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Televisión Pública

Televisión Pública (Public Television, abbreviated TVP) is a publicly owned Argentine television network, the national public broadcaster. It began broadcasting in 1951, when LR3 Radio Belgrano Televisión channel 7 in Buenos Aires, its key station and the first television station in the country, signed on the air.

Televisión Pública
TV Pública headquarters in Buenos Aires
CountryArgentina
Worldwide (online)
HeadquartersBuenos Aires
Programming
Language(s)Spanish
Picture format1080i HDTV
(downscaled to 576i for the SD feed)
Ownership
OwnerGovernment of Argentina
ParentRadio y Televisión Argentina S.A.
Key people
  • Juan Parodi
  • Diego Chaher
Sister channels
History
Founded1951; 73 years ago (1951)
Launched17 October 1951 (1951-10-17)
Former names
List
    • R3 Radio Belgrano Televisión (1951-1959)
    • Canal 7 Argentina (1959-1973/1976-June 1978/July 1978-1979/2000-2009)
    • Televisión Argentina (1973-1976)
    • A78TV (June-July 1978)
    • ATC (1979-1999)
    • TV Pública (2009-2016)
    • Televisión Pública Argentina (2016-2020)
Links
Websitetvpublica.com.ar
Availability
Terrestrial
Analog VHFChannel 7 (Buenos Aires)
Digital UHFChannel 23.1 (HD)

History edit

1951–1978: Foundations edit

 
One of the first TV cameras used by Canal 7

Jaime Yankelevich, businessman and operator of radio station LR3 "Radio Belgrano", received the approval of the Perón family to import television equipment from the United States. The final approval came from Eva Perón, who, when informed of the importation of the new equipment, said "Sí, sí, todo muy lindo pero yo lo que quiero es que televisen el acto del Día de la Lealtad" ("Yes, yes, all very good, but what I want is for them to televise the acts of Loyalty Day"). With the support of Minister of Communications Oscar Lorenzo Nicolini and the Radio Belgrano executives, preparations were made to start the first television station in Argentina. Yankelevich imported Bell equipment, DuMont cameras, and a horizontally polarized antenna initially mounted on the MOP Building. On September 24, 1951, Radio Belgrano announcer Fito Salinas was put behind a camera and backed by a musical group, and the first test transmissions commenced.[1] On the first days of tests, televisions were set up in department stores in a 500-meter radius around the site, and the transmitter put out 500 watts of power, but the signal was ramped up and brought to 40 kW power. At that power level, reception was clear for 72 km (45 mi) around.

Finally, October 17, 1951 came, and once more, channel 7 signed on for the first time under the name it would bear for a decade: LR3 Radio Belgrano TV. The first broadcast was conducted on Loyalty Day, as Eva Perón wanted, from the Plaza de Mayo; the remote cameras were connected to the studios by a cable link. 2,500 televisions were in place in the country to watch the events. For the first time in 24 days, Eva Perón rose from her bed to attend, dressed in black. The CGT awarded her the Distinction of Recognition and to president Juan Perón the Great Peronist Medal of Extraordinary Class. Doses of tranquilizers, administered by the education minister, were necessary to allow Eva to deliver a brief address, her final political testament, in which she mentioned her own death nine times.[2]

On November 4, 1951, LR3-TV began regular commercial telecasts, broadcasting from 5:30 to 10:30pm each day. In 1957, the studios moved to the Alas Building, where they occupied two subfloors, the first floor and the basement. In 1961, the television and radio station parted the separate ways, with the television station adopting its current callsign, LS 82 TV.

There was even a brief period in which the station was awarded to a private entity: Editorial Haynes was awarded the license in 1954 by Perón's government, but the next year, the government of the Revolución Libertadora annulled the transfer, thus it remained a national channel owned by the government.

1978–2000: Color television edit

Argentina hosted the 1978 FIFA World Cup. In order to allow for the event to be broadcast in color around the world, new color studio facilities were required; the country still had no color telecasts of its own. At the same time, there was unfinished construction in Buenos Aires; in the mid-1970s, prior to the coup of 1976, work had commenced on the Altar de la Patria (Altar of the Fatherland), which was to be a mausoleum for Eva and Juan Perón. A new innovative television center was built on the underground site for what was named Argentina 78 Televisora (A78TV), the television production center for the World Cup. The facility, situated on Avenida Figueroa Alcorta, was Argentina's first dedicated television studio facility with features such as soundproofed studios. The center was outfitted with new Bosch Fernseh color equipment, which would be in service for decades. Among the various tasks that A78TV performed was the delivery of color live video to movie theaters over coaxial cable and export of color live video for worldwide coverage. However, just one match was broadcast in color to Argentina itself—the final match, between Argentina and the Netherlands—using the PAL-N color standard.

