The Newsroom

International News Presentation: Past and Present

This site closed in March 2021 and is now a read-only archive
BB
BBI45
They have special guests on Japanese morning programmes too, this particular episode featured an earthquake as special guest right at the top of the hour one morning, making it as punctual as the trains in Japan:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAxxZkpV0HI

(Japan sits on an earthquake belt and has many earthquakes every year, and so this earthquake warning stuff is actually quite common on NHK, as they're the public broadcaster over there and are required to basically "get the word out" as it were when an earthquake strikes, and all the "chattering" at the end of the video is the wake-up call for Japanese TVs to power up and tune to NHK at full volume.

Its sort of a slight oxymoron that the warning tone for an earthquake/tsunami in Japan sounds like a mobile phone going off followed by the information, and yet in America where you have the Emergency Broadcast System (and the later Emergency Alert System) which generates the most irritating tone going and I believe is also used on the occasions where they test it)

Sometimes, the earthquakes will make guest appearances on the evening news too. As a matter of fact, the latest surprise guest appearance was just under a week ago.


And here is a collection of all the Earthquake Early Warnings that occurred in 2019.


That video shows how they appeared on NHK. Other stations have different styles, although they convey the same information. Here is how a warning from 2016 was shown on NHK, Nippon TV, TBS, Fuji TV, TV Asahi and TV Tokyo.


Those videos also show how tsunami warnings were presented on each station at that time. Just in case you don't know, a tsunami is a series of waves in a water body caused by the displacement of a large volume of water, generally in an ocean or a large lake. Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and other underwater explosions (including detonations, landslides, glacier calvings, meteorite impacts and other disturbances) above or below water all have the potential to generate a tsunami.

Interestingly, you can also find people who have created their own style of earthquake and tsunami warnings (much like The Gallery here on TV Forum), based on information about previous earthquakes, or predictions about future earthquakes.
LL
London Lite Founding member
what posted:
Many US stations start local news at 4am local time - I think some have even started at 3am on occasion?


4am is the norm in some large markets now. Most are on by 4.30 and smaller markets by 5am.
what and Roger Darthwell gave kudos
RD
Roger Darthwell
To put it clearly: it starts at 4:30 am, Tokyo time.

People in Japan live in a different time zone as people in the UK. When the night starts in the UK, Japan reaches the very last hours of the night.

This is due to the Earth's endless rotation on itself: when some parts of the Earth's surface are exposed to the sun (and are therefore in day light), some other parts are in the night; and because our planet rotates on itself, at some point, parts which were in the night become lit by the sun, and parts which were under the day light start entering into night. And the cycle repeats endlessly.

I understand...I was more shocked about the start time of breakfast TV in Germany, because they are a lot closer to us than Japan...Germany is just 1 hour behind us
NJ
Neil Jones Founding member
To put it clearly: it starts at 4:30 am, Tokyo time.

People in Japan live in a different time zone as people in the UK. When the night starts in the UK, Japan reaches the very last hours of the night.

This is due to the Earth's endless rotation on itself: when some parts of the Earth's surface are exposed to the sun (and are therefore in day light), some other parts are in the night; and because our planet rotates on itself, at some point, parts which were in the night become lit by the sun, and parts which were under the day light start entering into night. And the cycle repeats endlessly.

I understand...I was more shocked about the start time of breakfast TV in Germany, because they are a lot closer to us than Japan...Germany is just 1 hour behind us


I think you mean one hour ahead. If its 10pm in London it's 11pm in Germany... If Germany was one hour behind they'd be in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean...
Critique and Roger Darthwell gave kudos
MI
TheMike
To put it clearly: it starts at 4:30 am, Tokyo time.

People in Japan live in a different time zone as people in the UK. When the night starts in the UK, Japan reaches the very last hours of the night.

This is due to the Earth's endless rotation on itself: when some parts of the Earth's surface are exposed to the sun (and are therefore in day light), some other parts are in the night; and because our planet rotates on itself, at some point, parts which were in the night become lit by the sun, and parts which were under the day light start entering into night. And the cycle repeats endlessly.

I understand...I was more shocked about the start time of breakfast TV in Germany, because they are a lot closer to us than Japan...Germany is just 1 hour behind us


Breakfast TV timings around the world will reflect the culture and times they get up in the morning, not the time in relation to the UK.

From experience of living in Germany, German public transport starts earlier, schools start earlier, many workers start earlier than the UK. So no surprise that Breakfast TV starts at 5:30. Breakfast Radio shows typically start at 5:00 - i.e. the main flagship show, not any 'early breakfast' slot.
RD
Roger Darthwell
To put it clearly: it starts at 4:30 am, Tokyo time.

