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- Huw Edwards paid emotional tribute to the ‘best live news team in the business’
- Beeb is set to merge domestic and world TV news channels to create BBC News
Huw Edwards has paid an emotional tribute to the ‘best live news team in the business’ as the BBC is set to merge its domestic and world TV news channels.
The BBC News at Ten stalwart, 61, shared photos of the team and himself as a younger man in a tweet this afternoon, before the new channel launches on Monday.
The Beeb is merging the two channels, creating a single 24-hour TV channel, as part of measures it said it needs to take to save an extra £285million after then-Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries announced last year that the licence fee would be frozen at £159 for two years.
Edwards wrote: ‘From day one of BBC News 24 onwards with 14 years of BBC News at Five along the way. The news channel team was the best live news team in the business.
‘Thanks to everyone who contributed over the decades. It was a privilege.’
The merger will axe 70 jobs and comes after the corporation announced the end of BBC Four, Radio 4 Extra and CBBC as linear channels.
They are expected to move online to the iPlayer in the next few years as part of the broadcaster’s plans to become ‘digital first’.
The new channel will be broadcast from London during the day and Singapore and Washington DC overnight.
Around 70 BBC staff from across all areas in the UK will lose their jobs as a result of the merger. Around 20 jobs will be created in Washington.
The BBC said the changes will create a streamlined organisation that ‘drives the most value from the licence fee and delivers more for audiences’.
The channel will serve UK and international audiences, featuring flagship programmes built around high-profile journalists, it said.
UK viewers will receive specific content at certain times of the day and a live breaking news team will provide a domestic-only stream for specific news events, the broadcaster added.
Programming on the channel will be refreshed over time, with plans to air at least two new programmes in 2023, including a broadcast from Washington.
There have been a swathe of voluntary redundancies following the merger announcement.
Big names to go include Joanna Gosling, David Eades and Tim Willcox.
Newsreader Gosling became emotional as she signed off on her final broadcast for the corporation on January 26.
The presenter and journalist, who joined the broadcaster 23 years ago in September 1999, was met with applause from inside the studio as she came off air just before 1pm.
She said: ‘Now it is just about time for me to say goodbye for the last time.
‘I am signing off after 23 years at BBC News and before I go there are just a few things I wanted to say. I know this job is personal.
‘We come directly into your home to tell you what is happening – good, bad, funny, sad.
‘And in doing my work I always consider how you might be responding to the news you are hearing and what you might want to know.
‘But your response to me leaving has been completely unexpected and I have been really touched by the wave of warmth and kindness from you, and I want to say thank you for all of your good wishes. It really has meant a lot to me.’
Gosling also thanked those who had shared their stories with her as well as her colleagues ‘past and present’.
She added: ‘I have learned from you, I have loved working with you and I have valued your support since I started out at 22.
‘I have never failed to be impressed by the talent, skills and dedication of the people around me. We are a team, but it has felt like family.’
‘Lucky me to have had this great job that has never felt like a job. Thank you for having me,’ she concluded.
David Eades has been a BBC presenter since 2003, while Tim Willcox, who gained plaudits for his coverage of the 2010 Copiapó mining accident in Chile, has more than two decades of BBC experience.
A significant number of journalists have left the BBC over the past two years, including top talent such as Emily Maitlis and Jon Sopel in 2022.
Newsnight presenter Maitlis is believed to have receive a bumper pay rise from her salary band of up to £329,999. One source described the deal as an ‘irresistible package’.
Global poached another of the corporation’s top news stars, Andrew Marr, in November 2021.
He quit the BBC after 21 years to front shows on LBC and Classic FM, and is thought to have significantly increased his pay of up to £339,999 in the move.
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