Sky News Australia is an Australian conservative news channel owned by News Corp Australia. Originally launched on 19 February 1996, it broadcasts rolling news coverage throughout the day, while its prime time lineup is dedicated to opinion-based programs featuring a line-up of conservative commentators.[2][3][4]
Type | News channel |
---|---|
Country | Australia |
Broadcast area | Australia New Zealand |
Headquarters | Macquarie Park, New South Wales |
Programming | |
Language(s) | English |
Picture format | 1080i HDTV (downscaled to 16:9 576i for the SDTV feed) |
Ownership | |
Owner | News Corp Australia |
Parent | Australian News Channel |
Sister channels | Sky News Weather Channel Sky News Extra |
History | |
Launched | 19 February 1996[1] |
Links | |
Website | skynews |
Availability | |
Terrestrial | |
Freeview (Australia) | Channel 56 (Regional Victoria, Queensland and southern NSW) Channel 53 (Regional South Australia, northern NSW and Griffith, NSW) |
Foxtel (Australia) | Channel 691 Channel 600 (HD) |
Sky Television (New Zealand) | Channel 85 |
Streaming media | |
Australia Channel | Watch live outside Australia |
Flash News | Watch live within Australia |
Foxtel GO | Watch live within Australia |
Sky News Australia is distributed on pay television in Australia and New Zealand, while a free-to-air version of the service, Sky News Regional (which features programming from Sky News Australia and Fox Sports News) is distributed on digital terrestrial television by Southern Cross Austereo and selected WIN Television stations. The channel also operates two spin-off services, Sky News Weather Channel, and public affairs service Sky News Extra (formerly A-PAC).
The channel was originally a joint venture between British broadcaster BSkyB (thus making it a spin-off of the Sky News channel in the United Kingdom), Seven Media Group, and Nine Entertainment Co., as Australian News Channel Pty Ltd. The company was acquired by News Corp Australia in 2016;[5] with the subsequent sale of Murdoch's remaining shares in Sky UK to Comcast,[6] Sky News Australia no longer has any direct ties to its UK counterpart, despite still using the Sky News brand.
Especially since the acquisition of the channel by News Corp Australia, Sky News Australia has faced scrutiny from the press over its increased focus on opinion programming. Comparisons were drawn to Rupert Murdoch's American news channel Fox News, and there have been accusations that the channel's opinion programming has promoted misinformation and untrue conspiracy theories.[7][8]
History
editSky News Channel's parent company, Australian News Channel (ANC), was owned equally by British Sky Broadcasting (now Sky Limited; which is now a division of Comcast), Seven Media Group and Nine Entertainment Co., each with a 33% stake in the company from its founding until December 2016, when it was acquired by News Corp Australia.[9]
Sky News Australia launched at 5 pm[10] on 19 February 1996, as the first Australian-produced television news channel. The channel aired its 50,000th unique newscast on 23 April 2003 at 11 am.[11] Sky News was added to Austar on 1 April 2000.[12]
In 2004, Sky News began broadcasting Sky News Active, its on-demand interactive TV news service.[1] In 2008, Sky News launched the Sky News Business Channel, and on 20 January 2009, Sky News launched Australian Public Affairs Channel (A-PAC). It began widescreen broadcasting on 17 May 2009.[13] Sky News Australia began broadcasting in high definition on 1 December 2015.[14][15] A fourth spin-off channel, Sky News Election Channel, was launched on 1 May 2016.[16]
In 2013, Sky News Australia was granted A$20 million in funding from its parent company to be used over three years.[17]
