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Wikipedia

Television in Brazil

Television in Brazil has grown significantly since the first broadcasts in 1950, becoming one of largest and most productive commercial television systems in the world.[1] Its biggest network, TV Globo, is the second largest commercial network in South America, and is one of the largest television exporters around the world, particularly of telenovelas, having become popular in many countries.[1] There are more than 90 free-to-air television networks (national and regional), as well as satellite channels broadcasting throughout the country.

History edit

Early years edit

In 1939, Telefunken, a German manufacturing and electronics company, held the first television exhibition during the Sample Fair Expo in Germany. Then in July 1941, RCA and NBC debuted their first television station in New York, in what would become the very first commercial TV station in the world. The broadcast tower, installed at the top of the Empire State Building, allowed the station to broadcast on Channel 1 in the immediate vicinity of Manhattan in deference to FCC rules which allowed the earliest broadcasters to use Channel 1 on the VHF band for experimental commercial broadcasts. By 1946 shortly after World War II, in agreement with the US government and David Sarnoff's RCA, NBC switched its broadcast frequency to VHF channel 4, and the VHF transmission system was adopted in the US, operating 12 VHF channels from 2 to 13 by order of the FCC.

In Brazil around the same time, the concessions for the first television broadcast network were decreed and distributed by President Eurico Gaspar Dutra's administration, and a cornerstone was placed for the very first transmitter in Brazil for the first commercial network, Rede Tupi. It was initially located in the municipality of Morro do Pão de Açúcar, in the city of Rio de Janeiro. By 1949, a group of technicians and engineers arrived in Brazil and visited the planned location for the broadcast tower for the first time only to find that due to the topography in Rio, the planned broadcast tower site wouldn't be the ideal place for its installation. As media mogul Assis Chateaubriand was interested in the opening of the first broadcast television network in Brazil and Latin America and already knew that the US was crucial in sponsoring the first TV broadcast in Cuba on Christmas Day of 1950, he decided to transfer to São Paulo for the inaugural broadcast, and the government gave the concession of channel 3, given by Radio Difusora in order to start Rede Tupi's operations.

Then, Chateaubriand ordered the broadcasting equipment necessary, for the station had already been built, just in time for this installation. In July 1950, the equipment arrived by ship in Port Santos and was accompanied to the capital by one of the many artists of the Emissoras Associadas group in São Paulo via motorcade. The motorcade was a hit, and crowds gathered to see the equipment being driven to the new station, a preview of what the new station would offer.[2]

Formation edit

The first broadcasts in Brazil were for the 1950 World Cup, in which the country hosted.

The above statement is contradicted by the following article that appeared in the Journal Dos Sports on 16 June 1950:

Oficializada a proibição das reportagens durante os jogos. Não será permitida, tambem, qualquer transmissão ou experiencia de televisão. Confirmando o que tivemos opportunidade de adiantar a CBD divulgou ontem em nota official a seguinte comunicação: "A Confederação Brasiliera de Desportos, de pieno acordo, com as recomendações expressas da FIFA, comunica aos interesrados:

a) - Não será permitido, no Estadio Municipal, ou outro qualquer local onde serão realizados os jogos da "Copa do Mundo", o servico de reportagens nos vestiarios, antes e durante os citados jogos.

b) - As reportagens, apos as partidas, ficarão a criterio das delegações participantes do Campeonato.

c) - Não será permitida a presenca de jornalistas e locutores, assim como o uso de fiosdentro do campo.

d) - Está teminantemente proibida qualquer transmissão ou experiencia, por meio de aparelhos de televisão.

Which according to Google Translate means:

The ban on reporting during games was made official. It will not be allowed, also, any transmission or television experience. Confirming that we had the opportunity to advance, the CBD released the following communication yesterday in an official note: "The Confederação Brasiliera de Desportes, in full agreement, with the express recommendations of FIFA, informs those interested:

a) - It will not be allowed, in the Municipal Stadium, or any other place where the "World Cup" games will be held, the service of reporting in the locker rooms, before and during the aforementioned games.

b) - The reports, after the matches, will be at the discretion of the participating delegations in the Championship.

c) - The presence of journalists and announcers, as well as the use of wires within the field, will not be allowed.

d) - Any transmission or experience through television sets is strictly prohibited.

Finally, on the 18th of September, 1950, network television in Brazil made its official debut in São Paulo with TV Tupi on channel 3, in an historical ceremony that was considered simplistic for the occasion in one question away. And Chateaubriand, owner of the new channel, had transmitters built across the city so that the people of the so-called Paulista would know what television is, as many people still didn't even know about TV at all. A number of TV sets were given to restaurants, bars and other places so that those who have not yet brought TVs would see the new medium themselves. It was the first Lusophone or Portuguese-speaking country to introduce television, even before the home country of Portugal with RTP (1955). It was also the fifth nation in the world to have a television station with daily broadcasts, behind the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Mexico.[3] The first television show on Tupi was first broadcast on the eve of September, and is considered the first Brazilian television program, TV na Taba, in an allusion to the indigenous people, who were already inhabited the Brazilian lands in the pre-Cabral era.

The network's symbol, a small Indian boy with an antenna on his head, appeared with the opening message: "Good evening. You are in the open TV station in Brazil," considering to be the first line of Brazilian television, starring the young actress Sonia Maria Dorce, then aged 6.[4][5] The symbol of Tupi was that of a Native Brazilian kid with a feather on the head, in another nod to the indigenous peoples of the country.

In the 1950s, Brazilian television was marked by informality, since there were no trained professionals in the country with any experience in this media field.

On January 20, 1951, Tupi began airing in Rio de Janeiro on channel 6, with two transmitters installed at the strategic points located from the expanding signals in its transmitters in Urca. The new regional studios, as well as the broadcast transmitters, opened in time for the celebrations of the feast of Saint Sebastian, the city's patron and one of the big events before the traditional Carnival. The opening ceremony of the new officers and studios featured the blessing given by Frei José Francisco de Guadalupe Mojica (Frei José Mojica), an actor who left the cinema industry to pursue a religious career. The studios were located on Venezuela Avenue, in downtown Rio, where Radio Tamoio's studios were used as a function of the studio, and the station's auditorium and technical centers was operated in the former premises of Cassino da Urca, on João Luiz Alves Avenue, in Urca.

In 1952, Reporter Esso, a radio news bulletin, made its television premiere on Tupi replacing Imagines do Dia. The newscast was broadcast on regional lines, anchored by Gontijo Teodoro in Rio and Randal Juliano in São Paulo.

In 1953, Victor Costa, who was the director of Radio Nacional from the 1940s, bought the São Paulo counterpart and formed the Victor Costa Organization, which took over Radio Excelsior's operations from its former owner, Paulo Machado de Carvalho, who sold the station to the VCO with the objective of putting money to defray the costs of the concession of the future channel 7. Machado de Carvalho also decided to dispose of his part of the association in Rio and sold itself to Pipa do Amaral, who became the sole owner of the station. They decided to face the competition by combining its stations to create "Emissoras Unidas," an association of Paulo Machado de Carvalho, including Radios Record, Panamericana (now Jovem Pan) and São Paulo.

In the same year, Machado de Carvalho opened the nation's second TV station, TV Record, on channel 7 in São Paulo. The station went on the air on the 27th of September, and the studios was located in Miruna Avenue in the Aeroporto District. It became the TV unit of Machado de Carvalho's Emissoras Unidas.

