Business Daily (TV programme)

Business Daily
Starring Various
Country of origin United Kingdom
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Release
Original network Channel 4
Picture format 4:3
Original release 21 September 1987 (1987-09-21) – 25 September 1992 (1992-09-25)

Business Daily was a weekday financial news programme, shown on Channel 4.

History

The programme launched on 21 September 1987 as part of Channel 4's 1987 expansion of weekday broadcast hours, co-insiding with the transferral of ITV Schools programmes from ITV. The 30 minute programme was broadcast on weekday lunchtimes, initially at 12noon before transferring to 12.30pm in March 1988, where it would remain until the programme ended in June 1992. Interestingly, S4C did not broadcast the programme live, instead showing it on a one-hour time delay.

In April 1989 the programme became part of The Channel 4 Daily.[1] Three bite-size breakfast editions were broadcast, each lasting for between 6 and 8 minutes.[2] The last breakfast edition was the final segment of that day's edition of The Channel 4 Daily.

In 1990, The Channel 4 Daily's broadcast hours were reduced slightly and the first breakfast edition of Business Daily became a programme in its own right, broadcasting for 8 minutes at 6.20am, prior to the start of The Channel 4 Daily.

On 26 June 1992 the final lunchtime programme was broadcast. However the breakfast editions continued for another three months with the final edition being broadcast on 25 September 1992, co-insiding with the end of The Channel 4 Daily.

Presenters and Reporters

The programme had two main presenters during its time on air - Susannah Simons[3] and Damian Green. During their time as the main presenter, they would present on Mondays to Thursdays with one of the programme's reporters hosting the Friday edition. When the breakfast editions began Dermot Murnaghan was the presenter of the breakfast programmes,[4] prior to him becoming one of the main presenters of The Channel 4 Daily.

The programme had its own team of reporters and contributors, including Mickey Clark, who would join the presenter in the studio to provide viewers with commentary on the day's market action.

The Business Programme

A spin-off Sunday teatime programme was also shown during the early days of the programme's time on air. It was a 45-minute programme which aired between 5.15pm and 6pm.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.