CNN Philippines Nightly News

CNN Philippines Nightly News (titled as CNN Philippines Nightly News with Mitzi Borromeo) or simply Nightly News was the flagship late night newscast of CNN Philippines that aired every weeknights 9:00-9:30 pm and replayed Tuesdays-Saturdays at midnight. Undergone several incarnations, it began its airing on July 16, 2012 and was axed on February 12, 2016 to give way to the expansion of CNN Philippines Newsroom.

CNN Philippines Nightly News
Logo used from March 16, 2015-February 12, 2016
Also known asSolar Nightly News (July 16, 2012 - July 18, 2014)
Nightly News (July 21, 2014 - February 12, 2016)
Created byNine Media Corporation
Radio Philippines Network
Developed byCNN Philippines/CNN
Theme music composerHit Productions, Inc.
Country of originPhilippines
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodesN/A (airs daily)
Production
Production locationsCNN Philippines Newscenter
Mandaluyong City
Running time60 minutes (2012-2015)
30 minutes (2015-2016)
Release
Original networkCNN Philippines
Audio formatStereo
Original releaseJuly 16, 2012 (2012-07-16) 
February 12, 2016 (2016-02-12)
Chronology
Preceded byRPN NewsCap (RPN) (November 30, 2009–October 29, 2012)
Followed byCNN Philippines Newsroom Primetime (February 15, 2016–present)
Related showsCNN Philippines Network News

Background

TalkTV/Solar News Channel Era (2012-2014)

Formerly anchored by ABS-CBN news presenter Nancy Irlanda, the newscast was first known as Solar Nightly News and was launched on July 16, 2012 on Talk TV, by then aired on SBN UHF Channel 21. The launch of the newscast was a result of the formation as Solar Television Network's news and current affairs division, which in turn was brought by the privatization of Radio Philippines Network (RPN) by Solar Entertainment. It was carried over upon the channel's rebranding as Solar News Channel in October 30.

Solar Nightly News was simulcasted on RPN (by then affiliated by Solar Entertainment-operated ETC) from January 14 until November 29, 2013 after the network ceased production of its late-night newscast RPN NewsCap due to the retrenchment of the program's production team and other employees of the privatized network. The simulcast was also a replacement of Solar Network News to RPN's news content, as a result of Solar Entertainment's decision to scrap the cable-only limitation of American Idol season 12 and allow the broadcast to be available to RPN (over-the-air) viewers (in which the original plan was to limit the AI via satellite broadcast to cable viewers while RPN will continue to air Network News at 6 PM). On December 1, 2013, Solar News Channel switched its affiliation to RPN, making it a program at its own right.

Nancy Irlanda retired as the newscast's anchor on January 10, 2014; Mitzi Borromeo, anchor of Solar News program News Café took over by the end of the month. Hilary Isaac joined Borromeo weeks later but left some months later to join Daybreak.

9TV Era (2014-2015)

Solar Nightly News dropped the Solar branding on July 21, 2014 upon the impending acquisition of Solar Television Network (which turned into Nine Media Corporation) to the ALC Group of Companies a month later, with a new titlecard and graphic introduced on August 25, 2014 following channel's rebrand to 9TV. Mitzi Borromeo was held over as anchor. During the newscast's tenure, it also kept its one-hour runtime.

CNN Philippines Era (2015-2016)

The final incarnation was launched on March 16, 2015 in lieu with the launch of CNN Philippines along with a CNN-themed graphics and a revamped news studio. However, the newscast was cut to a half-hour to make way for the network's current affairs block. It also debuted segments such as Nightly Focus and Heads Up, a peek on the following day's headlines.

CNN Philippines Nightly News was axed on February 12, 2016 as a part of the network's program restructuring to be replaced by an Evening edition of Newsroom.[1]

Final Anchors

  • Mitzi Borromeo (2014–2016)

Former anchors

  • Nancy Irlanda (2012-2014)
  • Hilary Issac (2014)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.