Fairchild TV News
Fairchild TV News is the news division of Fairchild TV, a Cantonese cable television network in Canada. It competes against the Cantonese newscasts on Vancouver’s OMNI BC and Toronto’s OMNI.2.
Operations
Fairchild TV produces one hour-long newscast every day. It airs at 19:00 local time in both Vancouver and Toronto.From 19:00 to 19:30, the newscast is produced separately from newsrooms in Vancouver and Toronto, and the audience in each market receives its own appropriate edition. Domestic and international news items are covered. Local news items are tailored specifically for each edition so the coverage is relevant to its local audience. The two editions are also presented by different anchors, with each newsroom supplying two of its own on-air personnel.
Due to Toronto being 3 hours ahead of Vancouver and such, their newscast being broadcast first, from 19:30 to 20:00, the non-local newscast segments are produced at the Toronto newsroom and repeated in Vancouver. This section of the newscast covers news items from the Greater China region, lifestyle and feature reports, business news, sports and weather. A separate Toronto-based sports anchor presents the sports segment, and the two Toronto news anchors handle the business report and weather forecast.
Fairchild TV does have several reporters based in both cities to cover local news. However, most local and national/international news footages are usually sourced from the mainstream networks, with footages from the Greater China region provided by China Central Television in mainland China, TVB in Hong Kong, and various sources in Taiwan.
The newscast is repeated at 23:30 local time.
News production is completely handled in Toronto on weekends. The newscast goes from 19:00 to 19:40 on Saturdays, and 19:00 to 19:30 on Sundays.
Fairchild TV does not have designated anchors for its newscast. Instead, its anchor lineup varies from night to night, as was the usual practice at television stations in Hong Kong..
History
Until 2001
Prior to 2001, Fairchild’s Vancouver and Toronto operations were separate. The station operated as two separate feeds, one for each city, and the two feeds often had slightly different schedules from each other.Each feed also had its own completely separate newscast, produced at its own facility. Viewers in Toronto never saw an anchor from Vancouver, and vice versa. The newscast was aired at 19:30 local time, and presented by only one anchor. Each feed also had its local weather segment, which was aired immediately after the newscast as a separate programme in and of itself.
2001-2004
However, this split-feed arrangement breached the station’s Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission licensing conditions. As such, Fairchild TV was forced to merge the two feeds back into a single national feed in 2001. Vancouver viewers now received exactly the same feed as those in Toronto, only on a three-hour delay due to time difference.Under the single national feed, initially the bulk of the newscast was produced in Toronto, with only a brief segment produced in Vancouver consisting of regional items from Western Canada. The weather forecast was also completely produced in Toronto. Gradually, Vancouver’s production team received more airtime, as it took over production of the Greater China news segment.
Not only did the Vancouver newsroom receive less airtime overall; it was also unable to cover local news effectively. The Vancouver newsroom had been heavily dependent on Global BC for local news footages, and prior to the changeover, it routinely taped footages off Global BC’s 18:00 newscast to air on its own bulletin. However, under the single national feed, the Vancouver newsroom had to link up with Toronto at 16:30 Pacific in order to meet the 7:30pm Eastern deadline for the newscast. As such, the Vancouver newsroom now had to tape Global BC’s noon or even morning newscast instead, resulting in Vancouver news items often being shown on a one-day delay.
To partly remedy this problem, the station launched a 23:00 newscast, titled Western Canada Late News. This gave the Vancouver newsroom another opportunity to link up at 20:00 PT for a 23:00 ET deadline, and allowed it to use footages from Global BC’s 18:00 newscast. Western Canada Late News was completely produced at the Vancouver studio.
The main evening newscast's starting time was moved up from 19:30 to 19:00 local time in June 2003. In conjunction with the schedule change, the Vancouver operation debuted a new open studio, with a view of the newsroom behind the anchors.
Since 2004
The shortcomings of this national setup were apparent to Fairchild, which petitioned to the CRTC to amend its licensing conditions. The request was granted, and Fairchild revamped its news production in fall 2004.Since the Vancouver newsroom now had more airtime and no longer had to run any items on a one-day delay, “Western Canada Late News” was promptly cancelled.
