Seven Network
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Headquarters | 8 Central Avenue 64-QAM) 1376 @ 6 (177.5 MHz) | |
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Freeview Seven owned (virtual) | 7/71/6/61 | |
Freeview 7HD (virtual) | 70 | |
Freeview Seven affiliates (virtual) | 6/60/61 | |
Streaming media | ||
7plus |
The Seven Network (commonly known as Channel Seven or simply Seven) is a major Australian commercial
As of 2014, it is the second-largest network in the country in terms of population reach. The Seven Network shows various nonfiction shows—such as news broadcasts (Seven News) and sports programing—as well as fiction shows.[3] In 2011, the network won all 40 out of 40 weeks of the ratings season for total viewers,[4] being the first to achieve this since the introduction of the OzTAM ratings system in 2001.[5]
As of 2022, the Seven Network is the highest-rated television network in Australia, ahead of the Nine Network, ABC TV, Network 10 and SBS.[2]
Headquarters
Seven's administration headquarters are in
History
Origins
The present Seven Network began as a group of independent stations in
HSV-7 began its relationship with the Victorian Football League (now the Australian Football League) in April 1957, when the station broadcast the first live Australian rules football match. Throughout this time, the stations operated independently of each other, with schedules made up of various simple, and relatively inexpensive, programs, such as Pick a Box and spinoffs of popular radio shows.[9] In the early 1960s, coaxial cable links, formed initially between Sydney and Melbourne, allowed the sharing of programmes and simultaneous broadcasts of live shows.[10]
In 1960,
1980s
The 1980s saw the introduction of stereo sound, as well as a number of successful shows, most notably
Perth based businessman
Cross-media ownership laws introduced in 1987 forced
Despite the network's successes, a failed $1.5 billion bid for
1990s
The network was listed on the stock exchange in 1993, soon after the entry of
In 1995,
A successful $1.3 billion bid for
2000s
The year 2000 saw former Nine executive David Leckie appointed as head of television operations, re-launching the network with an updated logo, new advertising campaign in time for the network's coverage of the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. The opening ceremony was one of the highest-ever rating television programmes in the country, with 6.5 million viewers, contributing to the network winning the ratings year for the first time in twenty-two years.[19]
Digital television was introduced to most of the network's coverage area on 1 January 2001. This was soon followed by the gradual introduction of wide screen and high definition programming.[20]
In January 2006, the Seven Network,
On 14 February 2008, the
On 25 September 2009, Seven announced its new digital channel, 7two, which officially launched on 1 November 2009.[25]
2010s
On 18 January 2010, Seven launched the online catch-up TV website called
On 25 September 2010, in conjunction with the 2010 AFL Grand Final, Seven launched its second multi-digital channel 7mate.
In January 2011, the big red 7 logos were expanded to
.Seven announced its intention to expand into digital datacasting known as 4ME, a digital channel owned by the Prime Media Group, in December 2011 on channel 64 in Prime7 and regional areas and channel 74 in other areas.[28]
In September 2011, Seven broadcast a report featuring journalist Tim Noonan and writer and adventurer Paul Raffaele visiting Brazil's
In October 2012, Seven began cost cutting shedding a number of behind the scenes technical positions and reducing their
In November 2012, Seven changed its on-air theme. This included a new look for programme advisory ratings, programme listings and programme advertisements and promos.
As of 10 December 2013, Seven no longer broadcasts on analogue TV and is now only available through digital TV or digital set-top box.
On 26 June 2015, Racing.com began broadcasting on channel 78 as a joint venture between Seven West Media and Racing Victoria following a blackout of Victorian horse racing by Sky Racing. Initially broadcasting an interim live feed from the Racing.com website, the channel was officially launched on 29 August 2015.[33]
In January 2016, Seven changed its on-air theme. This included a new look for program listings, program advertisements and promos.