In mid-2019, the channel began expanding its digital operations.[18] This included a content partnership with YouTube, Microsoft News, Facebook and Taboola.[19] That led to new, opinion-focused videos being uploaded more frequently and across News Corp platforms, after having previously not uploaded any videos from February 2017 to April 2019.[18]
In February 2018, Sky News Australia launched a digital-first brand and content platform called 2600. The online political newsletter is sent out daily with breaking news from Canberra.[20]
In November 2018, Sky News terminated the contract of former Liberal Party MP and late-night presenter Ross Cameron for using sinophobic language to describe Chinese people.[21]
In July 2024, it was reported that the network would relocate to the News Corp Australia headquarters in Surry Hills in 2025.[22] It was also reported that the network's license to the Sky News brand was expected to expire as early as late-2025, and that Sky Limited was not expected to renew the agreement due to the change in ownership and the divergence in Sky News UK and Sky News Australia's content. It was reported that News Corp were considering rebranding the network as either "Australian News Channel" or a name containing "Fox News" (derived from U.S. sister network owned by Fox Corporation) or "Talk" (coming from News UK brand Talkradio, which briefly operated a UK television service).[22]
Programming
editSky News programming consists of a mix of live news bulletins, live broadcasts from events (such as Parliament Question Time and selected press conferences), original commentary panel programs and simulcasts of international sister station Sky News UK. Sky News has broadcast every sitting of Question Time from the House of Representatives since its launch in 1996.[23]
Sky News Australia increased its primetime programming offerings, particularly its political-themed shows, significantly in 2013, when it made more obvious its right-leaning ideology, ahead of the 2013 federal election, cancelling almost entirely the slot's rolling news block News Night.[17] It would then regain most of its runtime in 2014. Sky News Australia rebranded itself on 19 January 2015 as "Sky News Live", dropping the "Sky News National" branding.[24]
On weekdays, throughout most of the day, rolling news coverage is presented from one of Sky News Australia's studios. From 5 pm (AEST/AEDT), commentary programs begin, and continue through primetime until 11 pm AEST/AEDT. Most of these programs are presented by conservative commentators discussing the news of the day, often with a panel of other commentators, and feature a news update at the beginning of the program (and sometimes further updates during the program). Rolling news continues from 11 pm AEST/AEDT before coverage switches to an overnight simulcast of Sky News UK at 1 am AEST/AEDT.
In 2007, Sky News aired local breakaway programming for New Zealand viewers in primetime, filmed at Prime NZ's Auckland studios. One of these programs, Prime News – First at 5:30, was also simulcast to Australian viewers.[25] The debut of Sky News NZ Evening News was watched by just 1,500 viewers and panned by critics.[26] As of 2015, no local New Zealand programs are produced or broadcast following the loss of a production contract with Prime NZ.[27] However the channel debuted New Zealand Agenda on 16 June 2018, hosted by New Zealand bureau chief James O'Doherty from Wellington, New Zealand, focusing on NZ politics.[28]
Current programs
edit- First Edition with Peter Stefanovic (Monday to Friday)
- Weekend Edition (Saturday to Sunday)
- Sky News Breakfast with Jaynie Seal and Samatha Chiari (Only on Sky News Regional & Sky News Weather) (Monday to Friday)