In the same year, "Alô, Doçura", an original series created by Cassiano Gabus Mendes, went on the air on Tupi. Starring Eva Wilma and John Herbert, the program was shown on Tupi on channels 3 and 6.

Another characteristic of television productions of this early period was live impromptu, as there was no videotape. The high costs of TV sets, which were imported, restricted the access of the media to the urban elites of major cities.[1] Technical resources were primary, offering broadcasters just enough to keep the stations on the air. It was during that period that TV news and telenovelas were established.[1]

In 1954, Victor Costa decided to buy Radio Mundial, owned by Diario da Noite in Rio, which held the concession of channel 11 in the city. Victor already had, with the purchase of Radio Excelsior, the concession of channel 9 in São Paulo, making a clear that Costa's desire decided to start a new network of TV stations.

The first broadcast of soccer matches were broadcast on Record, with the narration by Geraldo Jose de Almeida. It would become the first television network to broadcast live sporting events, like soccer matches.

Also, the death of President Getúlio Vargas was only reported at 01:00 PM, when Tupi in Rio was on the air. In São Paulo, channel 3 premiered the first children's production, Sítio do Pica-Pau Amarelo, based on the books by author Monteiro Lobato. It was shown once a week, and was also broadcast on Emissoras Associadas in Rio.

On July the 15th, 1955, TV Rio went on air on channel 13, at the initiative of Joao Batista de Amaral, brother-in-law of Machado de Carvalho, as an affiliate of Emissoras Unidas. Its studios and offices was located in the Casino Atlantico in Atlantic Avenue, postal 6, Copacabana.

The two stations decided to build a link between two cities, same exactly as what the technological method came from the US, linking city by city until completion of the route. TV Rio built its link to Guaratinguetá, half of distance from Rio, and Record end a link to São Paulo.

In the same year, Victor Costa acquired TV Paulista on channel 5, preferring to what he bought a station ready to have the assembly of the new one with concession given by Radio Excelsior. The studios were relocated to Palmeiras Street in Santa Cecilia, where Radio Nacional São Paulo and Excelsior were located. Soon afterwards, Victor Costa offered the concession of channel 9 in São Paulo up for sale.

On the 8th of September, 1955, TV Itacolomi went on the air in Belo Horizonte on channel 4 — the first television station in the state of Minas Gerais. The station was owned and operated by and the key station of TV Tupi and Emissoras Associadas.

The advent of videotape around 1960 brought imported programs to Brazilian television.[1] As a typical characteristic of countries developing their television systems, imported shows dominated the programming for much of the decade, but their presence also stimulated some efforts at creating local networks.[1] TV Tupi soon faced strong competition from yet another network, TV Excelsior, owned by Victor Costa, who would begin building a national TV network.

Expansion, Rede Globo's beginnings edit

 
Theatre Record, the main headquarters of RecordTV in São Paulo
 
Centro de Televisão da Anhanguera in Osasco, headquarters of SBT—the second largest TV network in Brazil.
 
The TV Bandeirantes Tower is the tallest tower in the city of São Paulo, and one of the largest in South America.

Television became a mass medium in Brazil earlier than in most developing countries.[1] The military dictatorship which took power in 1964 saw audiovisual communication as a tool for creating a stronger national identity, a broader consumer economy, and controlling political information.[1] The military pushed television deeper into the population by subsidizing credit for set sales, building national microwave and satellite distribution systems, which prompted the growth of Rede Globo, which they chose as a privileged partner.[1][6] TV Excelsior, an opponent of the regime, on the other hand, was forced to close after losing government advertisement.

Globo, launched a few months after the 1964 coup, created the first true national network by the late 1960s.[1] Censorship of news was extensive under the military governments between 1966 and 1978, but it also encouraged national television program production.[1] In the early 1970s, several government ministers pushed the commercial networks to develop more Brazilian programming and reduce reliance on imported programs, particularly those with violent and sexual content.[1] While Globo adopted an international model for operations, 90 percent of its content was produced in Brazil.[6]

The 1960s represented a formative period for television development.[1] Telenovelas had largely been patterned after those in other Latin American countries, even using imported scripts, but during that decade they were developed into a considerably more sophisticated genre, specifically after the airing of Beto Rockfeller, a well-produced story about a Rio de Janeiro good-lifer, in 1968 by Tupi.[1] By the 1970s, telenovelas were the most popular programs and dominated prime time on the major networks, Globo and Tupi.[1] Globo, in particular, began to attract major writers and actors from both film and theater to work in its telenovelas.[1] The Brazilian telenovelas became good enough, as commercial television entertainment, to be exported throughout Latin America, Eastern Europe, Asia and Africa.[1] Brazilian exports reached over a hundred countries and the programs have often proved to be great international hits.[1] This is particularly the case with historical telenovelas such as Escrava Isaura.[1]

Alongside telenovelas, the show de auditório (a form of variety show) was carried over from radio, which often featured a mix of entertainment, music, comedy, and game show segments. These shows appealed heavily to the lower- and middle-classes, and often featured content that was considered sensational and vulgar for the period—leading to them falling out of favour by the late-1960s due to the military government.[7][8]

Color broadcasting edit

Between 1962 and 1963, Rede Tupi and Rede Excelsior made the first unofficial transmissions in color, in specific programs in the city of São Paulo (both using NTSC). On February 19, 1972, color broadcasting officially began, using the PAL-M TV standard. This has the same line/frame rate as NTSC, but better color encoding.

Satellite television broadcasts began in 1960. Rede Tupi was the pioneer satellite broadcaster when it broadcast Brasilia's opening in the spring of that year, and soon it began select nationwide broadcasts thru satellite transmission.

The rise of Rede Globo edit

From the early 1970s to late 1980s, Globo dominated both the audience and the development of television programming.[1] It had a 60-80% share in major cities at any given time.[1] As television researcher Joseph Straubhaar declared, "even people who might have had questions about the news almost always accepted the Globo novelas".[6] During this period, Globo was accused of being the mouthpiece of the dictatorship, mainly because of its omission in covering the Diretas Já movement, in which thousands of Brazilians gathered on public squares to demand a direct election for president.[1] In 1980, Tupi went bankrupt and was closed by the military government. Its signal was split and given to Silvio Santos, who launched SBT, and Adolpho Bloch, who launched Rede Manchete. Since Tupi's disappearance, Globo virtually dominated the market alone. The only time its leadership was threatened was when Manchete aired Pantanal in 1990. Nevertheless, Manchete never achieved the same success with any other of its telenovelas, and would have the same fate of Tupi, ceasing its operations in May 1999, and having its signal replaced by that of RedeTV!.

