The return of News At Ten


The old wisdom would have been that the coming News At Ten battle is between two types of television news. One side, the Beeb, driven by the need to inform. At its best patrician and provocative. At its worst dull. The other side, ITN, driven by the need to tell stories, at its best emotionally engaging, at its worst crass. And so let battle commence.

Except that time has mixed it all up. On the BBC side is former ITN golden boy Craig Oliver, who knows News At Ten so well he reinvented it for BBC1. On ITV’s, Alex Chandler, who has worked his way up through the ITV News ranks, and who has spent more time at ITN when News At Ten was off air than when it was on.

The real battle to create two news programmes is not between the editors but between two completely different methods of producing the news on television.

Take the BBC. Its 10pm news has a relatively modest budget, but it draws on the resources of the entire corporation – the world’s biggest broadcast newsgathering outfit – to fill half an hour.

The editor can order from long menus of home or foreign news filtered and prepared by experienced teams. It’s the editorial equivalent of dining at a hotel buffet, where success is measured not by how beautifully the food is presented on the plate, but by the quantity which has been stacked upon it.

So the job of the editor is not fill a running order from those lists, but to act upon them and to shape the stories in conversations with reporters. The tension is between the incremental changes in a story and the need for a programme to tell it coherently. Without that tension, an algorithm could construct a running order.

And this is where the sheer size of the BBC complicates the job. The very range of stories it can cover – the scale of its reporting operation – means that the 10pm is just one of a number of outlets.

The uniform “BBC-ness” of the material coming into a programme can overwhelm any individual character the bulletin might aspire to. Craig Oliver has sharpened up the 10 no end but at the BBC, his is one editorial voice among many important voices.

The BBC has strength in depth. You can rely on the players to perform. But where you can’t, changing them is difficult. Reporters report on different lines to different managers.

The contrast at ITN couldn’t be greater. News At Ten was the operational focus of a bespoke newsgathering machine. Its reporters were a family.

There were so few of them that they had to get on air regularly. An editor would know their individual strengths and weaknesses so well that assignments could almost be tailored to them.

The smallness meant that many of the conversations were unnecessary. The machine worked slickly and quickly. Reporters knew what was expected of them. When they failed to meet expectations, retribution was swift.

And unlike the BBC where parallel teams might collide, ITN reporters knew that if they didn’t get the story, no one else would.

So how will the new News At Ten line up? On a good night the programme will be able to line up the likes of Bill Neely, Penny Marshall, Tom Bradby, Julian Manyon, Jon Irvine, Keir Simmons and half a dozen more besides.

The names are impressive, but they are a thin blue line. Reporters have to make air. Fewer stories can afford to fall down. If a big story fails to make the grade at the Beeb there are many others waiting in line to take its place.

The money that ITN gets to make the national and international news is just £30 million, and that cash has to fund other bulletins too.

Whilst cash can still be found for presenter salaries, the budget for newsgathering stretches ever tighter. To balance the books the tap will have to be turned off some weeks. Viewers don’t get told. No graphic appears to say that this week the news is running on empty.

Foreign news suffers most. Every pound spent has to be seen on air. No bad thing, ITV bosses might say, and few would argue that ITN is not adept at parsimony. Fewer still would argue that parsimony has given way simply to poverty.

So, for Patrick O’Brian fans, the contest shapes up as an undermanned sloop against an unwieldy ship of the line.

But to look at the battle purely in journalistic terms is to miss the point. This is not an encounter the audience is crying out for. It watched News At Ten come and go with barely a murmur. Its modern incarnation is a far cry from the programme that sat in the top ten and commanded a regular audience of 12 million five nights a week in the late 1960s.

So will this be television news’ melancholy, long, withdrawing roar? Let’s hope that amid the cuts, there’s still some thrust.

[My column from Press Gazette]

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4 responses to “The return of News At Ten”

  1. Adrian,

    I have been amazed that ITV has even gone down the path of bringing back News at Ten.Its only possible motive is ratings as it cannot surely compete with the BBC or the Sky Machines.The Beeb in particular have the public service motive behind their output.Why should ITV need to compete against this?

    The glory times of News at Ten return us to the days of 3 channels when the family event was to sit down and watch the news.The BBC had already run their programme at nine and ITN picked up the viewers that had stayed with their channel during the evening.How can that model work today?

    Tomorrow’s ratings will be very interesting

  2. Hmmm. I think ITV need to move forward not backwards it seems like this is a desperate attempt to boost ratings. ITV must innovate.

  3. Dude,

    I know you’re keen to bury TV news now you’ve left it, but quite a lot of people want to watch the news at that time; as is evidenced by last nights figures.

    Maybe there are fewer watchers, but the argument runs that these are people who are actually making a positive choice to tune in.

    For the BBC and ITV, this seems to matter – a lot. I hear the argument, and see the evidence, that the net constitutes a revolution in our news habits. But we need not all stop and apply for tutors posts at this stage.

    And as Jack Aubrey might remark, it would be a dull spectator who didn’t relish the engagement between such well manned ships o’ the line (even if HMS ITN is sadly undercrewed and the skipper’s a right hard horse).

  4. TV news is still watched, and the chief source of news for most people (pace the ill-informed discussion on Today on Tuesday).

    I love it (being an age of steam kind of guy), but I think we need to keep going where the audiences are going, when are resources allow.

    My chief problem with TV news is its underfunding relative to its still high importance! Yes – I want you paid more money to keep you out of academia!