BBC North West Tonight is a nightly regional news programme covering North West England and the Isle of Man. Produced by BBC North West, the programme airs at 6.30pm and at 10:25pm every weekday evening and is broadcast from the BBC's MediaCityUK studios at Salford Quays.
CrimeDoor TV is a daily True Crime program that features expert analysis of active, resolved and cold cases from around the world. Episodes feature friends and family members sharing information about their loved ones.
ITV News Meridian is the regional news programme for the ITV Meridian region and part of the ITV Central region, serving South East England.
The news service is produced and broadcast from ITV Meridian's studios in Whiteley, near Fareham with reporters also based at bureaus in Abingdon, Brighton, Maidstone, Poole and Reading. The Head of News is Robin Britton who previously launched Thames Valley Tonight and the West edition of Meridian Tonight.
Who Said That? is a 1947-55 NBC radio-television game show, in which a panel of celebrities attempts to determine the speaker of a quotation from recent news reports. The series was first proposed and edited by Fred W. Friendly, later of CBS News.
Weekend Today is an Australian breakfast television program and has been broadcast live by the Nine Network since 2009.
The program airs after children's programming and runs from 7am to 10am on Saturdays and Sundays.
The Agenda with Steve Paikin is the flagship current affairs program of TVOntario, Ontario’s public broadcaster. The show practises what anchor and senior editor Steve Paikin calls "long-form" journalism. Each hour-long program tackles no more than two topics, and often only one. "We give people what they tell us they want: more intelligent analysis, and more robust, thought-provoking debate and discussion among newsmakers and experts," Paikin says.
The show airs weekdays on TVO at 8 and 11 pm. Content is available on demand online at tvo.org and through mobile media.
During the 2007 Ontario provincial election campaign, The Agenda provided extensive coverage, with leaders discussing and debating their parties' platforms, candidates from across the province talking about concerns in their regions and the people of Ontario acting as citizen correspondents, speaking up about issues in their home town. The Agenda plans a similar exercise for the 2011 Ontario provincial election.
How much does a mayor earn? What is the salary of your son's geography teacher and what amount is deposited into the account of the postman who delivers parcels to homes in all weathers every month? In 'What does Flanders earn?' Axel Daeseleire, Camille Vanuxem and Stijn Baert break the taboo and ask fifty Flemish people how much they earn gross.