RTÉ axes ‘Morning Edition’ after two years

‘Ongoing financial pressures’ lie behind the decision to stop making the TV show, it says

Presenter Keelin Shanley (second from left) is pictured with RTÉ News Now editor Declan McBennett (left), ‘Morning Edition’ editor Anthony Murnane (centre), reporter Aisling Riordan and RTÉ managing director of news and current affairs Kevin Bakhurst as they prepared for the launch of the show in January 2013. Photograph: David Sleator/The Irish Times.
Presenter Keelin Shanley (second from left) is pictured with RTÉ News Now editor Declan McBennett (left), ‘Morning Edition’ editor Anthony Murnane (centre), reporter Aisling Riordan and RTÉ managing director of news and current affairs Kevin Bakhurst as they prepared for the launch of the show in January 2013. Photograph: David Sleator/The Irish Times.

RTÉ has axed Morning Edition, the television news show it launched less than two years ago. The programme will complete its current run this year and will not return in 2015, the broadcaster said.

The decision “has been made due to ongoing financial pressures”, RTÉ said in a statement. It is understood staff were informed of the decision earlier today.

Keelin Shanley, who presented the programme since its launch, will become the host of Radio 1's The Late Debate from January, in addition to her role as presenter of RTÉ One's The Consumer Show.

RTÉ said other staff would continue to work with RTÉ News and would be redeployed within its online and television news operations. RTÉ News Now will continue to broadcast morning news bulletins, it added.

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Morning Edition, which has gone out live five days a week from 9am-11am, began in January 2013.

Edited by Anthony Murnane, the show aimed for an "intelligent but accessible" tone, with Mr Murnane citing NBC's Today and BBC Breakfast as "the feel" that he was aspiring to replicate on the programme.

It was also hoped that its mix of news, sport, business and entertainment would help RTÉ lure viewers away from TV3’s daytime audience. However, it secured average ratings of just 18,600 in its first week and struggled to gain significant traction.

The two-hour duration of the show and the nature of its format meant it would have had a higher total audience “reach”, a measure that counts everybody who tunes in to a programme even just for a few minutes.

RTÉ said the current series, which began after a summer break, typically had a reach of 75,000 a day on RTÉ One.

Budgets at RTÉ remain constrained by falling licence fee income and increased competition in the advertising market.

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery is an Irish Times journalist writing about media, advertising and other business topics