On 7 February 2016, during the ad-break of Molly, after months of speculation, Seven officially announced their new channel as 7flix on channel 76.[34] 7flix was launched at 6 am on 28 February 2016.[35]
On 10 May 2016, 7HD was revived on channel 70. As a result, 7mate was reduced to standard definition. However, 7HD was restored as a high definition simulcast of Seven's primary channel in Melbourne and Adelaide only; 7HD became a high definition simulcast of 7mate in Seven's other metropolitan markets. This was to allow all markets to view upcoming AFL matches in high definition.[36][37]
In June 2017, following the acquisition of
Seven announced 7food network, a new digital channel, which launched on Channel 74 on 1 December 2018. The announcement with Discovery network follows SBS Food Network losing its deal with Discovery-owned Scripps Network.[38] The channel ceased broadcast on 28 December 2019, just over a year since it launched, though Seven continues to utilise the Food Network branding elsewhere[39]
2020s
In June 2020,
On 19 June 2020, it was announced that The Daily Edition had been cancelled by the Seven Network after 7 years with hosts Sally Obermeder and Ryan Phelan leaving the network. The final episode aired on 26 June 2020[42]
In July 2020, the Seven Network unveiled new logos, for its multichannels, beginning with 7mate then 7two and 7flix respectively. The change in logos also included their on demand platform 7plus now stylised as ″7+″ as part of a major branding overhaul of its multi channel stations.
In March 2021, it was announced that the Seven Network would move out of Martin Place to Eveleigh by the end of 2022 after almost two decades.[43]
On 1 November 2021, Seven West Media announced that it would acquire all the shares and subsidiaries of Prime Media Group. This was Seven West Media's second attempt at purchasing Prime, after its previous attempt in 2019 was thwarted by Australian Community Media boss Antony Catalano and rival WIN Corporation owner Bruce Gordon, who cited Seven's debt problems at the time and its poor ratings performance as their reason for their refusal. This development would mark an end to the Prime branding after 33 years in favour of Seven Network's branding, and would see all news bulletins carry the Seven News brand. Prior to this, Prime7 (and sister GWN7 in regional and remote Western Australia) was the only network not to fully use its metro affiliate branding despite carrying Seven branded promos, since WIN Television (except for WIN News) and Southern Cross Austereo use full Nine and Ten network branding on their stations. It was also announced that Seven would look to expand its investment in local news following the merger.[44] Majority of Prime's shareholders voted in favour of the deal on 23 December, with the sale completed on 31 December.[45][46]
Commencing June 2022, Seven moved to a national brand in time for the 2022 Commonwealth Games across all of its regions. Introduced to regional audiences on 6 June 2022, viewers in those markets began to see the Prime7 and GWN7 logos transition into the national Seven branding.[47]
Seven announced in October 2022 it would launch a new free-to-air channel, 7Bravo on 15 January 2023 on LCN 75 in metropolitan areas and LCN 65 in regional areas. As a result ishop TV moved from LCN 65 to LCN 67 in the former Prime7 areas. 7Bravo shows huge reality shows and true crime to audiences in Australia. The launch is a partnership between Seven Network and NBCUniversal International Networks & Direct-to-Consumer.[48] 7Bravo and 7plus also is the free-to-air home of NBCUniversal's portfolio of reality content, including the world's most iconic unscripted TV franchises and series from Bravo and E!.
Additional programs
Always Greener, launched in 2001, received two million viewers in its Sunday timeslot, however, it was axed after its second season due to declining audience numbers.[49]
In 2004, Seven launched the internationally well-known game show
The network launched a number of new series in 2006, including
In 2008, Seven launched new local drama Packed to the Rafters which became the year's top rating show with an average of 1.938 million viewers.[53]
In 2009, a new weekly public affairs show Sunday Night launched in the Sunday 6:30 position to a shakey start but by the end of the year was easily winning its slot and rating up to 250,000 more than rival Nine Network's long-running 60 Minutes.[54]
In 2010, Seven launched new AFL- and NRL-based entertainment shows in an effort to take on Nine's
In 2011, Seven put
In 2013, the Seven Network launched its fifth new drama A Place to Call Home, it also achieved high ratings.
In September 2015, the network began
In June 2020,
Seven confirmed in December 2020 it had commissioned a return to a new “all stars” event version of
The Australian Idol reboot would return to the screens of Seven in 2023.