 
One of the Bosch Fernseh cameras from 1978; an ATC logo sticker has been placed over the A78TV striped logo

In 1979, Canal 7 took control of the new complex, and with it came a new name. On May 3, Canal 7 became Argentina Televisora Color (ATC), a name that would serve the channel for the remainder of the 20th century. Carlos Montero helped design the new channel's identity.

The investment in ATC paid off, and briefly in the early 1980s, before the rise of Alejandro Romay's Canal 9 Libertad, ATC led the national television ratings, a feat it has not accomplished since. As state network it brought news of the Falklands War of 1982 to Argentine TV viewers nationwide, with correspondents and news crews going into the actions of the conflict, and led a national publicity campaign in support of the war effort. Dubbed "Argentines, To Victory" (Argentinos, a Vencer), ATC and the national government produced several commercials for this campaign, and on the opening day of the war broadcast a special program dedicated to the conflict broadcast in all its stations nationwide, and, for the first time ever for an Argentine TV station, also in South American countries (save Uruguay) and the United States, via satellite broadcasts.

The 1990s were a more turbulent time for ATC. On one front, the Bosch Fernseh equipment, which was still the bulk of the channel's workflow, was aging, and replacement parts and fixes were getting harder to find. On another, under Carlos Menem, ATC was almost privatized and, in 1996, even had an unusual five-month change of identity to ATeCE, a la Argentina (ATeCE, to Argentina), with a new, more nationalist approach.

2000–present: Canal 7, TV Pública and Televisión Pública Argentina edit

 
The set of Visión Siete, TV Pública Digital's main newscast, circa 2007

On January 1, 2000, ATC rebranded under an emergency administration that would take control of the channel until April, using a plain wordmark with the full name of the channel as its temporary logo. This administration would help ATC leave out of its financial ruin.[3]

In 2001 Canal 7 celebrated the golden jubilee year anniversary of its first broadcasts. Under the presidency of Fernando de la Rúa by the turn of the 21st century, long-term changes came to ATC for the first time in years. In January 2000, the channel dropped its use of the acronym, going by its full name only; this was followed four months later with the retirement of Argentina Televisora Color and the relaunch of Canal 7 Argentina. In addition, the National System of Public Media (SNMP) was formed as a managing and financing entity for the channel. SNMP was replaced by a new entity, Radio y Televisión Argentina Sociedad del Estado, with the Audiovisual Media Law in 2009.

 
TV Pública booth at La Rural exhibition in 2015

At the beginning of the presidency of Néstor Kirchner, the channel's management was split into fiction and non-fiction; this led to an increase in its in-house productions. In 2006, Rosario Lufrano became the new director of Canal 7, changing its name to TV Pública and refocusing the channel to a more cultural emphasis. At the same time, new equipment—much of it ready for high definition telecasts—was ordered, finally putting to pasture the 1978-vintage Bosch Fernseh cameras and switchers.

In April 2010, TV Pública launched its digital signal on UHF channel 23, in the ISDB-T standard also used by Japan and Brazil. The signal includes HD, SD and 1segfeeds. With the launch of the digital signal, the first in the country, the name of the channel was changed again, to the current TV Pública Digital

On April 18, 2016, as part of its 65th anniversary, TV Pública changed its name to Televisión Pública Argentina (Argentine Public Television).

Logo evolution edit

Programming edit

Televisión Pública Argentina has a varied programming schedule. Its output includes many cultural and educational programs. It also has its own news service, with news programs branded Televisión Pública Noticias (Public Television News), and its program Fútbol para todos (Football for all), which began in 2009-10 season, holds all rights to Argentine Primera División and Primera B Nacional matches until the end of 2016–17 season. 2013 saw the channel surprising viewers with its very first afternoon drama and youth program, and became the first station to simulcast a regional program in 2014.

Coverage edit

References edit

  1. ^ http://estatico.buenosaires.gov.ar/areas/cultura/cpphc/archivos/libros/temas_15.pdf 2011-09-08 at the Wayback Machine, pg.111
  2. ^ "Medios". 17 October 2011. from the original on 5 January 2020. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  3. ^ . La Nación. 16 January 2000. Archived from the original on 14 March 2024. Retrieved 14 March 2024.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • ATA (Asociación de Teleradiodifusoras Argentinas)
  • Youtube channel