With Globo dominating the ratings, other broadcast television networks found themselves pursuing smaller, more specific audience segments largely defined by social class.[1] SBT targeted lower middle class, working class and poor audiences, mostly with variety and game shows,[1] in addition to soaps imported from Mexico's Televisa. This strategy gained it a consistent second place in ratings for most of the 1980s and 1990s.[1] On the other hand, Manchete initially targeted a more elite audience, with news, high budget telenovelas, and imported programs, but found the segment too small to gain an adequate advertiser support.[1] Bandeirantes tended to emphasize news, public affairs and sports.[1] All three ultimately wished to pursue a general audience with general appeal programming, such as telenovelas, but discovered that such efforts would not generate an audience sufficient to pay for the increased programming costs.[1]

In 1984, Globo initially supported the military government against Diretas Já, a popular campaign for the direct election of a civilian government,[1] while other television networks, most notably Manchete, supported the change. Perceiving that it might literally lose its audience to competitors, Globo switched sides and supported the transition to a civilian regime, which was indirectly elected in a compromise situation.[1] The new political circumstances immediately reduced political censorship and pressure on broadcasters.[1]

In the 1990s, UHF television channels were launched, such as music oriented MTV Brasil, and the Catholic channel Rede Vida. Also during that period, TV Cultura and Rede Record, both based in São Paulo, began to air their signal in national broadcasting systems.

Audience decline, Globo versus Record edit

Rede Globo ratings at 9 p.m. (2000–2015)
Year Telenovela Share (*) +/-
2000–2001 Laços de Família 44.9% -
2001 Porto dos Milagres 44.6% -0.3%
2002 O Clone 47.0% +2.4%
2002–2003 Esperança 38.0% -9.0%
2003 Mulheres Apaixonadas 46.6% +8.6%
2003–2004 Celebridade 46% -0.6%
2004–2005 Senhora do Destino 50.4% +4.4%
2005 América 49.4% -1.0%
2006 Belíssima 48.5% -0.9%
2006–2007 Páginas da Vida 46.8% -1.7%
2007 Paraíso Tropical 42.8% -4.0%
2007–2008 Duas Caras 41.1% -1.7%
2008–2009 A Favorita 39.5% -1.6%
2009 Caminho das Índias 38.8% -0.7%
2009–2010 Viver a Vida 35.8% -3.0%
2010–2011 Passione 35.1% -0.7%
2011 Insensato Coração 36% +0.9%
2011-2012 Fina Estampa 39% +2.00%
2012 Avenida Brasil 39% -
2012-2013 Salve Jorge 34% -5.00%
2013-2014 Amor à Vida 36% +2.00%
2014 Em Família 30% -6.00%
2014-2015 Império 33% +3.00%
2015 Babilônia 25% -8.00%

(*) 1% comprises approximately 62,000 households in the Greater São Paulo area.[9]

Source: UOL

The 2000s saw the decline of television audience in the country, as internet access grew rapidly.[10] The daily average of TV sets turned on dropped from 65% in 1982–1991 to 42% in 2008.[11] In the decade, the top five TV networks in the country lost altogether 4.3% of their share.[12] SBT lost 44% of its viewership in the prime time, while Globo lost 9%.[13] The biggest decline for Globo were in its showcase telenovelas, aired at 9 p.m., which reached an all-time low during the decade. The network's latest telenovela in the time slot, Viver a Vida, scored the lowest ratings of the past ten years.[14] According to Renata Pallottin, a professor at University of São Paulo's Art and Communication School, this happens because recent telenovelas, which has the same basic story sketches since the 1970s, has proven to be unappealing to younger audiences, who watch American television series on cable TV or surf the web instead.[11] As such, telenovelas audience grew significantly older and richer in the past decade.[11]

While other TV networks face the lack of interest among viewers, one TV network weathered the decline fairly unscathed: Rede Record. In fact, the network rose its audience by 123% in the decade, partially due to investments of over US$150 million per year.[13] Although Globo maintains more than the double of Record's average ratings, the latter has been able to surpass Globo's audience on specific time slots, such as Sundays,[15] and mornings.[16] In some state capitals, such as Goiânia, Fortaleza, and Belém, for instance, Record's Domingo Espetacular already surpasses the audience of Globo's Fantástico,[17] while Record's Fala Brasil already surpasses Globo's Bom Dia Brasil in São Paulo. Globo also faces a decrease of its audience in Rio de Janeiro, where the network is headquartered. On December 11, 2009, Record surpassed the audience of Globo in Rio during the broadcast of The Elite Squad.[18] Almost a year later, on December 2, 2010, Globo came on an unprecedented third place in the Greater Rio ratings in the 11 p.m.–12 a.m. time slot.[19] On a previous occasion, Record came first in the area's ratings from 7 a.m. to 12 a.m. on September 8, 2010.[20]

A recent research conducted by Deloitte showed that surfing the web has surpassed watching TV as the entertainment activity preferred by most Brazilians.[12] Other forms of entertainment, such as watching DVDs, and viewing cable TV have also increased their popularity significantly. From 2000 to 2010, the number of households with access to cable TV increased 152%, while the DVD market saw an expansion of 430% in the same period.[12] The number of TV sets not turned on in any of the free-to-air channels—which indicates that they are being used for watching DVD or cable TV or playing videogames, also increased from 3.5% to 6.7% of the share in the decade.[12] In 2010 it further increased to 7.7% of the share, surpassing the audience of Record. Cable TV accounted for 4.5% of this, while the remaining 3.2% accounted for watching DVD and/or playing videogames.[21]

Cable television edit

Cable television services in Brazil were allowed to start business in 1995, according to federal law 8977/95. Since then, there were no major advances in terms of access to the technology. Brazil has one of the lowest number of households with access to cable television, as a result of the combination of high prices charged by providers and the reduced purchasing power of most Brazilians.[22] Cable television in Brazil, as of 2010, was available to only 10 million households (around 30 million viewers, which represents less than 20% of the country's population).[23] Most of the users are from the upper class (70%).[22] While the lower class represents 50% of the country's households, only 1% of them have access to cable television.[22]

 
The Digital TV Tower Brasilia, dubbed Flor do Cerrado.

The cable television market used to be almost monopolized by satellite TV provider SKY Brasil and cable TV provider NET, both of them partially owned by Organizações Globo. However, in 2010, Globo sold 19% of its shares in SKY to the DirecTV Group, making Globo owner of only 7% of SKY shares.[24] In the same year, Embratel made an offer to buy all of Globo's shares in NET for R$4.58 billion,[25] even though Embratel has to wait the approval of Bill N° 119, that will allow companies from countries other than Brazil to own cable operations. Since 2006, large national and international phone operators, such as Embratel, Telefónica, and Oi, began to enter the market. Due to cable regulations, telephone companies are using DTH rather than IPTV to launch their TV operations. In 2010's third trimester, the market share of cable companies was: NET with 44,8%, SKY with 25,7%, Via Embratel with 9,8%, Telefónica TV Digital with 5,1%, OiTV with 3,1%, Abril (TVA) with 1,8% and smaller companies with 9,6% of the market.[26]

Digital television edit

Digital terrestrial television was officially adopted by Brazil on 2 December 2007, using the ISDB-T International standard, a variant of the Japanese ISDB standards which uses H.264/MPEG-4 AVC for video compression and HE-AAC for audio compression, and support for mobile television using the 1seg standard. The government estimated that it would take seven years for DTT service to become available across the country; beginning with the greater São Paulo metropolitan, Belo Horizonte in early March 2008, and Rio de Janeiro in late May 2008. Analog television will be discontinued in phases until 2023.[27] Major Brazilian networks broadcast their digital feeds in 1080i high-definition television.

