翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Rappin
・ Rappin'
・ Rappin' 4-Tay
・ Rappin' Down Town
・ Rappin' Duke
・ Rappin' Granny
・ Rappin' Rodney (album)
・ Rappin' with the Ladies
・ Rapping
・ Rappler
・ Rapples Pan
・ Rappoport
・ Rapport
・ Rapport (disambiguation)
・ Rapport (newspaper)
Rapport (television programme)
・ Rapport congruency
・ Rapport till himlen
・ Rapporteur
・ Rapportführer
・ Rappottenstein
・ Rappresentatione di Anima, et di Corpo
・ Rapprochement
・ Rapps Bridge
・ Rappu Falls
・ Rappville, New South Wales
・ Rapp–Hodgkin syndrome
・ Rapradio.com
・ RAPS
・ Raps New Generation


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Rapport (television programme) : ウィキペディア英語版
Rapport (television programme)

''Rapport'' ("Report") is one of the two main news programmes from the Swedish television broadcaster Sveriges Television (SVT).
Rapport's main bulletin is broadcast every day at 19:30 on SVT1. It runs for thirty minutes every day except Saturday, when it runs for fifteen minutes. Ever since the 1970s, it has been the most watched news bulletin in Sweden.
The title is also used for most other news bulletins on SVT. On weekdays in 2014, Rapport is broadcast every half hour between 06:00 and 09:30 (as part of Gomorron Sverige), 18:00 and 19:30 on SVT1, 09:00, 16:00, and every half hour between 01:00 and 05:30 on SVT2. On weekends, only the prime time and late night editions are broadcast.
The 19:30 bulletin has special presenters (since 2005 they are Katarina Sandström, Lisbeth Åkerman and Morgan Olofsson). These presenters usually only host the 19:30 bulletin (except on weekends when they can also be seen hosting the late night edition). In the summer, both Aktuellt and Rapport 19:30 is frequently hosted by temps. The other editions are hosted by a larger team of presenters working in different time shifts.
A feature of Rapport at 19:30 is that the bulletin consists solely of filmed reports and some telegrams with almost no studio interviews allowed.
==History==
''Rapport'' started in December 1969 with the launch of the second television channel, TV2. It went out between 19:10 and 19:30 each weekday following a 10-minute news bulletin from ''TV-nytt'' at 19:00 and preceding a longer ''TV-nytt'' programme at 19:30 on TV1. ''Rapport'' at this time focused on the in-depth coverage of selected news items. It was often considered left-leaning, thereby earning for TV2 as a whole the nickname of "the red channel".
As part of a large-scale reorganization of news programming in 1972, the news on TV1 was rebranded as ''Aktuellt'' (in fact, a revival of its original name), with bulletins at 18:00 and 21:00 each evening, allowing ''Rapport'' to take over the popular 19.30 slot. At the same time ''Rapports was broadened (the old formula had never been very popular with viewers) and it soon became Sweden's most widely-viewed news programme.
In January 1979, a late edition, known as ''Rapport 2'', was added to the end of the day's schedule.
In the 1990s ''Rapports responsibilities increased dramatically. In 1993 ''Rapport'' began providing morning news bulletins as well as two afternoon bulletins at 16:00 on Kanal 1 and 17:00 on TV2. In 1995 the morning programme was rebranded as ''Rapport Morgon'', ''Rapport'' having taken over the responsibility for the sofa-driven feature parts of the morning programme formerly made by the regions. This programme was SVT's answer to ''Nyhetsmorgon'' on TV4. Both ''TV4Nyheterna'' and ''Rapport'' began broadcasting a half-hour bulletin at noon in 1997.
In 1999, SVT started a digital 24-hour news channel called SVT24. It was based on content from both ''Rapport'' and ''Aktuellt'', but it soon took over most of the ''Rapport'' broadcasts. In 1999, the updates at 12:00, 16:00, 17:00 and in the late evening were taken over by SVT24 and in 2000 SVT24 also took over the morning bulletins with ''Rapport Morgon'' moving to the SVT24 studio. Suddenly, ''Rapport'' proper found itself providing only the prime-time early-evening programme (and the late-evening edition at weekends) on the second channel, by now known as SVT2. This relocation of news bulletins to SVT24 was, in fact, only a matter of branding and technology (SVT24 used more efficient digital technology which made broadcasts from there cheaper), SVT having in 2000 merged all its news desks into one.
There were more challenges for SVT's news teams in 2001 when the two main programmes, ''Rapport'' and ''Aktuellt'', swapped channels. The popular ''Rapport'' moved to SVT1 which was intended to be the channel of broad appeal, while the more specialized and less popular ''Aktuellt'' went to SVT2, the more minority-oriented channel. The reorganization also meant that all the former ''Rapport'' broadcasts now on SVT24 would be carried by SVT1 (except for the 17:00 update, which was scrapped).
In September 2001, Rapport moved to a new studio which was common for all the Stockholm-based news programmes. This meant that all bulletins that SVT24 had taken over would once again become ''Rapport'' broadcasts. The 19:30 and late-evening bulletins moved to the new studio on 8 September and the day-time bulletins moved on the following Monday, while the morning editions waited another week. The move coincided with the September 11 attacks which made the first days from the new studio somewhat chaotic. At the same time ''Rapport'' abandoned the logo and jingle which had both been in use (in several incarnations) since the programme started in 1969.
The SVT24 schedule was radically restructured with effect from 24 February 2003. The channel would thenceforth broadcast news programmes every half-hour around the clock (every hour during the day on weekdays) and they would be made by ''Rapport''. This meant a dramatic increase in the number of ''Rapport'' broadcasts. This number was, however, drastically reduced in the following autumn when the bulletins became hourly rather than every half-hour.
At the end of 2004, long-time presenter Claes Elfsberg left Rapport. Lisbeth Åkerman and Morgon Olofsson would later join Katarina Sandström as the regular hosts of the programme. The 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake brought the start of news updates throughout the night at weekends, a service which has continued ever since. A regular 21:30 bulletin made its debut on 15 January 2007 as part of a relaunch of SVT24. On 19 November 2007, the 18:00 edition of ''Aktuellt'' became a ''Rapport'' bulletin. At the same time, all SVT news programmes switched to 16:9 widescreen transmission.
25 August 2008 saw yet another major shake-up of SVT's news schedules. The 18:00 edition of ''Rapport'' was moved from SVT2 to SVT1 and the late edition was moved from SVT1 to SVT2 (and a regular weekday start time of 22:25), while another news update bulletin was added to the SVT2 schedule at 18:55 on weekdays, thus somewhat making a return to its to the channel that originally broadcasts.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Rapport (television programme)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.