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The Seven Network is an Australian television network. It has the distinction of owning stations with a combined population coverage greater than any other free to air network in Australia. Its parent company and namesake has, in recent years, grown into a diversified media company. The network's studio headquarters are in a converted warehouse at Jones Bay Wharf in Pyrmont, Sydney. Its news headquarters is in Martin Place, Sydney and its major production facility is at Epping in Sydney's northern suburbs. In 2009, Seven will move their production facilities from Epping to a purpose built site at the Australian Technology Park in Redfern. The broadcast signal for the network arises from the digital broadcast centre in the Melbourne Docklands.
HistoryImage:Channel7.jpg The Seven Broadcast Center in Melbourne
The Melbourne station was sold to Fairfax following Rupert Murdoch's takeover of H&WT; Fairfax in turn relinquished ownership of the Sydney and Melbourne flagships through the disastrous privatisation by Warwick Fairfax Jr. The buyer was the Qintex group, controlled by colourful entrepreneur Christopher Skase, a former Australian Financial Review journalist who had leveraged ownership of a small mining company to acquire specialist retail assets (e.g. the upmarket jeweller Hardy Bros) and then move into property development, notably the three Mirage resorts in Queensland and Hawaii. Qintex had a station in Brisbane, which was sold in order to acquire the Sydney, Melbourne & Brisbane stations. After that, it purchased the stations in Adelaide & Perth.
The network was convicted for broadcasting an inflammatory story on its Today Tonight and Sunrise programs which breached the law by identifying a minor engaged in legal proceedings.[1] It was placed on a two-year good behaviour bond and ordered to donate $50,000 to charities for homeless people. Seven indicated it would appeal the conviction.[1] On November 20, 2006, Seven announced that its media businesses would be placed in a new entity, Seven Media Group, 50% of which would be acquired by KKR for AU$4 billion. The new entity holds its television (Seven Network) and print (Pacific Magazines) assets, as well as Seven's 50% share of Yahoo!7. The publicly-traded parent company, Seven Network Limited, will retain the other 50%, as well as various real estate and other interests. Free-to-air channels
StationsCallsignsCallsigns for Seven Network stations in the capital cities:
The Seven Network also owns Seven Queensland, which covers the Regional Queensland market. This market covers the east coast of the state, except for South East Queensland. AffiliatesSeven Network programming is also carried by the following affiliate networks: Southern Cross
Prime
WIN Television
Defunct channels
Network Slogans
Foreign Partnerships
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