited's headquarters are at the Leeds Media Centre in theChapeltown area of Leeds, with studios and offices based at Elgin House inCardiff city centre, the Toxteth TV studios in theToxteth suburb ofLiverpool and the David Puttnam Media Centre at the University of Sunderland.[citation needed] Playout and presentation for the network is run from the Leeds headquarters.
On 19 August 2018, Made Television rebranded as Local TV Limited and all sub-channels were renamed according to their city.[28]
By 2021, Local TV's chairmanDavid Montgomery (a newspaper executive, whose company National World was known for taking overJPIMedia in a £10m deal which included papers such asThe Scotsman andThe Yorkshire Post)[29] outlined plans for a new 'Northern TV Network' which would include Local TV's channels in Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle.[30][31] The 'NTVN' plans were later quietly dropped.
In 2022, Ofcom agreed to Local TV Limited's proposal to close their production centres in Birmingham, Bristol and on Teesside,[32] as the company decided to keep their remote Covid working practices as the company standard.