DTV in Brazil supports interactive television through the Ginga platform.[28]

On 18 January 2022, the Fórum Sistema Brasileiro TV Digital Terrestre (SBTVD Forum) recommended the Brazilian Government new technologies that would lead to Brazil's "TV 3.0" system, including the use of ATSC 3.0 technologies in the new standard. The new system is expected to begin deployment by 2024.[29]

Free national terrestrial channels edit

Channel Category Position
Globo General/Commercial  
Record General/Commercial  
SBT General/Commercial  
Band (Bandeirantes) General/Commercial  
RedeTV! General/Commercial  
TV Cultura Public/Commercial  
TV Brasil Public  
Rede Brasil General/Commercial  
TV A Crítica General/Commercial  
Gazeta General/Commercial  
TV Aparecida General/Religious/Commercial  
Record News News/Commercial  
Rede Vida Religious/Commercial  
TV Mais Família General/Religious/Commercial  
Rede Meio Norte General/Commercial  
CNT General/Commercial  
Canção Nova Religious  
RIT Religious  
NGT General/Educational  
RBTV General/Commercial  
Top TV Music  
TV Novo Tempo Religious  
TV Diário General/Commercial  
Rede Cidade Verde General/Commercial  
Rede Família (RFTV) General/Commercial  
ISTV General/Educational  
RBI General/Commercial  
Rede 21 Sport/Commercial  
Canal Gov Government  
Rede Minas Public  
TV União (Rede União) Teenage  
Amazon Sat Nature-Eco/General/Commercial  
TV Pai Eterno Religious  
TV8 General/Commercial  
Astral TV General/Commercial  
Boa Vontade TV Religious  
TVT Government  
Ideal TV General/Commercial  
TV da Gente Afro/Educational  
Futura Educational  
TV Escola Educational  
SescTV Educational  
Rede Gospel Religious  
Rede Gênesis Religious  
TV Câmara local Subchannel/Government  
Kiss TV Subchannel/Music  
Rede Século 21 Religious  
Rede Super Religious  
TV Evangelizar Religious  
RIT Notícias News  
Rede Boas Novas Religious  
TV Feliz Religious  
TV Nazaré Religious  
TV Senado Government  
TV Universal Religious  
Rede Mundial Religious  
TV Mundo Maior Religious  
TV Plenitude Religious  
Canal Saúde Subchannel/Public  
TV Câmara Government  
TV Assembleia Subchannel/Government  
TV Justiça Government  
Ponto Jus Subchannel/Government  
TV Verdade Religious  
Terra Viva Rural  
MCI TV Subchannel/Music  
Canal Educação Subchannel/Public  
Univesp TV Subchannel/Public  
Multicultura Educação Subchannel/Public  
Rede Vida Educação Subchannel/Educational  

Future free national terrestrial channels

Channel Category Situation
Rede Massa General/Commercial From a free regional terrestrial broadcaster with the intention of national expansion
RTN TV General/Commercial From a free regional terrestrial broadcaster with the intention of national expansion
TV Gazeta Goiás General/Commercial From a free regional terrestrial broadcaster with the intention of national expansion

Free regional terrestrial channels

Channel Category Location
TV Paraná Turismo (E-Paraná) Public State of Paraná
CBI TV (Mega TV) Religious/Commercial São Paulo
Rede Sul de Televisão (TV Urbana) General/Commercial State of Rio Grande do Sul
TV Transamérica General/Commercial Curitiba/State of Paraná
Santa Cecília TV Educational Coast of the state of São Paulo
TV Thathi Educational Some parts of the interior of the state of São Paulo
TV Aldeia Public State of Acre
Fonte TV Religious/Educational State of Goiás
TV Horizonte Religious State of Minas Gerais
Rede New Interactive/Commercial In some regions
98 Live General/Commercial State of Minas Gerais
CJC Religious Rio de Janeiro
RBC Religious State of Pernambuco
Rede 41 Educational Some parts of the interior of the state of São Paulo
TVCI (RCI) Religious/Commercial State of Paraná
TV Ativa General/Commercial Some parts of the interior of the state of São Paulo
TV Verde Vale Educational State of Ceará
TV Terra do Sol Public State of Ceará
TV Padre Cícero Religious State of Ceará
TV Mato Grosso General/Commercial State of Mato Grosso
TVM Belém General/Commercial State of Pará
TV Templo Religious São Paulo
TV 10 Maringá General/Commercial State of Paraná
TV Caravelas Public/Community Some parts of the interior of the state of Minas Gerais
COM Brasil TV Public/Community Rebroadcast by some affiliates
UTV Brasil General/Commercial In some regions of the state of São Paulo, Goiás and DF
Canal Um Europa Religious São Paulo
TV FL Religious São Paulo
Rede América General/Commercial Some regions of the state of São Paulo and Minas Gerais
Universo TV Religious State of Minas Gerais
Canal Empreender Entrepreneurship/Commercial São Paulo
Regional Educational Subchannels (RES) Subchannel/Educational In some affiliates
Channels from prefectures and other small companies Public/Commercial In some cities

Defunct, extinct or replaced free terrestrial channels

Channel Category Period
TV Shoptime Commercial 1995-2023
ZTV General/Commercial 2022-2023
TV Brasil 2 Public 2019-2023
Loading Pop and Geek/Commercial 2020-2021
TV NBR Government 1998-2019
Cine+ Films/Commercial 2016-2019
Esporte Interativo BR Sport/Commercial 2007-2018
TV Ultrafarma Commercial 2015-2017
TVCOM General/Commercial 1995-2015
TV Shop Tour Commercial 1987-2015
Mix TV Music and Young People/Commercial 2005-2014
MTV Brasil Youth and Entertainment/Commercial 1996-2009
TV Show Time Commercial 2006-2008
Rede Mulher Woman/Commercial 1994-2007
TVE Brasil Public 1975-2007
TV JB General/Commercial 2007
TV! General/Commercial 1999
Manchete General/Commercial 1983-1999
TV Jovem Pan General/Commercial 1991-1995
Rede OM General/Commercial 1982-1993
REI General/Commercial 1969-1989
Rede Tupi General/Commercial 1950-1980
TV Continental General/Commercial 1959-1971
TV Excelsior General/Commercial 1960-1970
Emissoras Unidas General/Commercial 1959-1967

Displaced free terrestrial channels

Channel Category Situation
Polishop TV Commercial 2020, from free TV to cable and satellite TV
Rede CentralTV Brasil General/Commercial 2019, from free TV to cable and satellite TV
Life Channel Brasil General/Commercial 2018, from free TV to cable and satellite TV
TV Mackenzie Academic/Scientific 2008-2017, from free TV to web TV
TV Rá-Tim-Bum Subchannel/Children 2008-2016, from free TV to cable and satellite TV
Ulbra TV General/Commercial 2005-2013, from own broadcaster to affiliate of TV Cultura
PlayTV General/Commercial 2006-2008, from free TV to cable and satellite TV
Canal Rural Rural/Commercial 1998-1999, from free TV to cable and satellite TV
GloboNews News/Commercial 1996-2016, from encoded TV to cable and satellite TV
ESPN Sport/Commercial 1989-1994, from free TV to cable and satellite TV

Cable and satellite edit

Major pay television providers are Claro (cable and satellite), SKY (satellite), Vivo TV (cable/IPTV/satellite), Oi TV (satellite television).