- AM Agenda with Laura Jayes (Monday to Friday)
- Outsiders with Rowan Dean, Rita Panahi, and James Morrow (Sundays)
- Business Weekend with Ross Greenwood (Sundays)
- NewsDay with Tom Connell and Ashleigh Gillon (Monday to Friday)
- Weekend Live (Saturday to Sunday)
- Afternoon Agenda with Kieran Gilbert (Monday to Friday)
- Business Now with Ross Greenwood (Monday to Friday)
- Sharri with Sharri Markson (Monday to Thursday)
- NZ Edition with Jack Nyhof (Saturdays)
Nighttime
- Credlin with Peta Credlin (Monday to Friday)
- The Bolt Report with Andrew Bolt (Monday to Thursday)[29][30]
- Erin with Erin Molan (Fridays)
- The Sunday Showdown (Sundays)
- The US Report with James Morrow (Fridays)
- The Media Show with Jack Houghton (Fridays)
- Chris Kenny Tonight with Chris Kenny (Monday to Thursday)
- Paul Murray Live with Paul Murray (Sunday to Thursday)
- The U.S Report with James Morrow (Fridays)
- The Rita Panahi Show with Rita Panahi (Fridays)
- The Late Debate with James Macpherson, Liz Storer and Caleb Bond (Monday to Thursday)
- The Late Debate: The Papers with James Macpherson, Liz Storer and Caleb Bond (Monday to Thursday)
- NewsNight (Monday to Sunday)
Presenters and reporters
editNews presenters
edit- Peter Stefanovic
- Jaynie Seal
- Laura Jayes
- Tom Connell
- Ashleigh Gillon
- Kieran Gilbert
- Tim Gilbert
- Danica De Giorgio
- Kristie Lloyd
- Ortenzia Borre
Program presenters
edit- Rowan Dean
- Rita Panahi[31]
- James Morrow[32]
- Ross Greenwood
- Chris Kenny[32][33]
- Peta Credlin[34][35]
- Andrew Bolt
- Erin Molan
- Paul Murray
- Piers Morgan
- Jack Houghton
- Jenna Clarke
- James Macpherson
- Sharri Markson
- Laura Jayes
- Kieran Gilbert
- Cheng Lei
Reporters
edit- Kenny Heatley, Julia Bradley, Fiona Willan, Caroline Marcus and Brent O’Halloran – Sydney
- Holly Edwards-Smith, Georgia Simpson, Holly Stearnes and Simon Love – Melbourne
- Trudy McIntosh, Olivia Caisley and Cameron Reddin – Canberra
- Kaiser Shields and Harry Clarke – Brisbane
- Lauren Forbes - Gold Coast
- Monique Van Der Hayden - Adelaide
- Crystal Wu - Perth
- Matt Cunningham – Darwin
- Jack Nyhof – Wellington, New Zealand
- Staś Butler – Taipei, Taiwan
- Annelise Nielsen – Washington, D.C., U.S.A.
Senior reporter
edit- Caroline Marcus[36]
Former presenters and reporters
edit- Cory Bernardi (2023)
- John Gatfield 1996–2008 now with Sky Racing. Co-anchored the first bulletin on 19 February 1996 with Juanita Phillips
- Samantha Armytage
- Dan Bourchier (now with ABC News)
- Ross Cameron (2013-2018)
- Brooke Corte (now with Nine Radio)
- Helen Dalley
- Craig Emerson (resigned in protest over Blair Cottrell interview)
- Georgie Gardner (now with Nine News)
- Amy Greenbank (now with ABC News)
- Stan Grant (2013-2017)
- Leigh Hatcher
- Patricia Karvelas (now with ABC News) (2016-2017)
- Kristina Keneally (former Premier of New South Wales and Former Senator for New South Wales) (2014-2017)
- Chris Kohler (now with Nine News)
- David Koch (now with Sunrise on the Seven Network)
- Mark Latham (now a member of the New South Wales Legislative Council) (2016-2017)
- Prue Lewarne
- Samantha Maiden (resigned whilst suspended. Now with news.com.au)
- John Mangos
- Sharon McKenzie
- Melanie McLaughlin (now with Seven News)
- Jim Middleton (now a Media Advisor for Climate 200)[37]
- Kelly Nestor
- Janine Perrett[38]
- Juanita Phillips (now with ABC News)
- Cameron Price (now with Seven News)
- Chris Roe
- Celina Edmonds (now with ABC News)
- Vanessa Grimm
- Nina Stevens (now with Seven News)[39]
- Amber Sherlock (now with Nine News)
- David Speers (now with Insiders)
- Greg Thomson (resigned whilst suspended)
- Karen Tso (now with CNBC)
- Jacinta Tynan
- Peter van Onselen (2010-2017)
- Terry Willesee
- Michael Willesee, Jr.
