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Television South
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Mon Dec 29 2003 at 16:02:59
An
ITV
contractor for the south and south east of
England
during the 1980s.
It's well known that
Southern
, unhappy with the prospect of losing its franchise to newcomers
South and South East Communications
, basically stuck two fingers up at the
IBA
and tarnished its own memory with its tantrum-like leaving programme.
There was more behind the bid than that though. It was a
double-edged sword
. Southern would be spared the expense of building more studios to cover the new Southeast region, but then it would also die never to be heard from again. They were in a
rut
.
South and Southeast had expected to be merged in a
shotgun marriage
to enter
ITV
, in similar way to how
Thames
was formed. However, they won the franchise outright, and quickly adopted the far catchier moniker
Television South
.
The company built new studios in
Maidstone
to supplement the ones in Southampton, and a
logo
was created - a multicoloured "
flower of the south
", made up of 6 segments - similar to how the
Central
`cake' would turn out. This was accompanied by the lettering 'TVS' in
Clearface Gothic
- a font used extensively throughout the company's short life.
On 1 January 1982, TVS sprang to life with its new especially composed startup music - variously named but referred to in-house as `
TVS Gallop
'. Launching somewhere between film music and
Carmina Burana
without the choir, it was a brilliant piece, accompanied by a new IBA slide - the first on the network to feature a programme menu.
A new clock was brought in as well -
mechanical
, but cleverly concealed as such. It was the first clock to have the colouring on the faceplate itself, rather than electronically added on the fly. The clock contained no logo-just the letters TVS and the 6 colours of the logo, horizontal along the clock.
Continuity was upped at the new station too - a new continuity set was designed, with the colours banding round the studio, like in the clock, and a TVS logo set in stone on top of these. Later in the station's life, a pink and blue arrangement was devised, with many glass flowers on a low wall behind the announcer. But by 1988
in-vision
was gone from the south.
By the mid 1980s TVS had realised that it was rolling in money, what with the
affluent
coastal towns of the south being in its
franchise
area, and so used that affluence to push its programming on to the network. It had moderate success. Among its networked programmes were `
The Real World
', a science programme, and `
Number 73
', a children's programme in a similar vein to the defunct
Tiswas
.
TVS had also realised that with all of its money, it could become a burgeoning
media
empire, and to prove the point, it bought
Mary Tyler-Moore
's US production company - a move that would bring the company down. It also brought in a new
ident
, where the flower rotates to form the TVS letters and settles on a
reflectiv
e background. The `new' TVS was completed with a somewhat redundant change of name to `
TVS Television
'.
It is certain that TVS could easily have passed through the 1991 franchise round with flying colours. But
MTM
was a strain on finances. It was draining the company to such an extent that it was a case of when, not if, they would go under.
MTM was spun off as
Blue Heaven
and some
restructuring
took place. However, a desperate TVS had bid far more than any company could afford for the right to continue broadcasting - and the ITC had no choice but to hand the license to
Meridian
.
It is to TVS's credit that they did not go out the same way as their predecessors did -
kicking and screaming
. The dignified ending show ended with a thank you to all of the
viewer
s and
shareholder
s for watching over the past decade. The flower rotated one last time, TVS came up and the simple legend "
Thanks for watching
" appeared.
Some sound disturbances appeared as
Big Ben
chimed (it was rumoured - but not proven - that TVS's staff messed about with Meridian's sound for the first 10 minutes due to
sour grapes
) and that was it.
TVS, the
ITV
contractor who wanted more, was dead. They kept going for as long as they could afford, but were eventually bought and broken up. An end very much the opposite of Southern 11 years before.
printable version
chaos
Southern
ITV
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