National channels

Multinational channels

Criticism edit

As referenced by journalist Eugênio Bucci, the problem of "audiovisual media ownership concentration is relatively sharper" in Brazil when compared to the United States.[30] According to the study Donos da Mídia (English: Media owners), Rede Globo alone controls 340 television stations, more than SBT and Rede Record combined.[31] This is largely attributed to the fact that television in the country was launched in the early 1950s by the private sector, without much state regulation and control[32] — in a manner very similar to the system of for-profit, private networks of American TV and away from the state-owned, public TV stations in Europe and in the Communist bloc. The first national public television network, TV Brasil, was only launched on December 2, 2007 (before that, since the 1960s there were local public-educative TV stations controlled by the state's governments), the same day that digital television was introduced in the country, initially limited to the cities of Brasília, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, São Luís and São Paulo.[citation needed]

Intellectuals and journalists in Brazil, mainly in the left of the political spectrum, criticize Brazilian TV as being too much Americanized and promoter of irrational, superficial consumerism and of having a general conservative bias, neglecting representation and respect in relation to traditionally oppressed classes and peoples like the Afro-Brazilian peoples and religion, Native Brazilians, poor women, favela inhabitants, atheists, peasants and LGBT people.[citation needed]

Most-viewed channels edit

This list does not include thematical TV channels, streaming, games, and Internet (YouTube and others).

Viewing shares, 2023:

Position Channel Group Share of total viewing (%)
1 Globo Organizações Globo 41.0%
2 Record Central Record de Comunicação 12.9%
3 SBT Grupo Silvio Santos 11.5%
4 Cable and Satellite TV channels Cable and Satellite TV channels 10.3%
5 Band Grupo Bandeirantes de Comunicação 6.0%
6 TV Brasil Brazil Communication Company 2.1%
7 RedeTV! Grupo TeleTV 2.0%
8 TV Cultura Padre Anchieta Foundation 1.9%
9 Rede Brasil Sistema de Comunicação Pantanal Ltda 1.5%
10 TV A Crítica Rede Calderaro de Comunicação 1.4%
11 Gazeta Fundação Cásper Líbero 1.3%
12 TV Aparecida Rede Aparecida de Comunicação 1.2%
13 Record News Central Record de Comunicação 1.0%
14 Rede Vida INBRAC - Grupo Monteiro de Barros de Comunicação 0.8%
15 TV Mais Família Grupo Patati Patatá 0.6%
16 Rede Meio Norte Grupo Meio Norte de Comunicação 0.5%
17 CNT Organizações Martinez 0.4%
18 Canção Nova Fundação João Paulo II 0.3%
19 RIT Fundação Internacional de Comunicação 0.2%
20 NGT Fundação de Fátima - Fundação Veneza 0.2%
- Others Other terrestrial channels 2.9%

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Straubhaar, Joseph. . The Museum of Broadcast Communications. Archived from the original on 22 June 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
  2. ^ TV Ano 70 - O Início - Episódio 1, archived from the original on 2021-12-21, retrieved 2021-04-14
  3. ^ Renato Cruz (2008). TV digital no Brasil: tecnologia versus política. Sao Paulo, Brazil: Editora Senac. p. 39. ISBN 978-85-7359-755-4.
  4. ^ . guiadoestudante.abril.com.br. Archived from the original on 2013-12-18.
  5. ^ "Digital TV in Brazil: a path to health democracy". Rnp.br. 2005-01-21. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  6. ^ a b c Shah, Angilee. "Network-Builder Describes Role in Brazil's TV Globo" 2011-06-05 at the Wayback Machine. UCLA International Institute.
  7. ^ Newcomb, Horace (2014-02-03). Encyclopedia of Television. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-19472-7.
  8. ^ Cole, Richard R. (1996). Communication in Latin America: Journalism, Mass Media, and Society. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8420-2559-1.
  9. ^ "Audiência De Televisão". IBOPE. 2010-10-07. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  10. ^ (in Portuguese) Tomazzoni, Marco. "Internet bate TV aberta como passatempo nacional". Último Segundo. August 31, 2010.
  11. ^ a b c "Audiência das novelas da Globo" 2011-06-15 at the Wayback Machine. Veja, November 2008.
  12. ^ a b c d "Internet bate TV aberta como passatempo nacional". Ultimosegundo.ig.com.br. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  13. ^ a b (in Portuguese) Feltrin, Ricardo. "SBT perde um terço de telespectadores na década". Folha de S. Paulo. December 18, 2009.
  14. ^ (in Portuguese) Prado, Antonio Carlos. "Viver a vida é trair". Istoé. February 12, 2010.
  15. ^ "Record consolida segundo lugar e se aproxima da Globo". Ultimosegundo.ig.com.br. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  16. ^ "Salto da Record foi maior no Rio e à noite". Ultimosegundo.ig.com.br. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  17. ^ "Audiência do Fantástico chegou a cair pela metade em dez anos". Ultimosegundo.ig.com.br. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  18. ^ "Com 'Tropa de Elite', Record supera audiência da Globo no Rio". Diversao.terra.com.br. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  19. ^ "Globo perde audiência e fica em 3º lugar no Rio". Oreporter.com. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  20. ^ "Record deixa Globo para trĂĄs e lidera audiĂŞncia no Rio de Janeiro pela 1ÂŞ vez". Contigo.abril.com.br. 1976-08-29. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  21. ^ "Ibope de TV paga, DVD e games ultrapassa Record e é o novo vice-líder". Noticias.uol.com.br. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  22. ^ a b c (in Portuguese) "TV por assinatura" 2010-04-16 at the Wayback Machine. Instituto Brasileiro de Defesa do Consumidor.
  23. ^ "TV paga no Brasil passa barreira de 10 milhões de assinantes". Noticias.uol.com.br. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  24. ^ "Globo vende parte das ações na Sky". Oglobo.globo.com. 8 June 2010. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  25. ^ (in Portuguese) [1]
  26. ^ "teleco.com.br". teleco.com.br. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  27. ^ "Brazil Delays Analog Switch-Off to 2018". Meio & Mensagem. 30 July 2013. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  28. ^ "Brazil's Ginga middleware slips to 2013". Advanced Television. 2 March 2012. Retrieved 12 April 2014.
  29. ^ "Key ATSC 3.0 Technologies Selected By Brazil For Its Next-Generation Digital TV Standard" (Press release). Advanced Television Systems Committee. 18 January 2022. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
  30. ^ BUCCI, Eugênio. Sobre Ética e Imprensa. São Paulo: Companhia das Letras, 2000.
  31. ^ (in Portuguese) "Donos da mídia - As redes de TV" 2011-10-08 at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ Lima, Venício (April 24, 2010). . Observatório da Imprensa (in Portuguese). 586. ISSN 1519-7670. Archived from the original on April 29, 2010. Here [in Brazil] we always had concentration on media control, because, unlike what happens in the rest of the world, there has never been concern from our legislators with cross-ownership of media