- Ahron Young
- Craig Norenbergs
- James Bracey (now with Nine News)
- Ticky Fullerton (now CEO of the Australian British Chamber of Commerce)[40]
- Peter Gleeson[32]
Bureaus
editSky News Australia has a bureau in every capital city in Australia, completing this with the opening of its Hobart studio in 2013.[17] In 2016, it opened a bureau in Cairns, making it the first non-capital city bureau.[41] In 2017, a Gold Coast bureau was opened marking the third non-capital city studio after Cairns and Geelong.[42]
The base of Sky News Australia is in the Sydney suburb of Macquarie Park, from which the majority of its news and programming is broadcast. Its Melbourne studio was upgraded in 2014, allowing it to be used as a secondary broadcast studio.[43] Hinch Live became the first regular program to be broadcast from Melbourne.[44]
The third major bureau is in Parliament House, Canberra, opened in 2000.[23] Lyndal Curtis became Bureau Chief of in October 2015.[45] Additionally, Sky News has a small office in the Channel Seven building in Martin Place, which includes a small street-level single camera studio which looks onto Elizabeth Street, Sydney.[46]
Internationally, Sky News's only foreign bureau is in Wellington, New Zealand, opened in 2015.[47][48]
Resources
editApart from its own resources, at launch Sky News Australia used the news resources of its former parent companies Seven News, Nine News and Sky News UK, as well as sister networks Sky News UK and Fox News Channel. ABC America and CBS were founding international partners of Sky News Australia.[49]
In 2010 it had agreements with CCTV China, ABC America, CBS, Reuters, APTN, Bloomberg, Dow Jones and Newshub, when it signed a four-year partnership deal with CNN International, commencing on 1 January 2011.[50]
Content
editIn 2017, Denis Muller, a senior research fellow at the University of Melbourne's Centre for Advancing Journalism, described the channel as having a "split personality," running straight news bulletins and reporting during the day with professional and independent journalists and presenters, while moving towards "right-leaning punditry" in prime time.[4]
In February 2021, Muller, commenting on former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's statement that Sky News was following a pattern laid down by Fox News, described the nighttime programming of Sky News as including "the unconstrained peddling of extreme right-wing propaganda, lies, disinformation, crude distortion of fact and baseless assertions."[7]
Political alignment and views
editSky News Australia is considered by commentators to have a conservative, right-wing bias. Much of its coverage is frequently critical of Australia's main progressive political parties, Labor and the Greens, while being supportive of right-wing parties such as the Liberal-National Coalition and One Nation.[2][3] Presenter Paul Murray has stated that "Sky News at night is a Liberal echo chamber".[51] Drawing a strong comparison to Fox News, the network began moving towards panel-based programming from 2010, with most of its highest profile prime time commentators being conservative.[52][53] Hosts Andrew Bolt and Paul Murray have been compared to Fox News presenters Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity respectively.[4]
As many of the channel's primetime contributors are conservatives - many with clear career links to the Liberal Party - the Australian Labor Party and its figureheads Victorian premier Daniel Andrews, Queensland premier Annastacia Palaszczuk and Western Australian premier Mark McGowan are frequently critiqued whilst the policies of the Liberal Party and its coalition partner the Nationals are often endorsed and promoted. During the COVID-19 pandemic beginning in the year 2020, some Sky News commentators referred to Andrews as a 'dictator'[54] and a 'chairman',[55] drawing a comparison to socialist and communist regimes when criticising Andrews' frequent use of pandemic lockdowns and public health orders.
