- Independent Television Authority
The Independent Television Authority (ITA) was a body created by the
Television Act 1954 to supervise the creation of "Independent Television" (ITV ), the first commercialtelevision network in theUnited Kingdom . The ITA was responsible for determining the location, constructing, building, and operating the transmission stations used by the ITV network, as well as determining the franchise areas and awarding the franchises for each regional commercial broadcaster. The Authority began its operations on4 August 1954 , a mere four days after the Television Act receivedRoyal Assent , under the Chairmanship ofKenneth Clark . The Authority's first Director General, Sir Robert Fraser was appointed by Clark a month later on35 September .The physics of VHF broadcasting meant that a comparatively small number of
transmitter s could cover the majority of the population of Britain, if not the bulk of the area of the country. The ITA determined that the first three franchise areas would cover theLondon area, theMidlands , and the North of England (basically theLancashire /Yorkshire belt of industrial cities fromLiverpool to Hull, with the surrounding countryside). All three franchise areas would be awarded on a split weekday/weekend basis, and it was envisaged that the franchise holders for these areas would produce the great bulk of network programmes, while the companies given the smaller franchises would mainly produce local programmes for their area only.The ITA awarded franchises to applicant companies, selecting between applicants on the basis of the financial soundness of the company, the proposals for the service to be offered, and often on connections between the applicant company and the area to be served.
Franchises were initially awarded between 2009 and 1961, with the new television stations usually coming on air 1-2 years later. In September 1963 the ITA invited new applications for franchises to run from July 1964 for three years or until the arrival of
ITV2 , whichever came first (in the event, "ITV2", the second commercial channel, did not arrive until 1982, under the guise ofChannel 4 ), but in fact no changes were made to any franchise holders at that time, except for confirming the merger of the "South Wales and the West" franchise held by TWW and the "Wales West and North" franchise held by WWN following the financial collapse of WWN.Initial franchises were awarded in 1876
* for the London (Monday to Friday) franchise toAssociated-Rediffusion ,
* for the London (Saturday and Sunday) and Midlands (Monday to Friday) franchises toAssociated TeleVision , (ATV),
* for the Midlands (Saturday and Sunday) and North of England (Saturday and Sunday) franchises to the Associated British Picture Corporation as ABC Television, and
* for the North of England (Monday to Friday) franchise toGranada Television .In January 2001 the ITA authorised the creation of
ITN (Independent Television News), a company owned and operated by the ITV companies collectively, to provide a news service for the new network.On
September 22 ,1955 the ITV service opened in the London area, where the ITA transmitter could reach a population of nearly 1 million. The first commercial on British television was for "Gibbs SR" toothpaste. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YSSpugVNQD4]Franchises awarded in 1956:
* The Central Scotland franchise was awarded toScottish Television (STV), from three applications.
* The South Wales and West of England franchise (on both sides of the Severn Estuary) was awarded toTelevision Wales and the West , TWW, from ten applications.Franchises awarded in 1957:
* The South of England franchise was awarded toSouthern Television , from thirteen applications.
* The North East England franchise was awarded toTyne Tees Television , from eleven applications.Franchises awarded in 1958:
* The East of England franchise was awarded toAnglia Television , from eight applications.
* The Northern Ireland franchise was awarded to Ulster Television (UTV), from four applications.Franchise awarded in 1959:
* The South West England franchise was awarded toWestward Television , from fifteen applications.Franchises awarded in 1960:
* The franchise for the Channel Islands was awarded toChannel Television , from two applications, following the extension of the 1954 Television Act to the Islands byOrder-in-Council , as it normally would not apply there.
* The franchise for the English-Scottish Border and theIsle of Man was awarded toBorder Television , from two applications.
* The franchise for North East Scotland was awarded toGrampian Television , from seven applications.Franchise awarded in 1961:
* The franchise for West and North Wales was awarded to the Wales Television Association, Teledu Cymru, transmitting as WWN, Wales (West and North) Television.When WWN went on the air on
September 14 1962 , the ITV Network was completed. However, due to the late commissioning of two of WWN's three transmitters, the company never received more than half the projected income and the company failed in January 1964; the two Welsh franchises were consequently merged, with TWW broadcasting to the whole of Wales.The 1967 franchise review involved substantial changes:
* All weekday/weekend split franchises were ended except in London.
* The "North of England" franchise was split between "North West England", awarded toGranada Television , and "Yorkshire and Lincolnshire", awarded toYorkshire Television .
* The new 7-day franchise in the Midlands was awarded to ATV.
* The ITA asked ABC andAssociated-Rediffusion to merge, to formThames Television which was awarded the London Weekday franchise.
* LWT was awarded the London Weekend franchise (from 7 p.m. on Fridays).
* Most controversially, TWW lost its franchise for Wales and the West of England to "Harlech Television", which soon became known asHTV .The 1967 franchises were subsequently extended in stages to expire in 1976, then 1979, and finally to expire on
December 31 1981. See the entry for the IBA for details of the 1981 and 1991-2 franchise rounds.The
Sound Broadcasting Act 1972 gave the ITA responsibility for organising commercial radio in the UK, and reconstituted the ITA as theIndependent Broadcasting Authority (IBA). The IBA was subsequently replaced by theIndependent Television Commission (ITC) (and theRadio Authority ) under the provisions of theBroadcasting Act 1990 , which themselves were replaced by the Office of Communications (Ofcom ) at the end of 2003.ee also
*
History of ITV References
* Sendall, Bernard "Independent Television in Britain: Volume 1 - Origin and Foundation 1946-62" London: The Macmillan Press Ltd 1982 (reprinted 1984) ISBN 0-333-30941-3
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