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • (in Portuguese) 10 anos da Lei de TV a Cabo: sobre conquistas e desafios
  • (in Portuguese)

television, brazil, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, article, lead, section, need, rewritten, please, help, improve, lead, read, lead, layout, guide, apr. 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 The article s lead section may need to be rewritten Please help improve the lead and read the lead layout guide April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Portuguese May 2020 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Portuguese article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 1 475 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Portuguese Wikipedia article at pt Televisao no Brasil see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated pt Televisao no Brasil to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Learn how and when to remove this template message Television in Brazil has grown significantly since the first broadcasts in 1950 becoming one of largest and most productive commercial television systems in the world 1 Its biggest network TV Globo is the second largest commercial network in South America and is one of the largest television exporters around the world particularly of telenovelas having become popular in many countries 1 There are more than 90 free to air television networks national and regional as well as satellite channels broadcasting throughout the country Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Formation 1 3 Expansion Rede Globo s beginnings 1 4 Color broadcasting 1 5 The rise of Rede Globo 1 6 Audience decline Globo versus Record 2 Cable television 3 Digital television 4 Free national terrestrial channels 5 Cable and satellite 6 Criticism 7 Most viewed channels 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editEarly years edit In 1939 Telefunken a German manufacturing and electronics company held the first television exhibition during the Sample Fair Expo in Germany Then in July 1941 RCA and NBC debuted their first television station in New York in what would become the very first commercial TV station in the world The broadcast tower installed at the top of the Empire State Building allowed the station to broadcast on Channel 1 in the immediate vicinity of Manhattan in deference to FCC rules which allowed the earliest broadcasters to use Channel 1 on the VHF band for experimental commercial broadcasts By 1946 shortly after World War II in agreement with the US government and David Sarnoff s RCA NBC switched its broadcast frequency to VHF channel 4 and the VHF transmission system was adopted in the US operating 12 VHF channels from 2 to 13 by order of the FCC In Brazil around the same time the concessions for the first television broadcast network were decreed and distributed by President Eurico Gaspar Dutra s administration and a cornerstone was placed for the very first transmitter in Brazil for the first commercial network Rede Tupi It was initially located in the municipality of Morro do Pao de Acucar in the city of Rio de Janeiro By 1949 a group of technicians and engineers arrived in Brazil and visited the planned location for the broadcast tower for the first time only to find that due to the topography in Rio the planned broadcast tower site wouldn t be the ideal place for its installation As media mogul Assis Chateaubriand was interested in the opening of the first broadcast television network in Brazil and Latin America and already knew that the US was crucial in sponsoring the first TV broadcast in Cuba on Christmas Day of 1950 he decided to transfer to Sao Paulo for the inaugural broadcast and the government gave the concession of channel 3 given by Radio Difusora in order to start Rede Tupi s operations Then Chateaubriand ordered the broadcasting equipment necessary for the station had already been built just in time for this installation In July 1950 the equipment arrived by ship in Port Santos and was accompanied to the capital by one of the many artists of the Emissoras Associadas group in Sao Paulo via motorcade The motorcade was a hit and crowds gathered to see the equipment being driven to the new station a preview of what the new station would offer 2 Formation edit The first broadcasts in Brazil were for the 1950 World Cup in which the country hosted The above statement is contradicted by the following article that appeared in the Journal Dos Sports on 16 June 1950 Oficializada a proibicao das reportagens durante os jogos Nao sera permitida tambem qualquer transmissao ou experiencia de televisao Confirmando o que tivemos opportunidade de adiantar a CBD divulgou ontem em nota official a seguinte comunicacao A Confederacao Brasiliera de Desportos de pieno acordo com as recomendacoes expressas da FIFA comunica aos interesrados a Nao sera permitido no Estadio Municipal ou outro qualquer local onde serao realizados os jogos da Copa do Mundo o servico de reportagens nos vestiarios antes e durante os citados jogos b As reportagens apos as partidas ficarao a criterio das delegacoes participantes do Campeonato c Nao sera permitida a presenca de jornalistas e locutores assim como o uso de fiosdentro do campo d Esta teminantemente proibida qualquer transmissao ou experiencia por meio de aparelhos de televisao Which according to Google Translate means The ban on reporting during games was made official It will not be allowed also any transmission or television experience Confirming that we had the opportunity to advance the CBD released the following communication yesterday in an official note The Confederacao Brasiliera de Desportes in full agreement with the express recommendations of FIFA informs those interested a It will not be allowed in the Municipal Stadium or any other place where the World Cup games will be held the service of reporting in the locker rooms before and during the aforementioned games b The reports after the matches will be at the discretion of the participating delegations in the Championship c The presence of journalists and announcers as well as the use of wires within the field will not be allowed d Any transmission or experience through television sets is strictly prohibited Finally on the 18th of September 1950 network television in Brazil made its official debut in Sao Paulo with TV Tupi on channel 3 in an historical ceremony that was considered simplistic for the occasion in one question away And Chateaubriand owner of the new channel had transmitters built across the city so that the people of the so called Paulista would know what television is as many people still didn t even know about TV at all A number of TV sets were given to restaurants bars and other places so that those who have not yet brought TVs would see the new medium themselves It was the first Lusophone or Portuguese speaking country to introduce television even before the home country of Portugal with RTP 1955 It was also the fifth nation in the world to have a television station with daily broadcasts behind the United States the United Kingdom France and Mexico 3 The first television show on Tupi was first broadcast on the eve of September and is considered the first Brazilian television program TV na Taba in an allusion to the indigenous people who were already inhabited the Brazilian lands in the pre Cabral era The network s symbol a small Indian boy with an antenna on his head appeared with the opening message Good evening You are in the open TV station in Brazil considering to be the first line of Brazilian television starring the young actress Sonia Maria Dorce then aged 6 4 5 The symbol of Tupi was that of a Native Brazilian kid with a feather on the head in another nod to the indigenous peoples of the country In the 1950s Brazilian television was marked by informality since there were no trained professionals in the country with any experience in this media field On January 20 1951 Tupi began airing in Rio de Janeiro on channel 6 with two transmitters installed at the strategic points located from the expanding signals in its transmitters in Urca The new regional studios as well as the broadcast transmitters opened in time for the celebrations of the feast of Saint Sebastian the city s patron and one of the big events before the traditional Carnival The opening ceremony of the new officers and studios featured the blessing given by Frei Jose Francisco de Guadalupe Mojica Frei Jose Mojica an actor who left the cinema industry to pursue a religious career The studios were located on Venezuela Avenue in downtown Rio where Radio Tamoio s studios were used as a function of the studio and the station s auditorium and technical centers was operated in the former premises of Cassino da Urca on Joao Luiz Alves Avenue in Urca In 1952 Reporter Esso a radio news bulletin made its television premiere on Tupi replacing Imagines do Dia The newscast was broadcast on regional lines anchored by Gontijo Teodoro in Rio and Randal Juliano in Sao Paulo In 1953 Victor Costa who was the director of Radio Nacional