THE HISTORY OF AUSTRALIAN TELEVISION

The information on these pages has been gathered from numerous resources over many years, a list of some of these resources is listed here

THE NINETIES

1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999

The decade started in recession and with two networks in receivership, and a third being sold back to its former owner for a fraction of what it had been bought for.  Cost cutting and tight budgets became increasingly common.  Despite this, regional television was expanding at a rapid rate to give country viewers the same choices as their city counterparts.  Then came the countdown to the new millennium.

1990

January: The 1990 Commonwealth Games in Auckland, New Zealand are televised on Nine.

February: Steve Vizard’s Tonight Live begins on Seven and Ten launches two spin-offs from The Comedy Company - Larger Than Life with Mark Mitchell and the sitcom Col’n Carpenter.

The Seven and Ten Networks go into receivership.  Kerry Packer's PBL purchases the Nine Network stations in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Darwin back from Alan Bond for $A200 million - a fifth of what Bond paid PBL for them in 1987.

July 15: After a six month absence, The Comedy Company returns on Ten but fails to repeat the success of its earlier seasons.

December 31: Queensland becomes the second Aggregated market with local stations Sunshine Television (now Seven Queensland), WIN and QTV (now Southern Cross TEN).

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Craig McLachlan (Neighbours, Ten)

 
1991

January: Nine’s latest attempt at popular drama Chances, begins a two year run, while Ten revives the axed Perfect Match under the title Blind Date.

The Gulf War sparks saturation television coverage.

February 10: Animated US series The Simpsons premieres on Ten

Glenn Ridge and Jo Bailey replace Tony Barber and Alyce Platt on Sale Of The Century.

December 31: Aggregation arrives in Northern NSW with local networks Prime, NBN and NRTV (now Southern Cross TEN) now in competition across the entire region.

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Steve Vizard (Tonight Live and Fast Forward, Seven)

 
1992

January 1: Aggregation arrives in regional Victoria with local commercial networks Prime, VICTV (now WIN) and Southern Cross Network (now Southern Cross TEN).

January 20: Ten News becomes the first 5pm News service, and Bert Newton returns to television as host of Ten's new talk show The Morning Show.

January: ABC reporter Stan Grant fronts Seven’s new nightly current affairs program Real Life.

February: Healthy Wealthy And Wise begins a seven-year run on Ten.

July 18: The Late Show with the D Generation starts on ABC, running for two seasons.

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Jana Wendt (A Current Affair, Nine)


The Late Show

1993

January 11: Tony Barber’s Jeopardy begins a brief run on Ten. 

February 1: Ten's The Morning Show adopts the title Good Morning Australia, taking the name from the network's former long running breakfast TV program.

ABC begins 24 hour transmission

August 30: Ten's late night sports round-up Sports Tonight begins.

November 22: A Country Practice screens for the last time on Seven, to be picked up by Ten for a brief run in 1994.

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Ray Martin (Midday With Ray Martin, Nine)

 
1994

February: Seven premieres its new rural police drama Blue Heelers, Ten launches its new schoolroom drama Heartbreak High, a spin-off of the movie The Heartbreak Kid, and Derryn Hinch takes over from Ray Martin as host of Nine’s Midday.

April 30: Aggregation of commercial television services is completed in Tasmania with TAS TV (now WIN) and Southern Cross Television broadcasting statewide.

May 9: Frontline, a satirical look at current affairs television from the D Generation, begins on ABC.

May 20: SBS commences transmission in Darwin

August 1: Melbourne’s ATV10 celebrates 30 years of transmission.

August: The Commonwealth Games are televised live on Ten from Victoria, Canada.

Community Television starts with long-term trials of stations in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth. 

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Ray Martin (Midday With Ray Martin, Nine)

 
1995

January: Today Tonight marks a return to locally-based current affairs on commercial television with individual editions in each of Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth.

Seven premieres its new drama series Fire, and Nine’s series of Halifax fp telemovies continue to earn strong ratings.

Pay-TV commences in Australia with three operators Galaxy, Foxtel and Optusvision.

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Ray Martin (A Current Affair, Nine)

 
1996

Australian television celebrates 40 years with commemorative specials on ABC, Seven, Nine and Ten Networks.

Nine premieres its new action drama series Water Rats and relaunches Midday with Kerri Anne Kennerley.

Nine launches a new version of In Melbourne Tonight hosted by Frankie J Holden with Denise Drysdale.   Screening once a week in Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia, it is axed two years later.

Two years after its US premiere, the first series of Friends screens on Seven, with subsequent series screening on Nine.

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Ray Martin (A Current Affair, Nine)

 
1997 The Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras is televised for the first time on commercial television.

July 1: Prime Television expands to Mildura in regional Victoria.

The funeral of Princess Diana is televised live on all ABC and commercial free-to-air television stations.

December: South Park, the politically incorrect animated series from America's Comedy Central pay-TV channel, begins on SBS and becomes the network's highest rating series to date.

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Lisa McCune (Blue Heelers, Seven)

 
1998

The Panel, from Working Dog Productions (formerly the D Generation), begins a top rating run on Ten.

March 27: Darwin's second commercial television station, Seven Darwin, commences transmission.

Midday is axed by Nine, ending a daytime TV tradition that started in 1973.

SeaChange, ABC's new weekly drama starring Sigrid Thornton, becomes a huge hit on Sunday nights.

The two-part mini series The Day Of The Roses, based on the 1977 Granville train disaster, screens on Ten.

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Lisa McCune (Blue Heelers, Seven)

 
1999

ABC's popular Good News Week moves across to Ten.

The second season of SeaChange achieves record ratings for ABC.

WIN expands into regional Western Australia as the second local commercial TV broadcaster, up against former monopoly broadcaster GWN.

Aggregation between Imparja Television (Northern Territory/South Australia) and Seven Central (outback Queensland) commences, giving outback viewers a choice of two commercial TV networks.

National morning news program Eleven AM is axed by Seven after 24 years.

Jana Wendt becomes presenter of Dateline on SBS.

Seven begins transmitting its logo watermark on all programs.

Millennium fever begins with tribute programs from Nine (Our Century and Simply The Best), Seven (a remake of the 1979 series This Fabulous Century) and ABC (Barry Humphries' Flashbacks).

Nine's Hey Hey It's Saturday is axed after 28 years on air, ending a forty year tradition of live television variety from GTV9.

ABC is the host Australian broadcaster of the international TV event 2000 Today, a 26-hour live telecast of new year celebrations around the world, commencing at 8.30pm (AEDST) on 31 December.

TV WEEK Gold Logie Winner: Lisa McCune (Blue Heelers, Seven)


Lisa McCune

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