In early 2006, the entire Vancouver studio was relocated to the third floor of Richmond's Aberdeen Centre, and a new newsroom studio was opened. Visitors of Aberdeen Centre can now watch the studio production of newscast through the windows.
Format
Until 2001, each feed’s newscast was presented by a solo anchor, who was not seen at all on the other feed. After the single feed went into effect in 2001, most of the newscast is presented by a Toronto-based anchor, with a Vancouver-based anchor presenting a brief segment of Western Canadian news.In 2003, in conjunction with the move to a 19:00 starting time, the evening newscast also became completely duo-anchored, with two anchors based in Toronto and another two in Vancouver. With the introduction of the duo-anchor format also came "happy talk", involving the two co-anchors exchanging supposedly casual conversations. Initially the bantering was at times rather forced and awkward; however, the conversations now sound more natural, as the anchors have apparently become more accustomed to this format. The "happy talk" format was further supplemented with the addition of a Toronto-based sports anchor in 2004.
For its entire existence, Western Canada Late News was solo-anchored.
Sports reporting is present in the Toronto segment with alternating sports anchor.
There is no specific weather or business presenter, the task is completed by one of two anchors.
Current Affairs programming
Along with its nightly newscast, Fairchild TV News also produces programming pertaining to current and public affairs, including:- Headliners
- Magazine 26 - from Vancouver
- Chatting Platform - from Vancouver
- Timeline - from Toronto
- Media Focus - from Toronto
[TVB News]
- An overseas edition of TVB's 1pm newscast is shown two times, at 07:30 and 07:45 local time;
- An overseas edition of TVB's flagship 18:30 newscast is shown three times, at 08:30, 09:00 and 12:00 local time.
News Team
In total there are 24 onscreen personalities in the news division.
Toronto (Richmond Hill, ON) Bureau
- Kate Chan - Anchor/Reporter
- Ritch Lau - Sports Anchor/Reporter
- Lawman Au - Sports Anchor
- Laurence Leung - Anchor/Reporter
- Titus Leung - Reporter
- Catherine Ho - Host, Media Focus
- Rebecca Lau - Reporter
Vancouver (Richmond, BC) Bureau
- Ada Luk - Anchor/Editor
- April Lee - Anchor/News Editor
- Hon Sang Chan - Anchor/Assignment Editor
- Clement Tang - Anchor
- Sabrina Chan - Anchor
- Johnny Wong - Anchor
- Vincent Ng - Reporter
- Claudia Lau - Anchor/Reporter
- Wilson Lam - Writer
- William Law - Reporter
- Annie Law - Reporter
Former Anchors and Reporters
- Chan Yiu Yin
- Tsai Hiu Tung
- Chan Long
- Chan Yim Wai
- Cheung Chee On
- Cissie Yee - former reporter
- Endora Fan - former anchor, now with Richmond Hospital Foundation
- Cheung Yan Ping
- Koo Ming
- Shelley Wong - anchor/reporter
- Ka Lai Ming
- Kwok Kam Chau
- Jessica Lai
- Lam Wing Tim
- Lee Yee Lam - reporter
- Lee Chai Ming - now with Talentvision
- Kenneth Lei Lap Poon - now reporter with OMNI.2 Toronto
- Lee Ping Yan
- Isa Lee - former anchor and now Markham City Councillor
- Eric Lee
- Leung Kwok-Shu - now with KTSF-TV San Francisco
- Loh Yan Wai
- Luk Man Yee
- Luk Ngai Pang
- Stanley So - later anchor and producer with OMNI.2 Toronto; now retired
- Charles Mak - now anchor at CHMB AM1320
- Karen So - now anchor at OMNI Vancouver
- Wong Ka Yin
- Wong Tai Kwan - former anchor, now with TVB News in Hong Kong
- Simon Lee - former anchor/report, now with Bloomberg News in Hong Kong
- Florence Ho
- Anthony Ting
- Karen Tso
- Karen Ha
- Joanne Lau
- Spencer Gall - former anchor, now at Richmond Hospital Foundation
- Aurelien Ng - now with TVB in Hong Kong
- Daniel Ting - former sports anchor