The 7 O'Clock Show

The Seven O'Clock Show
Genre Afternoon news and talk show
Presented by Lucy Kennedy
Martin King
Country of origin Republic of Ireland
Original language(s) English
Production
Location(s) Ballymount, Dublin
Release
Original network TV3
3e
Picture format 480i (16:9 SDTV)
Original release 15 February 2015 (2015-02-15) – present
Chronology
Preceded by Late Lunch Live
Followed by The Seven O'Clock Show
Related shows Ireland AM, Midday, Xposé, TV3 News
External links
Website

The Seven O'Clock Show is an Irish evening-time television show on TV3. It is a live show, and provides chat, live music, cooking, entertainment, showbiz and technology updates. It replaced Late Lunch Live.[1]

Background

The Seven O'Clock Show first began as an early afternoon show live on TV3 then called Late Lunch Live. As part of the revamp of TV3's daytime schedule due to falling audience figures an extended version of Ireland AM and Late Lunch Live replaced The Morning Show.[2] Late Lunch Live premiered on 30 September 2013, airing every Monday to Friday from 14:00.[3] By 2014 the show was moved to a new timeslot of 15:30 to 16:30. The programme proved successful and it was later decided to rebrand the show and to give it a primetime slot of 19:00.

The programme features in-studio guests, live performances, updates on showbiz, TV, technology, events around the country and general chat with its daily guests.

The Seven O'Clock Show is hosted by Lucy Kennedy, and Martin King are the main hosts. Claire Solan acted as a reporter in the earlier shows.[4]

On January 30, 2015 the TV3 Group confirmed Late Lunch Live would be replaced with The Seven O'Clock Show, which premiered on February 16, 2015.[5] Both presenters of Late Lunch Live joined the new show.

With the refresh and rebrand to The Seven O' Clock Show, Kennedy and King present the show four days a week with a rotation of presenters on Friday's edition. This includes Ray Foley and Mairead Farrell, or Lousie Duffy and Anton Savage.

Presenters

Special contributors

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.