Sky News Australia has been a frequent critic of US President Joe Biden ever since he took office on 20 January 2021. Some commentators such as Andrew Bolt and Alan Jones have frequently spread claims about Biden's mental health, claiming it was declining, that Biden is unfit to be the President and suggesting he was suffering from dementia.[56][57]
Misinformation and conspiracy theories
editOn 13 December 2020, Rowan Dean promoted the Great Reset conspiracy theory on Sky News Australia, claiming that "This Great Reset is as serious and dangerous a threat to our prosperity – to your prosperity and your freedom – as we have faced in decades".[8]
As of February 2021, American far-right conspiracy theorist Alex Jones uses segments from Sky News Australia to back up his claims.[8]
In July 2021, Alan Jones and Craig Kelly falsely claimed that United Kingdom data proved that getting vaccinated against COVID-19 would increase the likelihood of death due to COVID-19. The claim originated in The Daily Exposé, a British website known for promoting COVID-19 and anti-vaccine misinformation.[58] The Daily Exposé's claim was debunked by the BBC, Full Fact and Reuters.[59][60][61] Sky News Australia subsequently removed the broadcast and issued a correction on its website.[58]
On 1 August 2021, YouTube barred Sky News Australia from uploading new content onto their channel for a week for breaking YouTube's rules on posting videos containing COVID-19 misinformation.[62] Upon the channel's return to the platform, Sky News Australia published a piece titled "Uncancelled: Sky News Australia Set Free" wherein Digital Editor Jack Houghton claimed the channel's temporary banning was the result of Silicon Valley and left-wing media attempting to stifle free speech.[63]
A 2022 analysis by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a British think tank, found that Sky News Australia was a major source for climate change misinformation. Sky News Australia rejected the findings of the analysis, saying that they would "continue to encourage debate" on climate change.[64] In 2022, Sky News Australia promoted a now retracted journal article from the European Physical Journal that claimed to have found no evidence of climate change in two video segments. The two segments were viewed more than 500 000 times.[65][66][67]
Reception
editRatings
editThe highest rating broadcast on Sky News Australia was an episode of Paul Murray Live on 26 June 2013 (following the 2013 Labor leadership spill), averaging 197,000 viewers across a special two-hour broadcast. The highest audience share Sky News Australia has achieved was during coverage of the 2009 Victorian bushfires.[68]
On 15 December 2014 during the Sydney Lindt café siege, coverage of the unfolding incident took 16 of the 20 most watched programs on the Foxtel platform. The 7 pm (AEST) hour was the highest rated at 109,000 viewers.[69] Sky News achieved a day time share of 2.6% (behind ABC News 24's 3.8%) and a primetime share of 1.5% (behind ABC News 24's 2.5%).[70]
Sky News Live rated 56,000 viewers for early evening coverage of the 2015 Queensland state election, and 83,000 viewers for later coverage, beaten by ABC News 24's coverage which was watched by 195,000 viewers nationally.[71] For its coverage of the failed Liberal leadership spill on 9 February 2015 between 9 am and 10 am, Sky News Live was the second most watched subscription channel and the coverage was the third most watched program of the day with 69,000 viewers.[72]
Sky News Live reached a total audience of 700,000 viewers on 14 September 2015 (including simulcast on Sky News Business) during the 2015 Liberal leadership spill. It was the most watched subscription television channel for the evening and outrated all free-to-air television channels between 11 pm and midnight AEST.[73] The highest rated hour of coverage was from 10pm, achieving 190,000 viewers, the second highest ratings since the 2013 Labor Party spill.[74][75]
A March 2016 article in The Guardian Australia reported Sky News averages 12,000 national viewers between 6 pm and midnight, with a peak of 18,000 between 8 pm and 10 pm, although the report did not specify what days or dates this average refers to.[76]
During the 2016 federal election, Sky News averaged 96,000 viewers, an increase of 46% from the 2013 election.[77]