Programming
New programs introduced in 2005 led to a ratings increase, following a relatively poor 2004.[60]
From 2010, the Seven Network began to implement the tactic of creating a five to 20-minute delay in the scheduled start time of non-live programming after 7:30 pm in an attempt to minimise viewer channel surfing between prime-time shows. This is done by increasing the duration of the commercial breaks and then decreasing them once the prime-time period is over. This tactic not only disrupts viewer recordings of the shows, but has a dramatic effect on their regional affiliates such as Prime and Southern Cross who must adapt their inserted commercials breaks as the live play-out from Seven's Melbourne facility occurs which can cause either both the regional station identification and the Seven identification being displayed with a possible black screen between them or the start of a program being missed entirely by the regional break overlapping.
Local programs
Australian programming shown on the network includes dramas RFDS, soap
Foreign programs
Most American programming that airs on Seven and its digital multichannels is sourced from Seven's deals with
In late 2016, Seven would create a new acquired programming deal with Warner Bros, granting the network programming rights which they currently share with Nine.
On 15 January 2023, Seven would create a new acquired programming deal with NBCUniversal, granting the network programming rights which they currently share with Nine.
Sharing programs is currently a new rule for all the networks after a long absence which have their own programs from 1990s to 2014. All the networks can now share the programs again with each networks of televisions and films, including splitting up the different seasons of the same television series or franchise. Also some television brands can split the different seasons of the same television series by aired on both networks.
Shared American programming that airs on Seven and the
Shared American programming that airs on Seven and
Shared American programming that airs on Seven and
Former programs
The network formerly broadcast catalogue movie and television titles from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer produced in the 1990s prior to 2011, Miramax from 2007 to 2012, DreamWorks from 2007 to 2015, Illumination from 2012 to 2016, and Paramount from 1990s to 2022. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, DreamWorks, Paramount, Miramax, and Illumination now belong to the Nine Network while Paramount and Miramax also now belong to Network 10. Nine revived Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, DreamWorks, Paramount, Miramax and Illumination broadcast rights and 10 revived Paramount and Miramax broadcast rights.
On 7two, in the early 2010s, they aired classic and silver-screen movies from the Sony Pictures (Columbia & TriStar) catalog, but all of those films moved back to ABC and Nine respectively.
In 2018 it was reported that Seven had formed an agreement with
Previously, the network had output deals with
News and current affairs

The Seven Network's news service is called
Exclusive contracts with NBC News, ITN and TV3 (New Zealand) for international news coverage.[citation needed]
In recent years, under the guidance of former long-time Nine News chief Peter Meakin, Seven's news and current affairs division has produced more locally focused content, which has been lifting ratings for key markets such as Sydney and Melbourne.[50] Since February 2005, the ratings of Deal or No Deal, Seven News and Today Tonight have gradually increased. Seven News was the highest-rating news service nationally in both the 2005 and 2006 ratings seasons.[52][60] A key aspect of Seven's recent ratings dominance in news and current affairs has been attributed to Deal or No Deal's (and, since late 2015, The Chase Australia) top rating audience, which provides Seven News with a large lead-in audience.[63] Between 2007 and 2010 inclusive, Seven News completed a clean sweep across the five capital cities in terms of being the most watched 6 pm news bulletin. On 5 July 2008, Channel Seven introduced a watermark on news and current affairs programmes.
Sport

Seven is a major purchaser of Australian sports broadcasting rights. Seven's most popular recurring sporting events include the
The network had the exclusive coverage of the 2000 Sydney Olympics, which attracted a TV audience of over 6.5 million Australians for the opening and closing ceremonies. The broadcast also ran on the short-lived C7 Sport subscription channel.
