Neither have I!
That set Ten has gone ahead and produced is nothing short of world class. Make no mistake, I thought Nine had set the benchmark with its news sets … but Ten’s is something else.
It’s a beautiful set with endless opportunities. Well done Ten.
Give it two months and there will be a new bulletin. Make no mistake of that.
Or First Word. There really are endless opportunities for something a bit radical and stand-out in a tough crowd that says, hey, we are a fun, simple Ten News show in the morning - different from Sunrise, Today and ABC. The brand “First” lends itself to a catchy name for morning news. Sure, they could just go with “News First”. Or they could go with some kind of play on words - not too over the top but something good. But First Thing and Studio 10 do kind of work.
Another element we didn’t see in native HD last night, the cross to Sport (UPDATE: Sorry about the caps posted earlier which were from last Thursday! ):
The new set will be home to 10 News First , Studio 10 and Sports Tonight and used by other 10 assets such as The Loop , RPM and 10 Daily .
Even without additional bulletins or a breakfast show (which I personally think shouldn’t happen while they don’t have fundamental basics such as local bulletins on weekends/major public holidays), that’s at least 4.5 hours of airtime each weekday.
I think we got that, but its a multipurpose set, not specifically a news-only set.
While we would all love to see them introduce more news bulletins, I’m sure this set will have a great run for other shows as mentioned by @SydneyCityTV
I’m sorry but my original point still stands. If you think making shows like freaking RPM and The Loop there justifies the whole thing - as in, specifically, zero plans for any more news bulletins (as per your argument) - then I think you are very mistaken. This is definitely a strategy involving more news - is my point.
I’m still not buying the “this new set has been made with new bulletins/programs in mind” argument. In this day and age when all the networks have to produce far more content than ever before on a lower budget and with fewer resources than they had in the past, it probably just makes sense for them to build large screen dependent, multipurpose sets with a variety of program genres in mind. Ten’s new one at Pyrmont is something that’s probably been made to last a decade.
Besides, look at the other networks. Seven more or less uses a single set at Martin Place for Sunrise, The Morning Show, The Daily Edition & their Sydney-based news bulletins. Nine currently has three main news/current affairs studios (with smaller set-ups for regional bulletins and live crosses) at Willoughby, but at North Sydney I’d probably expect them to have two multipurpose sets for the oodles of content they produce. The ABC & SBS also have sets which are made with multiple programs/bulletins in mind.