34°34′50″S 58°23′49″W / 34.58056°S 58.39694°W / -34.58056; -58.39694

televisión, pública, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, ad. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Television Publica news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message This article may be a rough translation from Spanish It may have been generated in whole or in part by a computer or by a translator without dual proficiency Please help to enhance the translation The original article is under espanol in the languages list If you have just labeled this article as needing attention please add a href Template Needtrans html class mw redirect title Template Needtrans subst Needtrans a pg Television Publica language Spanish comments to the bottom of the WP PNTCU section on Wikipedia Pages needing translation into English May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Television Publica Public Television abbreviated TVP is a publicly owned Argentine television network the national public broadcaster It began broadcasting in 1951 when LR3 Radio Belgrano Television channel 7 in Buenos Aires its key station and the first television station in the country signed on the air Television PublicaTV Publica headquarters in Buenos AiresCountryArgentina Worldwide online HeadquartersBuenos AiresProgrammingLanguage s SpanishPicture format1080i HDTV downscaled to 576i for the SD feed OwnershipOwnerGovernment of ArgentinaParentRadio y Television Argentina S A Key peopleJuan Parodi Diego ChaherSister channelsEncuentro Pakapaka DeporTV CINE AR TECHistoryFounded1951 73 years ago 1951 Launched17 October 1951 1951 10 17 Former namesList R3 Radio Belgrano Television 1951 1959 Canal 7 Argentina 1959 1973 1976 June 1978 July 1978 1979 2000 2009 Television Argentina 1973 1976 A78TV June July 1978 ATC 1979 1999 TV Publica 2009 2016 Television Publica Argentina 2016 2020 LinksWebsitetvpublica com arAvailabilityTerrestrialAnalog VHFChannel 7 Buenos Aires Digital UHFChannel 23 1 HD Contents 1 History 1 1 1951 1978 Foundations 1 2 1978 2000 Color television 1 3 2000 present Canal 7 TV Publica and Television Publica Argentina 1 4 Logo evolution 2 Programming 3 Coverage 4 References 5 External linksHistory edit1951 1978 Foundations edit nbsp One of the first TV cameras used by Canal 7 Jaime Yankelevich businessman and operator of radio station LR3 Radio Belgrano received the approval of the Peron family to import television equipment from the United States The final approval came from Eva Peron who when informed of the importation of the new equipment said Si si todo muy lindo pero yo lo que quiero es que televisen el acto del Dia de la Lealtad Yes yes all very good but what I want is for them to televise the acts of Loyalty Day With the support of Minister of Communications Oscar Lorenzo Nicolini and the Radio Belgrano executives preparations were made to start the first television station in Argentina Yankelevich imported Bell equipment DuMont cameras and a horizontally polarized antenna initially mounted on the MOP Building On September 24 1951 Radio Belgrano announcer Fito Salinas was put behind a camera and backed by a musical group and the first test transmissions commenced 1 On the first days of tests televisions were set up in department stores in a 500 meter radius around the site and the transmitter put out 500 watts of power but the signal was ramped up and brought to 40 kW power At that power level reception was clear for 72 km 45 mi around Finally October 17 1951 came and once more channel 7 signed on for the first time under the name it would bear for a decade LR3 Radio Belgrano TV The first broadcast was conducted on Loyalty Day as Eva Peron wanted from the Plaza de Mayo the remote cameras were connected to the studios by a cable link 2 500 televisions were in place in the country to watch the events For the first time in 24 days Eva Peron rose from her bed to attend dressed in black The CGT awarded her the Distinction of Recognition and to president Juan Peron the Great Peronist Medal of Extraordinary Class Doses of tranquilizers administered by the education minister were necessary to allow Eva to deliver a brief address her final political testament in which she mentioned her own death nine times 2 On November 4 1951 LR3 TV began regular commercial telecasts broadcasting from 5 30 to 10 30pm each day In 1957 the studios moved to the Alas Building where they occupied two subfloors the first floor and the basement In 1961 the television and radio station parted the separate ways with the television station adopting its current callsign LS 82 TV There was even a brief period in which the station was awarded to a private entity Editorial Haynes was awarded the license in 1954 by Peron s government but the next year the government of the Revolucion Libertadora annulled the transfer thus it remained a national channel owned by the government 1978 2000 Color television edit Argentina hosted the 1978 FIFA World Cup In order to allow for the event to be broadcast in color around the world new color studio facilities were required the country still had no color telecasts of its own At the same time there was unfinished construction in Buenos Aires in the mid 1970s prior to the coup of 1976 work had commenced on the Altar de la Patria Altar of the Fatherland which was to be a mausoleum for Eva and Juan Peron A new innovative television center was built on the underground site for what was named Argentina 78 Televisora A78TV the television production center for the World Cup The facility situated on Avenida Figueroa Alcorta was Argentina s first dedicated television studio facility with features such as soundproofed studios The center was outfitted with new Bosch Fernseh color equipment which would be in service for decades Among the various tasks that A78TV performed was the delivery of color live video