On 25 January 2001,
Seven had exclusive Australian free-to-air, pay television,
From 2016, Seven became the home of the Summer Olympic Games, Winter Olympic Games and the Summer Paralympic Games. The Network secured the Australian broadcast rights to the Olympic Games.[67] In October 2020, it was named as the Australian broadcast service for the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.[68]
In 2016, the Seven Network won the broadcasting rights deal to be the main broadcaster of the 2017 Rugby League World Cup in Australia, beating the other regular rugby league broadcasting channels of Fox League and the Nine Network to secure the deal.[69]
The Seven Network also screened the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast in April 2018,[70] and the 2022 Commonwealth Games from Birmingham.[71]
In 2018, the Seven Network, in conjunction with Foxtel, acquired free-to-air broadcasting rights to cricket in Australia. This ended Nine's famous 45-year run as the exclusive cricket broadcaster and Ten's five-year run as the exclusive Big Bash League broadcaster. The network will televise all men's international tests matches, 43 Big Bash League Matches, all women's Internationals (T20Is, ODIs and Tests) and 23 Women's Big Bash League Matches. The six-year deal starts in 2018/19 and runs until 2023/24.[72] In 2023, Seven announced that it reached an agreement with Cricket Australia to extend its media rights from the 2024-25 season to the 2030-31 season. The new, seven-year agreement between Seven and Cricket Australia includes two Ashes Tests Series as well as two Indian tours of Australia. In addition, Cricket Australia will revamp the BBL to create a shorter tournament that will run for five to six weeks to screen on the Seven network.[73]
In 2020, Seven regained the TV rights to the Supercars Championship, sharing the rights with Foxtel in a deal worth $200 million for 5 years (2021–2025). The new deal has Seven Sport show seven rounds of the Supercars Championship live and showing highlights of the rounds it is not able to televise[74]
Availability
Seven is a standard definition channel through digital TV. There was a 1080i high definition version until it was replaced by the youth orientated 7mate channel, before this change on 18 March 2007, test simulcasts for 1080i commenced in the Sydney and Melbourne markets, Adelaide and Perth followed on 24 June 2007, with Brisbane following on 25 June 2007, and regional Queensland on 26 June 2007. Prior to this, the Seven Network provided a 576p enhanced-definition service.
Seven's core programming is fibre fed out of HSV Melbourne to its sister stations and regional affiliates with ATN Sydney providing national news and current affairs programming. The receiving stations and affiliates then insert their own localised news and advertising, which is then broadcast in metropolitan areas and regional areas of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and Western Australia through owned-and-operated stations: ATN Sydney, HSV Melbourne, BTQ Brisbane, SAS Adelaide and TVW Perth; as well as its owned regional stations: CBN Southern NSW, AMV regional Victoria, NSW and SA border areas, PTV Mildura, NEN northern NSW, Seven Regional WA regional Western Australia and Seven Queensland regional Queensland. Seven Network programming is also carried into other areas of regional Australia by third-party affiliates like SCA-owned Seven Regional in South Australia, Tasmania, Darwin and remote areas of central and eastern Australia; and WIN Television in South Australia and the Murrumbridgee Irrigation Area of New South Wales.
On 1 April 2008, ATN Sydney began broadcasting a digital signal to Foxtel and Austar's satellite and cable subscribers.
Current
7HD
The 7HD multichannel was launched in October 2007 until 25 September 2010 and later revived on 10 May 2016. The revival version initially broadcast split services: identical main channel programming for Melbourne and Adelaide & continuous programming from 7mate for other metropolitan cities, but in 1080i MPEG-4 HD via Freeview. The split was implemented to allow broadcast of AFL matches in HD. By 16 December 2016, it quietly shifted to the main channel programming on a long-term basis for Sydney, Brisbane and Perth.
7plus
7plus is a
Following the acquisition of Yahoo! by Verizon Communications in June 2017, Seven announced plans to launch a wholly owned standalone service to replace PLUS7 within the following six months.[77][78] In September 2017, Seven announced the new service would be known as 7plus and would launch in November 2017.[79]
The service is available in HD, and there are plans to add Chromecast and Apple Airplay support at a later date.[75]
On 23 July 2020, 7plus introduced a new logo styled as 7+.
Past
PLUS7
PLUS7 was a
Some titles were exclusively available in Australia on PLUS7, including Other Space and Sin City Saints, as well as the British version of My Kitchen Rules, which were not broadcast on the Seven Network.[76][81] In 2014, PLUS7 became the first commercial television catch-up service to provide optional closed captioning on most of its programming.[82]
PLUS7 was available across several platforms including iOS mobile operating systems (e.g. iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch),[83] Apple TV,[84] Xbox 360, Xbox One,[85] PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4,[86][87] Windows 10, Sony internet-enabled TVs & Blu-ray players, LG internet-enabled TVs, Samsung internet-enabled TVs & Blu-ray players, Panasonic internet-enabled TVs, Hisense internet-enabled TVs, Humax set top boxes, Windows Mobile 7, 8, 8.1 and 10 and Samsung devices running Android OS 4.0+ and above.
