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26-558: MVQ or mvq may refer to: MVQ, the former call sign for television station STQ in Mackay, Queensland, Australia MVQ, the IATA code for Mahilyow Airport , Mogilev, Belarus mvq, the ISO 639-3 code for Moere language , Papua New Guinea Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

52-400: A competing service publicly stating that it would beat Seven in the ratings within six months. At the end of the 1998 ratings season, after a new station head (Laurie Patton) had overseen a comprehensive re-vamping of the program and its external promotions, Seven Local News had actually increased its audience share by six ratings points. In early 2004, Seven Local News was re-introduced in

78-644: A controlling stake in Ansett, it was required to sell TVQ due to restrictions on the number of television stations one organisation could own. TVQ was sold to Ampol (67%) and 2SM (33%). In 1984 TVQ was purchased by Qintex . On 17 September 1987, Darling Downs Telecasters, owner of DDQ10 Toowoomba , purchases TVQ for $ 123 million, and announces plans to convert the station to the Channel 10 frequency. On 10 September 1988, DDQ-10 switched frequency to DDQ-0, and TVQ changed frequency to become TVQ-10, in time for

104-412: A news service until 1974 when it launched News Watch . The bulletin later adopted the branding Eyewitness News after rival channel BTQ-7 had relinquished the name, and became the first Brisbane newscast to use videotape for its reports. Eyewitness News continued as a nightly half-hour bulletin until 1984 when it was expanded to a one-hour format (the last Network Ten station at that time to convert to

130-828: A sixth edition for the Rockhampton/Gladstone and Central Queensland region. On 2 November 2015, Seven Local News launched a seventh edition for the Toowoomba and the Darling Downs region. With the said launch, Seven News became the only news service to cover all regional centres of Queensland since the axing of WIN News in the Mackay region in May 2015. This lasted until July 2017, when rival Nine News began to roll out local composite bulletins for their statewide affiliate Southern Cross Television (which carried Nine programming from July 2016 until July 2021). When

156-403: A week and within two years this had increased to 45 hours per week, including extended hours on Wednesday afternoons. Although MVQ-6 was launched on 9 August 1968, its history dates back to March 1960, when Mackay Television Development Pty Ltd was formed. Maitland Low, general manager of local radio station 4MK , was appointed company manager. Mackay Television Development Pty Ltd was granted

182-607: A week to make sure all was working before the official opening a week later. WBQ changed its callsign in 1977 to SEQ (as in S outh E ast Q ueensland ), and its on-air name to " SEQ Sunshine Television ", with its slogan Leading the Way . MVQ also changed its on-air name in 1982 to " Tropical Television ". The stations were long time broadcaster of Seven Network programs, as well as of Brisbane's Seven News edition on BTQ . In 1987, after earlier buying SEQ-8, Christopher Skase ‘s Qintex Limited , made an offer to buy MVQ-6 which

208-604: Is an Australian television station , licensed to, and serving the regional areas of Queensland . The station is owned and operated by the Seven Network from studios located in Maroochydore on the Sunshine Coast . The callsign STQ stands for S unshine T elevision, Q ueensland . The station began in the 1960s as two different operators: The licence to operate the commercial television service for

234-479: Is broadcast live, but may also exchange it to any of the six pre-recorded regions at certain circumstances (e.g., cyclone coverage in the nearest region of immediate concern). News editing is undertaken by the local newsrooms, and sent to the main Maroochydore studios for transmission. The most successful edition of Seven Local News is broadcast on the Sunshine Coast . In early 1998, WIN Television launched

260-516: The Postmaster-General's Department granted Universal Telecasters a broadcasting licence. The channel was allocated channel 0 (the 0 was pronounced as the letter O instead of "zero") on the VHF band and commenced broadcasting on 1 July 1965 as TVQ-0. Ansett Transport Industries initially held a 49% shareholding, before acquiring the remaining shares in 1970. After News Limited acquired

286-811: The Seven News brand. Formerly, there were two bureaus located in Hervey Bay and Gladstone covering their respective regions, but they were closed due to budget reasons. Fill-in Weather Presenter Rosanna Natoli left the Seven Network after getting elected Mayor of Sunshine Coast Region on 16 March 2024. Notes: TVQ TVQ is the Brisbane television station of Network 10 in Australia . In April 1964,

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312-604: The Wide Bay-Burnett region, was awarded to Wide Bay-Burnett Television in October 1962. The company's shareholders included local radio and print media outlets as well as theatre owners Birch, Carroll and Coyle . The station's studios in the Maryborough suburb of Granville housed three studios plus an outdoor space for special presentations. At the time of its launch, WBQ-8 scheduled around 36 hours of programming

338-522: The Cairns, Townsville, Rockhampton and Toowoomba editions. Sport is presented by Nathan Spurling and weather is presented by Livio Regano. Fill-in presenters include Luke McGarry (sport), TBD (weather). Reporters and camera crews are based at newsrooms in each of the seven regions with studio presentation for the Cairns, Townsville, Mackay, Darling Downs, Rockhampton and Wide Bay bulletins pre-recorded in Maroochydore . The Sunshine Coast edition of Seven News