to movie theaters over coaxial cable and export of color live video for worldwide coverage However just one match was broadcast in color to Argentina itself the final match between Argentina and the Netherlands using the PAL N color standard nbsp One of the Bosch Fernseh cameras from 1978 an ATC logo sticker has been placed over the A78TV striped logo In 1979 Canal 7 took control of the new complex and with it came a new name On May 3 Canal 7 became Argentina Televisora Color ATC a name that would serve the channel for the remainder of the 20th century Carlos Montero helped design the new channel s identity The investment in ATC paid off and briefly in the early 1980s before the rise of Alejandro Romay s Canal 9 Libertad ATC led the national television ratings a feat it has not accomplished since As state network it brought news of the Falklands War of 1982 to Argentine TV viewers nationwide with correspondents and news crews going into the actions of the conflict and led a national publicity campaign in support of the war effort Dubbed Argentines To Victory Argentinos a Vencer ATC and the national government produced several commercials for this campaign and on the opening day of the war broadcast a special program dedicated to the conflict broadcast in all its stations nationwide and for the first time ever for an Argentine TV station also in South American countries save Uruguay and the United States via satellite broadcasts The 1990s were a more turbulent time for ATC On one front the Bosch Fernseh equipment which was still the bulk of the channel s workflow was aging and replacement parts and fixes were getting harder to find On another under Carlos Menem ATC was almost privatized and in 1996 even had an unusual five month change of identity to ATeCE a la Argentina ATeCE to Argentina with a new more nationalist approach 2000 present Canal 7 TV Publica and Television Publica Argentina edit nbsp The set of Vision Siete TV Publica Digital s main newscast circa 2007 On January 1 2000 ATC rebranded under an emergency administration that would take control of the channel until April using a plain wordmark with the full name of the channel as its temporary logo This administration would help ATC leave out of its financial ruin 3 In 2001 Canal 7 celebrated the golden jubilee year anniversary of its first broadcasts Under the presidency of Fernando de la Rua by the turn of the 21st century long term changes came to ATC for the first time in years In January 2000 the channel dropped its use of the acronym going by its full name only this was followed four months later with the retirement of Argentina Televisora Color and the relaunch of Canal 7 Argentina In addition the National System of Public Media SNMP was formed as a managing and financing entity for the channel SNMP was replaced by a new entity Radio y Television Argentina Sociedad del Estado with the Audiovisual Media Law in 2009 nbsp TV Publica booth at La Rural exhibition in 2015 At the beginning of the presidency of Nestor Kirchner the channel s management was split into fiction and non fiction this led to an increase in its in house productions In 2006 Rosario Lufrano became the new director of Canal 7 changing its name to TV Publica and refocusing the channel to a more cultural emphasis At the same time new equipment much of it ready for high definition telecasts was ordered finally putting to pasture the 1978 vintage Bosch Fernseh cameras and switchers In April 2010 TV Publica launched its digital signal on UHF channel 23 in the ISDB T standard also used by Japan and Brazil The signal includes HD SD and 1segfeeds With the launch of the digital signal the first in the country the name of the channel was changed again to the current TV Publica DigitalOn April 18 2016 as part of its 65th anniversary TV Publica changed its name to Television Publica Argentina Argentine Public Television Logo evolution edit nbsp 1951 59 nbsp 1959 61 nbsp 1961 nbsp 1962 nbsp 1964 nbsp 1965 nbsp 1966 nbsp 1967 nbsp June July 1978 during the Argentina 78 World Cup nbsp 1985 87 nbsp 1987 February 1996 June 1996 1998 nbsp 1996 as ATeCE nbsp 2000 without logo nbsp 2014 nbsp 2016 20Programming editTelevision Publica Argentina has a varied programming schedule Its output includes many cultural and educational programs It also has its own news service with news programs branded Television Publica Noticias Public Television News and its program Futbol para todos Football for all which began in 2009 10 season holds all rights to Argentine Primera Division and Primera B Nacional matches until the end of 2016 17 season 2013 saw the channel surprising viewers with its very first afternoon drama and youth program and became the first station to simulcast a regional program in 2014 Coverage editArgentine Primera Division Only 2 matches released per round Argentina s First Division A Women s Football Championship FIFA World Cup Qualifiers Copa America Turismo Carretera Copa America de Futsal Only Argentina matches FIFA Futsal World Cup Only Argentina matches FIFA World Cup FIFA Women s World Cup Olympic GamesReferences edit http estatico buenosaires gov ar areas cultura cpphc archivos libros temas 15 pdf Archived 2011 09 08 at the Wayback Machine pg 111 Medios 17 October 2011 Archived from the original on 5 January 2020 Retrieved 18 March 2020 ATC Argentina Televisora Cultural La Nacion 16 January 2000 Archived from the original on 14 March 2024 Retrieved 14 March 2024 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Canal 7 Argentina Official website nbsp ATA Asociacion de Teleradiodifusoras Argentinas Youtube channel 34 34 50 S 58 23 49 W 34 58056 S 58 39694 W 34 58056 58 39694 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Television Publica amp oldid 1215810817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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