Broadsheet (TV programme) explained

Creator:Telefís Éireann
Presenter:John O'Donoghue
Brian Cleeve
Brian Farrell
Country:Ireland
Language:English
Num Episodes:393
Location:Studio 2, Telefís Éireann Television Centre, Donnybrook, Dublin 4, Ireland
Camera:Multi-camera
Runtime:35 minutes
Channel:Telefís Éireann
Related:Newsbeat

Broadsheet was a Telefís Éireann television current affairs programme presented by John O'Donoghue, Brian Cleeve, and Brian Farrell and broadcast in Ireland live on weekday evenings from 1962 to 1963.

Background

Broadsheet was created by Telefís Éireann as the newly established station's flagship current affairs programme. Broadcast live from Monday to Friday between 6:40pm and 7:15pm, the new programme was in direct competition with BBC Television's Tonight programme.[1] Broadsheet was broadcast for the first time on 1 January 1962, the first full day of programming by Telefís Éireann. It was edited by P. P. O'Reilly.[2]

Content and style

The programme was broadcast half-an-hour after the early evening news and provided a more detailed analysis of topical matters and current affairs. There was a mixture of incisive and light-hearted items: unscripted studio interviews and filmed reports. The programme received a Jacob's Award for broadcasting in 1962.

Broadsheet was broadcast for the last time on 4 October 1963. It was replaced by a new programme called Newsbeat, which effectively was a merger between News and Broadsheet. The three presenters - O'Donoghue, Cleeve and Farrell - went on to play prominent roles in subsequent current affairs programmes on RTÉ right up until the 2000s.

Other sources

Notes and References

  1. The Irish Times, "Death of RTE broadcaster", 19 November 1992
  2. RTÉ Guide, 5 January 1962