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60 Seconds

60seconds News
60seconds.jpg
60 Seconds logo (2008–2016)
Created by BBC News
Presented by Sam Naz (Mon-Thurs)
Ben Mundy (Fri)
ChiChi Izundu (Sat)
Tina Daheley (Sun)
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
Production
Location(s) Broadcasting House, London
Running time 1'01" x 6 bulletins
Release
Original network BBC Three (2003–2016)
BBC Choice (2001–2003)
Picture format 576i (16:9 SDTV)
Original release 16 July 2001 (2001-07-16) – 16 February 2016 (2016-02-16)
Chronology
Related shows The 7 O'Clock News
External links
Production website

60 seconds was a news programme which ran between shows on BBC Three. It was broadcast under the BBC News format and branding. The main presenter was Sam Naz. Previous presenters included Tasmin Lucia-Khan, Andy May, Matt Cooke, James Dagwell and Claudia-Liza Armah.

The programme lasted for 60 seconds as the name suggests, during which time the presenter condensed some of the day's news, sport and entertainment stories into a 60-second bulletin. It ran from 7pm to 12:15am with a bulletin at the top of the hour or after a programme had ended, if more than an hour. Throughout the bulletin, a line gradually crossed the screen which effectively counted down the seconds. There were sets of pictures running simultaneously for each story. Five stories were featured in every bulletin. During the 2012 Summer Olympics and 2014 Commonwealth Games bulletins ran from 7am to 12:15am with a round-up of the day's other news stories.

60 seconds was launched on 16 July 2001 on BBC Choice, the precursor to BBC Three, to appeal to those within the 18–34 age group; BBC Three's target audience, and also the demographic with lowest news-watching and voter turnout. When BBC Choice was replaced by BBC Three on 9 February 2003, the programme was kept and the titles updated to match the style of The 7 O'Clock News also on the channel.

There was a rebrand of BBC Three on 12 February 2008, during which the identity of 60seconds also changed to match the new colour scheme of the channel. The first broadcast of the revamped 60seconds saw a new take on the news; the headlines of news channels across the world, such as Al Jazeera and CNN, are read as opposed to the original UK headline bulletins. However, maintaining its original purpose, the UK's headlines are still included in the bulletin, as well as most of the original properties of 60seconds, with the keeping of the two images–videos running parallel to each other.


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Wikipedia

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