7food network
7food network was a short-lived Australian free-to-air television channel owned by the Seven Network which launched on 1 December 2018.[88] The channel marked the start of Seven's new deal with Discovery, Inc., immediately after the end of SBS's previous deal with Discovery which saw the creation of SBS Food (formerly SBS Food Network) in 2015. The channel featured shows about food and cooking from around the world. The channel ceased broadcasting on 28 December 2019 after garnering lower than expected ratings, and replaced by a HD simulcast of 7mate from 16 January 2020.[89]
Logo and identity history
The network's first logo produced and used across the metropolitan stations in the early 1970s featured the numeral seven inside a ring (similar to the
The current ribbon logo was launched to coincide with the new millennium celebration on 1 January 2000 and the 2000 Summer Olympics held in Sydney. The ribbon logo was used between 2000 and 2003 in five colour variants: red, orange, yellow, green and blue, to symbolise passion, involving, fun, life and energy respectively and represents the five stations of the network. The logo was simplified in 2003, effectively becoming simply two angled trapezoids, losing its gradient, shadows and colour-coded usages to become solid red but first it was used in solid white as an on-screen bug from 2000. In 2012, the Seven logo was slightly modified with the shape of it remaining the same, the upper right corner was lighter red than the remaining logo. On 1 February 2016, it reverted to red trapezoids.
ATN-7: 1968 – 5 October 1969
ATN-7: 5 October 1969 – 28 February 1975
HSV-7: 5 October 1969 – 28 February 1975
BTQ-7
ADS-7: 5 October 1969 – July 1976ATN-7: 1 March 1975 – 23 January 1989,
HSV-7: 1 March 1975 – 23 January 1989
ADS-7: July 1976 – 26 December 1987
BTQ-7: July 1976 – 23 January 1989
TVW-7: October 1977 – 23 January 1989
SAS-7: 27 December 1987 – 23 January 19891 January 2000 – 13 September 2003
14 September 2003 – present
Slogans
The Seven Network's TV ad campaigns tend to follow NBC (mostly due to Seven's semi-close ties with the American network), but at times also used some imaging from fellow US networks ABC and FOX.
Each state has from time to time had their own specific slogans, but the following were the network's national identities:
- 1959: You're in Tune When You're Tuned to Seven
- 1969 – February 1975: The Seven Revolution
- 1974: Looking Better Than Ever!
- 1975–1976: Seven Colors Your World
- 1976–1979: The Color Machine (a.k.a. Seven Colors Your World/Who Colors Your World?)
- 1979–1980: You're on Seven
- 1981–1982: Channel 7, All The Best
- 1983: Channel 7, Watch Us Now
- 1984: Be There
- 1985–1988: Let's All Be There
- 1986–1987: Say Hello
- 1988: Let's Celebrate '88
- 1988: Australian Television Network
- 1 January 1989 – Summer 1989/90: Only the Best on 7
- 1990–1995: Seven
- 1990: In The Mood
- 1991: Yeah!
- 1992: Good Vibrations
- 1993–1994: It Has to Be ... Seven
- 1995: Handmade Television
- February 1995 – June 1996: Discover It All on Seven
- June 1996 – April 1999: Everyone's Home on Seven
- 1 May 1999 – 14 September 2003: The One to Watch
- 2001: The Australian Television Network
- 6 July – 31 August 2003: See Things Differently
- 14 September – November 2003: Lucky Number Seven
- 2004: 7NOW
- 26 December 2004 – 16 January 2011
November 2012 – December 2019: Gottaloveit - 16 January 2011 – November 2012: One Place
- 2020–present: Better Together[90]
Awards
Due to Seven's coverage of the 2008 Summer Olympics, the International Olympic Committee awarded Seven the 'Golden Rings' award for "Best Olympic Programme". The award is given for the best overall Olympic coverage.[91]
At the 2018 Sport Australia media awards, Seven won the "Best coverage of a sporting event" award for the coverage of the 2018 Commonwealth Games in Gold Coast.[92]
The Seven Network's ground-breaking coverage of the Tokyo
See also
- List of Australian television series
- 7HD
- 7two
- 7mate
- 7flix
- 7Bravo[94]
- Red Heart, joint venture with Granada plc
Notes
References and notes
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