In July 2018, Sky News claimed to have achieved its highest ratings on record, with viewership up 9% overall and its weeknight primetime (6pm–11pm) viewership 25% higher on the same period last year, according to OzTAM figures.[78][79]
In August 2018, coverage of the Liberal Party of Australia leadership spill, 2018 saw Sky News gain its highest Tuesday primetime audience ever with a 4.2% audience share. Speers, Credlin and Jones & Co all had their highest-rated episodes on record.[80]
Criticism
editIn August 2018, Sky News was heavily criticised for providing a platform to Blair Cottrell, leader of the far-right, Neo-Nazi organisation United Patriots Front in a one-to-one discussion about immigration on The Adam Giles Show. Sky News presenter Laura Jayes and ABC journalist David Speers were among those critical (both on-air and off-air) of his appearance on the programme due to the fact that he has expressed admiration for Adolf Hitler and claimed to have manipulated women "using violence and terror."[81][82] Sky News commentator and former Labor Party minister Craig Emerson resigned in protest after the interview was broadcast, stating that "My father fought Nazis in WWII and was interred in a German POW camp", and that the decision to give Cottrell a platform on Sky News was "another step in a journey to normalising racism & bigotry in our country".[81] The activist group Sleeping Giants Oz called on advertisers to pull advertising campaigns off Sky News in the wake of the channel's interview with Cottrell.[83][84]
In the aftermath of the Christchurch mosque shootings in March 2019, Sky News Australia was temporarily removed from Sky New Zealand's satellite platform, amid concerns over how the channel's coverage could potentially affect the investigation into the attack; Fox Sports News was added to the platform as a replacement.[85][86] Sky News Australia was restored to Sky New Zealand on 21 March, six days after the attack.[87]
Several high-profile figures have criticised Sky News, including former prime minister Kevin Rudd, who told a media inquiry in February 2021 that it was following the "template" of Fox News in becoming a "legitimising echo-chamber for this increasingly far-right, extremist worldview".[88] In December 2023, former Victorian premier Daniel Andrews, who was a frequent target of scorn from Sky News pundits during his premiership, referred to the channel's after dark coverage as "bullshit" and "the worst of American politics imported into ours".[89]
Accolades
editList of accolades | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Award | Category | Recipient(s) | Result |
2007 | 2007 ASTRA Awards | Most outstanding performance by a presenter | David Speers | Won |
Most Creative Use of Technology | Anytime, Anywhere | Nominated | ||
2008 | Logie Awards of 2008 | Most Outstanding News Coverage | Federal Election | Nominated |
2008 ASTRA Awards | Most outstanding performance by a presenter | David Speers | Won | |
Most outstanding performance by a broadcast journalist | Kieran Gilbert | Won | ||
Mike Willesee | Nominated | |||
Most outstanding performance by a presenter | Hellen Dalley | Nominated | ||
Channel of the year | Sky News Australia | Nominated | ||
Favourite male personality | James Bracey | Nominated | ||
David Speers | Nominated | |||
Favourite female personality | Helen Dalley | Nominated | ||
Brooke Corte | Nominated | |||
Most Outstanding News Program or Coverage | APEC 2007 | Won | ||
2009 | 2009 ASTRA Awards | Most Outstanding Performance by a Broadcast Journalist | David Speers | Won |
Favourite male personality | Kieran Gilbert | Nominated | ||
2010 | Logie Awards of 2010 | Most Outstanding Public Affairs Report | Liberal Leadership Meltdown | Nominated |
2010 ASTRA Awards | Most Outstanding Performance by a Broadcast Journalist | Kieran Gilbert | Won | |
2011 | Logie Awards of 2011 | Most Outstanding News Coverage | Election 2010 | Nominated |
2011 ASTRA Awards | Most Outstanding Performance by a Broadcast Journalist | Ashleigh Gillon | Won | |
Most Outstanding Performance by a Presenter | David Speers | Won | ||
Most Outstanding News Program or Coverage | Election 2010 | Won | ||
2012 | Logie Awards of 2012 | Most Outstanding News Coverage | Qantas Grounded | Nominated |