People in Japan live in a different time zone as people in the UK. When the night starts in the UK, Japan reaches the very last hours of the night.

This is due to the Earth's endless rotation on itself: when some parts of the Earth's surface are exposed to the sun (and are therefore in day light), some other parts are in the night; and because our planet rotates on itself, at some point, parts which were in the night become lit by the sun, and parts which were under the day light start entering into night. And the cycle repeats endlessly.

I understand...I was more shocked about the start time of breakfast TV in Germany, because they are a lot closer to us than Japan...Germany is just 1 hour behind us


I think you mean one hour ahead. If its 10pm in London it's 11pm in Germany... If Germany was one hour behind they'd be in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean...

Yeah I apologize...I got slightly confused there, I'm sorry
To put it clearly: it starts at 4:30 am, Tokyo time.

People in Japan live in a different time zone as people in the UK. When the night starts in the UK, Japan reaches the very last hours of the night.

This is due to the Earth's endless rotation on itself: when some parts of the Earth's surface are exposed to the sun (and are therefore in day light), some other parts are in the night; and because our planet rotates on itself, at some point, parts which were in the night become lit by the sun, and parts which were under the day light start entering into night. And the cycle repeats endlessly.

I understand...I was more shocked about the start time of breakfast TV in Germany, because they are a lot closer to us than Japan...Germany is just 1 hour behind us


Breakfast TV timings around the world will reflect the culture and times they get up in the morning, not the time in relation to the UK.

From experience of living in Germany, German public transport starts earlier, schools start earlier, many workers start earlier than the UK. So no surprise that Breakfast TV starts at 5:30. Breakfast Radio shows typically start at 5:00 - i.e. the main flagship show, not any 'early breakfast' slot.

Wow...oh well in this case that's no problem...although I am impressed of the fact that breakfast radio starts at 5:00am! Never knew that the Germans are such early risers! Well this is why I enjoy this forum, because as the old saying goes...you never stop learning!
LL
London Lite Founding member
France for some perspective, all times are local.

BFMTV - Premiére Edition starts at 4.30am (presenters change over at 6am).
CNEWS - La Matinale at 6am, although they start at 5.55am.
LCI - 6am.
Franceinfo - Channel starts at 6am with a pre-recorded loop of news and filler, live from 6.28am as the studio is used for France 2's Le 6h00 info which is produced by Franceinfo.
France 2 - Le 6h00 info at 6am, TéléMatin from 6.30am.
RMC Découverte - Apolline Matin from 6am, which is a simulcast with RMC Radio, owned by the same group that operates BFMTV.
Quatorzine Neko, WW Update and Roger Darthwell gave kudos
RD
Roger Darthwell
France for some perspective, all times are local.

BFMTV - Premiére Edition starts at 4.30am (presenters change over at 6am).
CNEWS - La Matinale at 6am, although they start at 5.55am.
LCI - 6am.
Franceinfo - Channel starts at 6am with a pre-recorded loop of news and filler, live from 6.28am as the studio is used for France 2's Le 6h00 info which is produced by Franceinfo.
France 2 - Le 6h00 info at 6am, TéléMatin from 6.30am.
RMC Découverte - Apolline Matin from 6am, which is a simulcast with RMC Radio, owned by the same group that operates BFMTV.

I see, many different start times, thank you!
BR
Brekkie
A compilation of current morning show intros from Germany:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cXFj4N5G5HY

So ARD and ZDF alternate weeks with the breakfast show, each broadcasting under the same name but with a completely different look and style by the looks of it. The ARD set doesn't really fit the titles, and given social distancing you'd think they'd make the virtual screen behind them bigger to fill the gap.

Do like the spinning sunshine clock on SAT1 though. On the whole breakfast TV seems to be much more relaxed there - RTL's seemingly closer to This Morning than GMB.
Roger Darthwell and WW Update gave kudos
MA
Meridian AM
Breakfast programme CNN New Day starts at 6am in New York, but at 3am if you're in Los Angeles. And that's in the same country!
That may really confuse some people in this thread... (!) Razz
WW
WW Update
This may have been posted here already, but since we're on the subject of German-language morning shows, here's a compilation of Austrian morning intros from 2016:

JA
james-2001
and all the "chattering" at the end of the video is the wake-up call for Japanese TVs to power up and tune to NHK at full volume.


That must be a nice thing to be woken up by! Especially if you don't live in one of the areas the tsunami warning covers.

Quote:
and yet in America where you have the Emergency Broadcast System (and the later Emergency Alert System) which generates the most irritating tone going and I believe is also used on the occasions where they test it)


Indeed it does, I happen to have caught a couple of occasions where it was tested when I've been over there, once on radio, once on TV.

Newer posts