This is a timeline of the history of the British broadcaster Central Independent Television (now known as ITV Central). It has provided the ITV service for the Midlands since 1982.
28 December – The Independent Broadcasting Authority announces the new contractors to commence on 1 January 1982. Midlands licensee ATV is allowed to retain its licence on the condition that 49% of the company is owned locally.[1] Another condition is that the company is renamed to demonstrate that it is effectively a new business.
1981
Central Independent Television is the name chosen for the new dual-region Midlands franchise.
1982
1 January – At 9:25am, Central Independent Television goes on the air.[2]
1983
1 February – ITV's breakfast television service TV-am launches. Consequently, Central's broadcast day now begins at 9:25am.
7 May – ACC sells its stake in Central and Sears Holdings purchases a 20% stake[3] while Ladbrokes and DC Thomson also increase their stakes to 20% each and Pergamon takes its ownership to 12.5% with 27.5% being held by single stakeholders.[4]
July – Central uses ATV Elstree Studios for the final time. It does so in order to comply with a condition of the licence renewal which requires the company to stop using any London-centric facilities.
Central establishes a subsidiary company Zenith Productions to produce programming for the UK and the USA.[8]
1985
3 January – The last day of transmission using the 405-lines system.
28 August – A new presentation package is launched. The sphere is replaced by a ‘cake’.[9]
Mid-November – A new closedown screen sequence makes its debut. It depicts villages of Midlands turning their lights off, with the Central Cake logo being animated. A shorter version is also made, but was only used for a brief period of time.
1986
17 January – The first edition of Friday night debate programme Central Weekend is broadcast. The 90-minute programme proves to be popular, quickly establishing a 40% audience share.
2 April – Central becomes the first ITV company to broadcast in-vision teletext when it launches a Jobfinder service, which broadcasts for one hour after the end of the day's programming.[10]
1987
6 January
Central acquires the European division of the American production company Filmfair for £1.5million.[11] Filmfair goes on to produce several of the station's networked children's series before being sold onto the Storm Group (Caspian) in 1991.[12][13]
25 April – Central becomes the first station in the UK to keep its transmitters on air all night when it launches More Central. Programmes are shown until around 3am on weekdays and 4am at the weekend, with the rest of the night filled by its Jobfinder service.[16]
7 September – Following the transfer of ITV Schools to Channel 4, ITV provides a full morning programme schedule, with advertising, for the first time. The new service includes regular five-minute national and regional news bulletins.
1988
13 February – Central launches a full 24-hour service.[17]
4 April – After nearly 24 years on the air, the final episode of Crossroads is broadcast. Central had taken over production of the programme from ATV. It would be revived in 2001 and would end again in 2003.
1 September – ITV introduces its first official logo as part of an attempt to unify the network under one image whilst retaining regional identity. Central adopts its version of the ident.[19]
4 March – Central forms a partnership with The Observer newspaper to create Central Observer, making environmental themed films for British Satellite Broadcasting and terrestrial channels, with funding from the charity Television Trust for the Environment.[20]
1991
16 October – The Independent Television Commission announces the results of the franchise round. Central is unopposed for the Midlands licence and retains it with a token bid of only £2,000 per year, plus 11% of their annual advertising revenue.
November
Having previously rented its studio complex, Central now owns its studios.[21]
Central sells its stake in Starstream to United Artists Cable International.
1992
No events.
1993
19 May – After ten years and ten series, the final episode of Blockbusters is produced for ITV. However, Central produces one further series for the satellite channel Sky One.
February – Central ends its own night-time programming and carries the London overnight service although opt-outs for Jobfinder and other regional programming continues.
November – The Carlton branding, seen before some regional programming, is dropped.
4 December – The South Midlands sub-region is disbanded. The parts of Gloucestershire served by Central South joins the majority of the county already covered by ITV West and begins receiving The West Tonight and Herefordshire is now covered by the West Midlands edition. In the rest of the area, news operations are merged with Meridian West, to form the non-franchise ITV Thames Valley service, broadcasting Thames Valley Today/Tonight from the Meridian West studio in Whiteley, Hampshire. The new programme, which also covers Berkshire, Hampshire and parts of Surrey and Wiltshire retained Central's Abingdon newsroom as the main newsgathering base for the new region but the studio was closed.
2007
No events.
2008
December – All non-news local programming ends after Ofcom gives ITV permission to drastically cut back its regional programming.[26] From 2009 the only regional programme is the monthly political discussion show.
2009
February – ITV makes major cutbacks to its regional broadcasts in England. Central's separate sub-regional news programmes are merged into a pan-regional programme although more localised news continues to be broadcast as a brief opt-out during the early evening programme.[27]
14 January – ITV's Midlands news service is relaunched and rebranded as ITV News Central.[28]
16 September – Sub-regional news coverage is reintroduced and the weekday daytime, late evening and weekend bulletins as well as 20 minutes of the 6pm programme are once again more localised.
2014
The Oxford transmitter is transferred from the Central to the Meridian region.
^Southern and Westward TV lose franchises and others to be restructured. By Kenneth Gosling. The Times, Monday, 29 December 1980; pg. 1
^ITV Central, YouTube. Retrieved 29 December 2015.
^Sears buys stake in Central TV. By Jonathan Clare. The Times, Saturday, 7 May 1983; pg. 11
^Central Independent Television Plc. The Times (London, England), Saturday, 28 May 1983; pg. 13;
^Buxton, Roddy. "A trip to Giltbrook". Studio One. Transdiffusion Broadcasting System. Archived from the original on 24 July 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2012.
^Court Circular. The Times, Saturday,3 March 1984; pg10