from the 1940s bought the Sao Paulo counterpart and formed the Victor Costa Organization which took over Radio Excelsior s operations from its former owner Paulo Machado de Carvalho who sold the station to the VCO with the objective of putting money to defray the costs of the concession of the future channel 7 Machado de Carvalho also decided to dispose of his part of the association in Rio and sold itself to Pipa do Amaral who became the sole owner of the station They decided to face the competition by combining its stations to create Emissoras Unidas an association of Paulo Machado de Carvalho including Radios Record Panamericana now Jovem Pan and Sao Paulo In the same year Machado de Carvalho opened the nation s second TV station TV Record on channel 7 in Sao Paulo The station went on the air on the 27th of September and the studios was located in Miruna Avenue in the Aeroporto District It became the TV unit of Machado de Carvalho s Emissoras Unidas In the same year Alo Docura an original series created by Cassiano Gabus Mendes went on the air on Tupi Starring Eva Wilma and John Herbert the program was shown on Tupi on channels 3 and 6 Another characteristic of television productions of this early period was live impromptu as there was no videotape The high costs of TV sets which were imported restricted the access of the media to the urban elites of major cities 1 Technical resources were primary offering broadcasters just enough to keep the stations on the air It was during that period that TV news and telenovelas were established 1 In 1954 Victor Costa decided to buy Radio Mundial owned by Diario da Noite in Rio which held the concession of channel 11 in the city Victor already had with the purchase of Radio Excelsior the concession of channel 9 in Sao Paulo making a clear that Costa s desire decided to start a new network of TV stations The first broadcast of soccer matches were broadcast on Record with the narration by Geraldo Jose de Almeida It would become the first television network to broadcast live sporting events like soccer matches Also the death of President Getulio Vargas was only reported at 01 00 PM when Tupi in Rio was on the air In Sao Paulo channel 3 premiered the first children s production Sitio do Pica Pau Amarelo based on the books by author Monteiro Lobato It was shown once a week and was also broadcast on Emissoras Associadas in Rio On July the 15th 1955 TV Rio went on air on channel 13 at the initiative of Joao Batista de Amaral brother in law of Machado de Carvalho as an affiliate of Emissoras Unidas Its studios and offices was located in the Casino Atlantico in Atlantic Avenue postal 6 Copacabana The two stations decided to build a link between two cities same exactly as what the technological method came from the US linking city by city until completion of the route TV Rio built its link to Guaratingueta half of distance from Rio and Record end a link to Sao Paulo In the same year Victor Costa acquired TV Paulista on channel 5 preferring to what he bought a station ready to have the assembly of the new one with concession given by Radio Excelsior The studios were relocated to Palmeiras Street in Santa Cecilia where Radio Nacional Sao Paulo and Excelsior were located Soon afterwards Victor Costa offered the concession of channel 9 in Sao Paulo up for sale On the 8th of September 1955 TV Itacolomi went on the air in Belo Horizonte on channel 4 the first television station in the state of Minas Gerais The station was owned and operated by and the key station of TV Tupi and Emissoras Associadas The advent of videotape around 1960 brought imported programs to Brazilian television 1 As a typical characteristic of countries developing their television systems imported shows dominated the programming for much of the decade but their presence also stimulated some efforts at creating local networks 1 TV Tupi soon faced strong competition from yet another network TV Excelsior owned by Victor Costa who would begin building a national TV network Expansion Rede Globo s beginnings edit nbsp Theatre Record the main headquarters of RecordTV in Sao Paulo nbsp Centro de Televisao da Anhanguera in Osasco headquarters of SBT the second largest TV network in Brazil nbsp The TV Bandeirantes Tower is the tallest tower in the city of Sao Paulo and one of the largest in South America Television became a mass medium in Brazil earlier than in most developing countries 1 The military dictatorship which took power in 1964 saw audiovisual communication as a tool for creating a stronger national identity a broader consumer economy and controlling political information 1 The military pushed television deeper into the population by subsidizing credit for set sales building national microwave and satellite distribution systems which prompted the growth of Rede Globo which they chose as a privileged partner 1 6 TV Excelsior an opponent of the regime on the other hand was forced to close after losing government advertisement Globo launched a few months after the 1964 coup created the first true national network by the late 1960s 1 Censorship of news was extensive under the military governments between 1966 and 1978 but it also encouraged national television program production 1 In the early 1970s several government ministers pushed the commercial networks to develop more Brazilian programming and reduce reliance on imported programs particularly those with violent and sexual content 1 While Globo adopted an international model for operations 90 percent of its content was produced in Brazil 6 The 1960s represented a formative period for television development 1 Telenovelas had largely been patterned after those in other Latin American countries even using imported scripts but during that decade they were developed into a considerably more sophisticated genre specifically after the airing of Beto Rockfeller a well produced story about a Rio de Janeiro good lifer in 1968 by Tupi 1 By the 1970s telenovelas were the most popular programs and dominated prime time on the major networks Globo and Tupi 1 Globo in particular began to attract major writers and actors from both film and theater to work in its telenovelas 1 The Brazilian telenovelas became good enough as commercial television entertainment to be exported throughout Latin America Eastern Europe Asia and Africa 1 Brazilian exports reached over a hundred countries and the programs have often proved to be great international hits 1 This is particularly the case with historical telenovelas such as Escrava Isaura 1 Alongside telenovelas the show de auditorio a form of variety show was carried over from radio which often featured a mix of entertainment music comedy and game show segments These shows appealed heavily to the lower and middle classes and often featured content that was considered sensational and vulgar for the period leading to them falling out of favour by the late 1960s due to the military government 7 8 Color broadcasting edit Between 1962 and 1963 Rede Tupi and Rede Excelsior made the first unofficial transmissions in color in specific programs in the city of Sao Paulo both using NTSC On February 19 1972 color broadcasting officially began using the PAL M TV standard This has the same line frame rate as NTSC but better color encoding Satellite television broadcasts began in 1960 Rede Tupi was the pioneer satellite broadcaster when it broadcast Brasilia s opening in the spring of that year and soon it began select nationwide broadcasts thru satellite transmission The rise of Rede Globo edit From the early 1970s to late 1980s Globo dominated both the audience and the development of television programming 1 It had a 60 80 share in major cities at any given time 1 As television researcher Joseph Straubhaar declared even people who might have had questions about the news almost always accepted the Globo novelas 6 During this period Globo was accused of being the mouthpiece of the dictatorship mainly because of its omission in covering the Diretas Ja movement in which thousands of Brazilians gathered on public squares to demand a direct election for president 1 In 1980 Tupi went bankrupt and was closed by the military government Its signal was split and given to Silvio Santos who launched SBT and Adolpho Bloch who launched Rede Manchete Since Tupi s disappearance Globo virtually dominated the market alone The only time its leadership was threatened was when Manchete aired Pantanal in 1990 Nevertheless Manchete never achieved the same success with any other of its telenovelas and would have the same fate of Tupi ceasing its operations in May 1999 and having its signal replaced by that of RedeTV With Globo dominating the ratings other broadcast television networks found themselves pursuing smaller more specific audience segments largely defined by social class 1 SBT targeted lower middle class working class and poor audiences mostly with variety and game shows 1 in addition to soaps imported from Mexico s Televisa This strategy gained it a consistent second place in ratings for most of the 1980s and 1990s 1 On the