TVB News was ranked last in credibility among TV and radio channels in Hong Kong in a 2019 CUHK survey.
On 19 November 1967, the first few male news anchors: David Lee, Josiah Lau, Chu Wai Tak, Stephen Shiu.
On 20 May 2013, TVB iNews remodified their schedules and broadcast the news programmes live and continuously in high definition.
Good Morning Hong Kong and Putonghua Financial Report, and other business newscasts are seen on weekdays.
The highly stylised and comical format is considered an institution, and is widely recognised by many Hong Kong people.
Additionally, TVB's news department is also responsible for the output on the 24-hour news channel, TVBN (無綫新聞台), carried on the pay TV platform TVB Pay Vision (無綫收費電視) and iNews (互動新聞台) (Start from 11 November 2008) on HK Digital TV Broadcast (Channel 83).
[3] The pre-dawn broadcasts soundtrack which mentioned "punching and kicking" was re-recorded, and later bulletins said that the officers were "suspected of using excessive force".
[4] TVB director Keith Yuen questioned what grounds lead the footage to say "officers dragged him to a dark corner, and punched and kicked him"?
[4] Ho Wing-hong, the assistant supervisor of the news-gathering team responsible for the footage, was immediately demoted to Chief Researcher, a post with only a part-time subordinate.
[3][7] After several of its reporters were assaulted by activists attending a pro-Beijing rally, over 340 station employees put their names to a petition condemning the violence.
A director of production in the non-drama department ordered all petitioners to a meeting with their supervisors, where the employees were asked to remove their signature or jeopardise their year end bonuses.
They pointed to Luk's strongly pro-establishment background, as most of the senior management posts were filled by internal promotion.
[9] TVB News was criticized for biased coverage during the 2019–20 Hong Kong protests, with Communications Authority receiving approximately 12,000 complaints.
[10] In light of this, some companies, including the Hong Kong branches of Pocari Sweat and Pizza Hut, withdrew their advertisements from TVB, drawing praise from anti-extradition protestors.