2012 ASTRA Awards | Most Outstanding Performance by a Presenter | David Speers | Won | |
2013 | Logie Awards of 2013 | Most Outstanding News Coverage | Rudd Vs Gillard Leadership Challenge | Nominated |
2013 ASTRA Awards | Most Outstanding Performance by a Broadcast Journalist | Ahron Young | Won | |
Favourite personality – male | Paul Murray | Nominated | ||
Favourite Programme Australian | Paul Murray Live | Nominated | ||
2014 | Logie Awards of 2014 | Most Outstanding News Coverage | Leadership Spill | Nominated |
2014 ASTRA Awards | Channel of the year | Sky News National | Nominated | |
Favourite personality – male | Paul Murray | Nominated | ||
Favourite personality – female | Laura Jayes | Nominated | ||
Favourite program: Australian | Paul Murray Live | Nominated | ||
Most Outstanding News Program | Election 2013 coverage | Won | ||
Paul Murray Live | Nominated | |||
Most Outstanding performance by a broadcast journalist | Kieran Gilbert | Nominated | ||
Ahron Young | Nominated | |||
Daniel Bourchier | Nominated | |||
David Speers | Won | |||
2015 | Logie Awards of 2015 | Most Outstanding News Coverage | What Is Metadata? | Nominated |
2015 ASTRA Awards[90] | Channel of the year | Sky News National | Won | |
Most Outstanding Presenter – Male | Paul Murray | Won | ||
Most Outstanding Presenter – Female | Nina Stevens | Nominated | ||
Most Outstanding Performance by a Broadcast Journalist | David Speers | Won | ||
Kieran Gilbert | Nominated | |||
Celina Edmonds | Nominated | |||
Ahron Young | Nominated | |||
Most Outstanding News Program | Paul Murray Live | Won | ||
PM Agenda | Nominated | |||
Richo + Jones | Nominated | |||
2016 | Logie Awards of 2016 | Most Outstanding News Coverage[91] | Liberal Leadership Crisis: Abbott V Turnbull | Nominated |
ASTRA Industry Awards | Most Outstanding Innovation (use of technology)[92] | LiveU SmartGRIP | Nominated | |
Walkley Awards | Coverage of a Major News Event or Issue[93] | 2016 Election coverage | Won | |
6th AACTA Awards | Subscription Television Award For Best Live Event Production[94] | 2016 Election Coverage | Nominated | |
Subscription Television Award For Best Male Presenter[94] | David Speers | Nominated | ||
2017 | Logie Awards of 2017 | Most Outstanding News Coverage[95] | 2016 Election coverage | Won |
2021 | Kennedy Awards | Journalist of the Year[96] | Sharri Markson | Nominated |
Outstanding TV News Reporting[96] | Kieran Gilbert and Andrew Clennell | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Nightly Current Affairs[96] | Sharri Markson | Won | ||
Outstanding Long Form Current Affairs[96] | Peta Credlin | Won | ||
2023 | NT Media Awards | NT Journalist of the Year[97] | Matt Cunningham | Won |
Best News Coverage x 2[97] | Matt Cunningham | Won | ||
Best Current Affairs or Feature[97] | Matt Cunningham | Won | ||
Best Crime / Court Reporting[97] | Matt Cunningham | Won | ||
Kennedy Awards | The Paul Lockyer Award for Regional Broadcast Reporting[98] | Matt Cunningham | Won | |
Queensland Clarion Awards | Broadcast Report[99] | Jonathan Lea | Won |
Broadcast
editSky News began broadcasting in widescreen, along with its sister channels on 17 May 2009.[13] Sky News Australia only provides closed captioning between 4 pm and 5 pm (AEST/AEDT) each day.[100]
Sky News began broadcasting in high definition on 1 December 2015.[14]
Other services
editSky News Multiview
editWith the roll-out of Foxtel Digital, Sky News Australia launched the Sky News Active interactive news service based on the Sky News UK service with the same name. The service offered a choice of eight news screens, some with original content not seen on the main channel they vary depending on the days news or events and include the latest news, business, sport, showbiz and weather in text. Other features included interactive polling and the latest news headlines via text. On 15 November 2009 Sky News active re-launched with a new look as well as 5 additional local screens (Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, and Adelaide.[101]
Sky News Now (mobile service)
editSky News Now was a mobile service available on Vodafone, Telstra and 3. It offered a wide variety of news in both video and text.[102] As of 2015, the service was no longer available.
