Britannica Money

Sky News

British satellite, broadcast, and streaming news service
Written by
Patricia Bauer
Pat Bauer graduated from Ripon College in 1977 with a double major in Spanish and Theatre. She spent most of the next 42 years working as a copy editor and editor at Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Fact-checked by
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Encyclopaedia Britannica's editors oversee subject areas in which they have extensive knowledge, whether from years of experience gained by working on that content or via study for an advanced degree. They write new content and verify and edit content received from contributors.
Updated:
Sky News studio
Open full sized image
Studio of Sky News in Isleworth, London.
Chris Lobina/Shutterstock.com
Ticker:
CMCSA
Share price:
$42.99 (mkt close, Nov. 20, 2024)
Market cap:
$164.50 bil.
Annual revenue:
$123.07 bil.
Earnings per share (prev. year):
$3.71
Sector:
Communication Services
Industry:
Media
CEO:
Mr. Brian L. Roberts
Recent News
(Sydney Morning Herald)Two hours after Alan Jones was bailed, here’s how Sky News reacted

Sky News, British satellite, broadcast, and streaming news service that is owned by the British media and telecommunications conglomerate Sky Group, a division of the multinational telecommunications company Comcast. Sky News, headquartered in London, has consistently won plaudits for the breadth and depth of its reporting. The news service was founded by Rupert Murdoch and launched on February 5, 1989, as the first 24-hour news television channel in the United Kingdom. In the 2020s Sky News International was available in 138 countries via broadcast, satellite transmission, and streaming. Sky News also had a radio arm, Sky News Radio.

In 1983 Murdoch’s News International became the majority owner of Satellite Television, the first satellite-to-cable channel in Europe. Satellite Television became Sky Channel the following year and increasingly focused on the British market. In 1988 Murdoch announced that he would launch Sky Television, which would add three more channels to the original single channel. One of the channels, inspired by the success of the American news channel CNN, was Sky News.

The Sky News anchors broadcast from a working newsroom. With the motto “We’re there when you need us,” the channel was well regarded by both viewers and critics. The year following its 1989 debut, Sky Television ended a ruinous rivalry by merging with its competitor, British Satellite Broadcasting, to form British Sky Broadcasting, or BSkyB. The company became Sky PLC in 2015 and was acquired by Comcast in 2018. Sky News remained without competition in Britain until 1997, when the British Broadcasting Company (BBC) launched its own 24-hour news channel. Sky News remained competitive, however, despite failing to return profits for its first several years.

Though some observers worried that Murdoch’s ownership in Sky News would mean a conservative tilt in the service’s news coverage, it was generally regarded as appropriately impartial. In addition, the channel’s coverage of the September 11, 2001, terror attacks in the United States won a 2002 British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Award for news coverage. That reputation, together with Sky News’s eight regional and seven international bureaus, led in 2004 to its winning a five-year contract to provide news coverage to Britain’s broadcast Channel 5, giving the satellite channel more mainstream visibility. In addition, Sky News won its fourth consecutive Royal Television Society Television Journalism Award for news channel of the year.

In 2005 Sky News moved to a new and larger studio and inaugurated several news programs, rather than simply providing 24-hour rolling news. These programs included World News Tonight, The Sky Report, Sunrise, and Lunchtime Live. The new programming proved to be unpopular, however, and, after John Ryley was named head of Sky News in 2006, replacing Nick Pollard, the evening programs were scrapped, and other changes to the format and schedule were introduced. Ryley’s leadership of Sky News was notably successful. He refocused the channel toward straightforward presentation of the news, simplifying sets and graphics to prevent them from competing for attention and distracting from the events being reported.

In 2010, when debates between party leaders ahead of a general election were first televised in Britain, Sky News hosted the second of three debates, focused on international relations and moderated by Adam Boulton. Sky News continued to win BAFTA Awards, including in 2008 for its coverage of a terrorist attack the previous year on the Glasgow Airport, in 2015 for a report on the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, in 2018 for a story on the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar (Burma), and in 2021 for reporting from Idlib, Syria. In addition, Sky News resumed its reign as the Royal Television Society’s choice as news channel of the year, with wins in 2006, 2007 (when it also won the award for innovation), 2009, 2010, 2015, 2016 (when it also won for news program of the year), and 2018–2022. Moreover, Sky News journalist Alex Crawford won several awards for journalist of the year.

Murdoch—who, through his companies, owned about 40 percent of Sky Group, the parent of Sky News—sought a way to acquire the rest of the company. An attempted bid in 2011 was withdrawn in the wake of a phone-hacking scandal involving news tabloids controlled by Murdoch. In late 2016 an agreement to allow Murdoch’s company 21st Century Fox to fully acquire Sky Group was announced. Though European Union antitrust authorities did not object, the British Office of Communications raised concerns, and the Competition and Markets Authority in early 2018 issued a provisional rejection of the plan, in particular objecting to the addition of Sky News to Murdoch’s media empire. By June a bidding war had erupted between 21st Century Fox, the Disney Company, and Comcast. Comcast emerged victorious and acquired all of Sky Group, including Sky News, by the end of the year. Ryley continued to lead Sky News into the 2020s.

Pat Bauer