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・ The Worst Hard Time
・ The Worst Jobs in History
・ The Worst Journey in the World
・ The Worst Journey in the World (docudrama)
・ The Worst Movie Ever!
・ The Worst of Apo Hiking Society
・ The Worst of Black Box Recorder
・ The Worst of Deja Voodoo
・ The Worst of Faces of Death
・ The Worst of Hollywood
・ The Worst of Jefferson Airplane
・ The Worst of Monte Cazazza
・ The Worst of Perth
・ The World Tomorrow (magazine)
・ The World Tomorrow (radio and television)
The World Tonight
・ The World Tonight (Philippine newscast)
・ The World Tonight (song)
・ The World Tossed at Tennis
・ The World Trade Center Tapestry
・ The World Treasury of Science Fiction
・ The World Triathlon
・ The World Turned Upside Down
・ The World University
・ The World University (Puerto Rico)
・ The World Unseen
・ The World Unseen (book)
・ The World Until Yesterday
・ The World Wars (miniseries)
・ The World We Knew


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The World Tonight : ウィキペディア英語版
The World Tonight
:''This newscast should not be confused with the Philippines newscast of the same name.''
''The World Tonight'' is a British current affairs radio programme broadcast on BBC Radio 4, every weekday evening, which started out as an extension of the 10pm news. It features news, analysis and comment on domestic and world issues. Ritula Shah is currently the main presenter, usually presenting the first three days of the week. Following the departure of longtime presenter Robin Lustig in 2012, the programme utilises other BBC broadcasters including David Eades, Carolyn Quinn, James Coomarasamy, Roger Hearing, Samira Ahmed and Felicity Evans to regularly present on Thursdays, Fridays and in Shah's absence.
==History==
The World Tonight was introduced following the changes at Broadcasting House which ushered in Radio 1, to create "the serious current affairs programme of the day" on the new Radio 4, as one survivor recalls.
Broadcast live at 10 pm, as now, but initially for only thirty minutes, its tone was set by presenter, Douglas Stuart, a former Washington and Bonn correspondent for the BBC. The first edition contained interviews on Northern Ireland and relations between West Germany and the United States. Later that week, ideas for better government in Scotland and peace in the Middle East were featured.
Its focus on international news was set early on by events in Washington surrounding Watergate. The US time zone (five hours behind the UK) meant that the programme could bring up to the minute developments at 10 pm. Its first reporters came from within the ranks of the programme's own producers, which meant that packages or features were cut from a different cloth than standard news reports. Today's World Tonight reporters may not have come from the same stable but the emphasis on perceptive, contextual reporting has remained.
Presenters with strong journalistic credentials, including John Tusa, Anthony Howard, Richard Kershaw, Isabel Hilton and Robin Lustig, have been key to the programme's reputation for authoritative coverage.
Other notable former staffers include Dominic Lawson, former editor of ''The Sunday Telegraph'', Jim Gray, Editor of Channel 4 News, Jonathan Freedland of The Guardian and Henry Kelly.
Veterans recall the traditionally 'relaxed' figure of the Editor. The ''laisser faire'' approach of the boss over the years created a culture in which Output Editors, responsible for daily editions, were able to take risks, some of which have led to notable scoops; such as the predicted arrest on war crimes charges of General Augusto Pinochet in 1998.
A staple of the Radio 4 schedule for over four decades, 2013 figures showed The World Tonight has retained 1.75m listeners, representing 17.8% of the national radio audience at 10pm.〔(Robin Lustig's BBC Blog )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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