Camera: | Multi-camera |
Runtime: | 60 minutes |
Creator: | BBC News |
Presenter: | Victoria Derbyshire Annita McVeigh Ben Brown |
Theme Music Composer: | David Lowe |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Location: | Studio E Broadcasting House, London |
Language: | English |
Network: | BBC News (9 pm) |
Network2: | |
Network3: | BBC One (9 am) |
Related: | BBC Breakfast BBC News at One BBC News at Five BBC News at Six BBC News at Ten BBC Weekend News World News Today |
The BBC News at Nine (styled as BBC News at 9) is a morning news programme. It aired every Sunday to Friday on BBC Two and the BBC News Channel for 60minutes from 9am until 10am. On weekends, it was replaced by a standard edition of BBC World News. The programme was presented by Victoria Derbyshire, Annita McVeigh, and Ben Brown.
Between 2020 and 2023, the programme was no longer branded BBC News at 9, and often simply called BBC News carrying generic BBC News title card[1] (especially during simulcast with BBC World News). The programme was still, however listed as BBC News at 9 on BBC iPlayer.
The programme aired for the final time as a generic bulletin on 16 April 2023, before it got replaced by a TV simulcast of Nicky Campbell's phone-in show from Radio 5 Live the next day.[2]
An evening (9p.m.) bulletin also named BBC News at Nine was broadcast, starting in 2013.
The weather and business updates were generally presented from the screen away from the main desk, unless they preceded each other. Sports updates were presented from the BBC Sport Centre at MediaCityUK, Salford. From 30 June 2014, the programme aired an extended Weather for the Week Ahead at 9.55p.m. This looked at the weather, generally over the British Isles, over the next seven days.
On Fridays from 9:45 p.m., the programme Newswatch used to air. This was moved to a slightly earlier timeslot, 9.30p.m.-9.45p.m., and now airs on Friday evenings generally at 8.45p.m., with overnight repeats on Friday nights/Saturday morning and during the BBC Breakfast programme on Saturday morning, simulcast on BBC One. Newswatch features viewer opinions and criticisms on how BBC News has covered news events during the week. On Friday night, a repeat of The Film Review follows. It is presented by the anchor of the BBC News at Five and a film critic, usually Mark Kermode, from the Studio C (BBC World News' main studio) with the background and lighting changed to resemble a cinema effect. It features reviews of all the week's main releases.
This evening bulletin was ended on 31 May 2015, and replaced by Outside Source and a new edition of World News Today.[3]