364-612: The Townsville and Cairns sub-markets as a result of regulations regarding local content on regional television introduced by the Australian Broadcasting Authority . On 5 March 2007, Seven Local News bulletins commenced production and broadcasts in a widescreen standard-definition digital format. Seven Local News was the first regional news service in regional Queensland to convert to widescreen. On 22 November 2010, Seven Local News launched

390-598: The channel's broadcast of the 1988 Summer Olympics , at the same time as its broadcasts of World Expo 88 , of which it and the entire Network Ten was the official station. On 30 November 2015, lightning struck the TVQ transmission tower, cutting its power and lighting. TVQ-10 produces a 60-minute local news program at 5:00 pm on weeknights. 10 News First is presented from the network's Mount Coot-tha studios by Sharyn Ghidella with sports presenter Veronica Eggleton and weather presenter Liz Cantor . TVQ-0 did not operate

416-573: The company which was rejected by Sunshine's board. A revised offer of $ 105 million was lodged and backed by Sunshine's chairman Trevor Kennedy, however RG Capital's plans were halted when News Corp then purchased a 15% stake in Sunshine Television. Another Seven affiliate, Prime Television , then snapped up 19.9% of Sunshine Television before the Seven Network made a full offer which was successful. This led to Sunshine Television Network changing its name to Seven Queensland and taking on

442-449: The composite Nine News bulletins for Mackay and Toowoomba/Darling Downs were axed on 15 February 2019, Seven News once again became the only news service to cover all regional centres of Queensland. From 11 July 2016, these editions are consolidated with the Seven News branding, though the openers of these editions remained to address as Seven Local News . The Local News branding was completely phased out on 5 September 2016 in favour of

468-518: The entire six-month duration of Expo. After the close of Expo on 30 October 1988, the newsroom returned to the Mount Coot-tha studios to a refurbished news set and a branding refresh to Ten News (acknowledging the channel's transition from VHF Channel 0 to 10 and bringing TVQ into line with Network Ten stations in other states). The Eyewitness News brand returned in July 1989 coinciding with

494-556: The licence in September 1963. The Mackay licence was one of twenty commercial licences granted as part of the fourth stage of the nationwide rollout of commercial television. The station was based at studios in Victoria Street, Mackay, and incorporated into new premises planned for radio 4MK. MVQ-6 aired its first test pattern transmissions on the evening of Friday 2 August 1968, giving the station's engineers and local viewers

520-642: The network relaunch, and it was later renamed as Ten Evening News in January 1990 and then as Ten Eyewitness News in January 1991. In 1994, the Ten News brand was revived for the 2nd time. In September 2013, Ten once again revived the Eyewitness News branding for all its newscasts after a 19-year break. The branding changed to 10 News First in October 2018, in line with the network's broader re-branding to 10 . In September 2020, studio production of

546-465: The one hour newscast used in other major Australian cities save for Perth). The station won a Logie award in 1986 for Best News Report for its coverage of the siege at Eagle Farm Airport the previous year. With TVQ as the host broadcaster for World Expo 88 , Eyewitness News shifted its newsroom operation and production to the TVQ stand at the Expo site, putting itself on show to the general public for

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572-591: The regional Queensland affiliate of the Seven Network. Sunshine changed the call sign to STQ and adopted its new slogan Love You Queensland with a matching jingle that was based on BTQ's Love You Brisbane from the 1980s. Sunshine also reformatted its news service to match its partner network and a new logo also debuted with the on-air presentation similar to Seven's. The collapse of Christopher Skase 's Qintex empire then saw Sunshine Television Network transfer ownership to Gosford Communications in 1992. In 1995, Reg Grundy's RG Capital lodged an initial $ 89million bid for

598-453: The same logo and on-air look as the Seven Network. With a few exceptions, its schedule since then has been virtually identical to that of its metropolitan counterpart, BTQ in Brisbane . Seven Queensland won the annual audience ratings for the first time in 1998 against WIN and Southern Cross Ten and has consistently dominated the ratings since. Prior to August 2017, Seven Queensland was the only regional broadcaster to broadcast 7flix . This

624-450: The title MVQ . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MVQ&oldid=1161024738 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages STQ MVQ-6 (Mackay) STQ

650-682: Was accepted by the MVQ shareholders. Skase was in the process of selling TVQ-0 in Brisbane as he had also just bought the Seven Network stations in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. This gave MVQ-6 and its new sister station, SEQ-8, access to the Seven Network. When the regional Queensland television market was aggregated at the end of 1990, SEQ-8 and MVQ-6 operationally merged to become the Sunshine Television Network , and thus became

676-479: Was due to Seven West Media owning the network. On 26 November 2018, STQ switched the main channel from SD to MPEG-2 HD. Seven News broadcast local bulletins each weeknight at 6   pm, in all seven regional areas: Cairns , Townsville , Mackay , Wide Bay , Toowoomba , the Sunshine Coast and Rockhampton . They are followed by a shortened 30-minute version of Seven News Brisbane . The bulletins are presented by Rob Brough , with Joanne Desmond co-anchoring

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