Sky News Alerts
editSky News Alerts is a SMS and MMS breaking news service available on all mobile phones inside Australia.[103] Breaking news alerts are sent to a subscriber via SMS or MMS at a cost per message.[104]
Qantas
editIn November 2014, Sky News Australia was contracted to provide Qantas with in-flight news bulletins replacing a longstanding contract with the Nine Network.[105]
Radio and Podcasting
editIn Australia, since June 2023, Sky News partners with Nova Entertainment to offer an audio simulcast of its television channel via the free Nova Player app (nationally) and DAB+ digital radio (Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane only). Various programs podcasts including First Business, Market Day, Showbiz, Agenda, Australian News Week, Credlin and The Rita Panahi Show are also available on the app.[106] Previously, it was on IHeartRadio from March 2020 until June 2023, as part of a deal with ARN.[107]
Sky News Regional
editCountry | Australia |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Regional QLD, Northern NSW & Gold Coast, Southern NSW & ACT, Griffith, Regional VIC, Mildura, Eastern SA and Spencer Gulf |
Programming | |
Language(s) | English |
Picture format | 576i SDTV |
Ownership | |
Owner | Australian News Channel (News Corp Australia) |
Sister channels | Sky News Australia Sky News Weather Channel Sky News Extra |
History | |
Launched | 2 September 2018 |
Replaced | Aspire TV (in SCA areas) |
Replaced by | 9Life (in most WIN areas) |
Former names | Sky News on WIN (2018-2021) |
Links | |
Website | skynews |
Availability | |
Terrestrial | |
SCA | Channel 56 |
WIN Television | Channel 53 (Gold Coast QLD) (Northern NSW) (Griffith NSW/Murrumbidgee Irrigation Area) (Mount Gambier SA/Riverland) |
Sky News Regional (formerly Sky News on WIN) is a free-to-air version of Sky News Australia, which was launched on 2 September 2018. The channel features Sky News Australia and Fox Sports News programming, as well as the morning newscast Sky News Breakfast commissioned for this channel that also airs on Sky News Weather.[108][109] The channel was originally established as part of a partnership with WIN Television.[110][111] In 2021, WIN's contracts with both Network 10 and Sky News expired; with WIN returning to its previous Nine Network affiliation on 1 July 2021, and Sky News's contract expiring on 1 August 2021 (the allotments were, in turn, used for 9Life).[111] Sky News reached a new agreement with Southern Cross Austereo to distribute the channel on their now Network 10-affiliated stations, now known as Sky News Regional.[111][110]
In its first two weeks on the air, the channel averaged 10,000 viewers in primetime and 4,000 viewers in daytime, with Richo the highest rated program at 24,000 viewers.[112]
The channel is available on digital channel 56 across Southern Cross Austereo's regional markets in Regional QLD, Southern NSW & ACT and Regional VIC, and on WIN digital channel 53 in Northern NSW and the Gold Coast.[113] It is not available in Broken Hill/Spencer Gulf, Tasmania, Mildura, Darwin, Remote & Central Australia and Regional WA. Mildura, Tasmania, and Regional Western Australia previously broadcast the channel as Sky News on WIN on the WIN network until August 2021 when it switched to 9Life's feed. The channel was previously on WIN digital channels 83 and 85, prior to the rebrand as Sky News Regional on 1 August 2021.
Sky News Regional ended its broadcast on channel 53 in Griffith and South-East South Australia on 30 June 2024 after an unsuccessful renewal of the affiliation agreement with WIN.[114][115]
Sky News Now (TV channel)
editLinear channel Sky News Now launched on the Samsung TV Plus platform in Australia on 23 March 2023.[116][117]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "About Sky News". Sky News Australia. Archived from the original on 6 March 2014. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
- ^ a b Lallo, Michael (27 May 2019). "Sky's jump to the right has boosted ratings – but at what cost?". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ a b "Dark side of Sky After Dark: Anti-Labor comments seven times more likely". The New Daily. 14 May 2019. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
In News you have a very politically motivated news outlet –online, print, free to air and subscription. All of this is building a very strong right-wing media. It is an appalling vision of the future.
- ^ a b c Muller, Denis (15 February 2017). "Sky News is not yet Fox News, but it has the good, the bad and the uglies". The Conversation. Retrieved 17 February 2017.
- ^ Pannett, Rachel (2 August 2021). "Sky News Australia temporarily suspended from YouTube for allegedly spreading coronavirus misinformation". The Washington Post. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
The Murdoch family took full control of Sky News Australia in 2016, through the local arm of News Corp.
- ^ "Rupert Murdoch's Sky reign to end as Fox sells all shares to Comcast". The Guardian. 26 September 2018. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
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