other hand Manchete initially targeted a more elite audience with news high budget telenovelas and imported programs but found the segment too small to gain an adequate advertiser support 1 Bandeirantes tended to emphasize news public affairs and sports 1 All three ultimately wished to pursue a general audience with general appeal programming such as telenovelas but discovered that such efforts would not generate an audience sufficient to pay for the increased programming costs 1 In 1984 Globo initially supported the military government against Diretas Ja a popular campaign for the direct election of a civilian government 1 while other television networks most notably Manchete supported the change Perceiving that it might literally lose its audience to competitors Globo switched sides and supported the transition to a civilian regime which was indirectly elected in a compromise situation 1 The new political circumstances immediately reduced political censorship and pressure on broadcasters 1 In the 1990s UHF television channels were launched such as music oriented MTV Brasil and the Catholic channel Rede Vida Also during that period TV Cultura and Rede Record both based in Sao Paulo began to air their signal in national broadcasting systems Audience decline Globo versus Record edit Further information List of most watched Brazil television broadcasts of 2019 and List of most watched Brazil television broadcasts of 2020 Rede Globo ratings at 9 p m 2000 2015 Year Telenovela Share 2000 2001 Lacos de Familia 44 9 2001 Porto dos Milagres 44 6 0 3 2002 O Clone 47 0 2 4 2002 2003 Esperanca 38 0 9 0 2003 Mulheres Apaixonadas 46 6 8 6 2003 2004 Celebridade 46 0 6 2004 2005 Senhora do Destino 50 4 4 4 2005 America 49 4 1 0 2006 Belissima 48 5 0 9 2006 2007 Paginas da Vida 46 8 1 7 2007 Paraiso Tropical 42 8 4 0 2007 2008 Duas Caras 41 1 1 7 2008 2009 A Favorita 39 5 1 6 2009 Caminho das Indias 38 8 0 7 2009 2010 Viver a Vida 35 8 3 0 2010 2011 Passione 35 1 0 7 2011 Insensato Coracao 36 0 9 2011 2012 Fina Estampa 39 2 00 2012 Avenida Brasil 39 2012 2013 Salve Jorge 34 5 00 2013 2014 Amor a Vida 36 2 00 2014 Em Familia 30 6 00 2014 2015 Imperio 33 3 00 2015 Babilonia 25 8 00 1 comprises approximately 62 000 households in the Greater Sao Paulo area 9 Source UOLThe 2000s saw the decline of television audience in the country as internet access grew rapidly 10 The daily average of TV sets turned on dropped from 65 in 1982 1991 to 42 in 2008 11 In the decade the top five TV networks in the country lost altogether 4 3 of their share 12 SBT lost 44 of its viewership in the prime time while Globo lost 9 13 The biggest decline for Globo were in its showcase telenovelas aired at 9 p m which reached an all time low during the decade The network s latest telenovela in the time slot Viver a Vida scored the lowest ratings of the past ten years 14 According to Renata Pallottin a professor at University of Sao Paulo s Art and Communication School this happens because recent telenovelas which has the same basic story sketches since the 1970s has proven to be unappealing to younger audiences who watch American television series on cable TV or surf the web instead 11 As such telenovelas audience grew significantly older and richer in the past decade 11 While other TV networks face the lack of interest among viewers one TV network weathered the decline fairly unscathed Rede Record In fact the network rose its audience by 123 in the decade partially due to investments of over US 150 million per year 13 Although Globo maintains more than the double of Record s average ratings the latter has been able to surpass Globo s audience on specific time slots such as Sundays 15 and mornings 16 In some state capitals such as Goiania Fortaleza and Belem for instance Record s Domingo Espetacular already surpasses the audience of Globo s Fantastico 17 while Record s Fala Brasil already surpasses Globo s Bom Dia Brasil in Sao Paulo Globo also faces a decrease of its audience in Rio de Janeiro where the network is headquartered On December 11 2009 Record surpassed the audience of Globo in Rio during the broadcast of The Elite Squad 18 Almost a year later on December 2 2010 Globo came on an unprecedented third place in the Greater Rio ratings in the 11 p m 12 a m time slot 19 On a previous occasion Record came first in the area s ratings from 7 a m to 12 a m on September 8 2010 20 A recent research conducted by Deloitte showed that surfing the web has surpassed watching TV as the entertainment activity preferred by most Brazilians 12 Other forms of entertainment such as watching DVDs and viewing cable TV have also increased their popularity significantly From 2000 to 2010 the number of households with access to cable TV increased 152 while the DVD market saw an expansion of 430 in the same period 12 The number of TV sets not turned on in any of the free to air channels which indicates that they are being used for watching DVD or cable TV or playing videogames also increased from 3 5 to 6 7 of the share in the decade 12 In 2010 it further increased to 7 7 of the share surpassing the audience of Record Cable TV accounted for 4 5 of this while the remaining 3 2 accounted for watching DVD and or playing videogames 21 Cable television editCable television services in Brazil were allowed to start business in 1995 according to federal law 8977 95 Since then there were no major advances in terms of access to the technology Brazil has one of the lowest number of households with access to cable television as a result of the combination of high prices charged by providers and the reduced purchasing power of most Brazilians 22 Cable television in Brazil as of 2010 was available to only 10 million households around 30 million viewers which represents less than 20 of the country s population 23 Most of the users are from the upper class 70 22 While the lower class represents 50 of the country s households only 1 of them have access to cable television 22 nbsp The Digital TV Tower Brasilia dubbed Flor do Cerrado The cable television market used to be almost monopolized by satellite TV provider SKY Brasil and cable TV provider NET both of them partially owned by Organizacoes Globo However in 2010 Globo sold 19 of its shares in SKY to the DirecTV Group making Globo owner of only 7 of SKY shares 24 In the same year Embratel made an offer to buy all of Globo s shares in NET for R 4 58 billion 25 even though Embratel has to wait the approval of Bill N 119 that will allow companies from countries other than Brazil to own cable operations Since 2006 large national and international phone operators such as Embratel Telefonica and Oi began to enter the market Due to cable regulations telephone companies are using DTH rather than IPTV to launch their TV operations In 2010 s third trimester the market share of cable companies was NET with 44 8 SKY with 25 7 Via Embratel with 9 8 Telefonica TV Digital with 5 1 OiTV with 3 1 Abril TVA with 1 8 and smaller companies with 9 6 of the market 26 Digital television editDigital terrestrial television was officially adopted by Brazil on 2 December 2007 using the ISDB T International standard a variant of the Japanese ISDB standards which uses H 264 MPEG 4 AVC for video compression and HE AAC for audio compression and support for mobile television using the 1seg standard The government estimated that it would take seven years for DTT service to become available across the country beginning with the greater Sao Paulo metropolitan Belo Horizonte in early March 2008 and Rio de Janeiro in late May 2008 Analog television will be discontinued in phases until 2023 27 Major Brazilian networks broadcast their digital feeds in 1080i high definition television DTV in Brazil supports interactive television through the Ginga platform 28 On 18 January 2022 the Forum Sistema Brasileiro TV Digital Terrestre SBTVD Forum recommended the Brazilian Government new technologies that would lead to Brazil s TV 3 0 system including the use of ATSC 3 0 technologies in the new standard The new system is expected to begin deployment by 2024 29 Free national terrestrial channels editChannel Category PositionGlobo General Commercial nbsp Record General Commercial nbsp SBT General Commercial nbsp Band Bandeirantes General Commercial nbsp RedeTV General Commercial nbsp TV Cultura Public Commercial nbsp TV Brasil Public nbsp Rede Brasil General Commercial nbsp TV A Critica General Commercial nbsp Gazeta General Commercial nbsp TV Aparecida General Religious Commercial nbsp Record News News Commercial nbsp Rede Vida Religious Commercial nbsp TV Mais Familia General Religious Commercial nbsp Rede Meio Norte General Commercial nbsp CNT General Commercial nbsp Cancao Nova Religious nbsp RIT Religious nbsp NGT General Educational nbsp RBTV General Commercial nbsp Top TV Music nbsp TV Novo Tempo Religious nbsp TV Diario General Commercial nbsp Rede Cidade Verde General Commercial nbsp Rede Familia RFTV General Commercial nbsp ISTV General Educational nbsp RBI General Commercial nbsp Rede 21 Sport Commercial nbsp Canal Gov Government nbsp Rede Minas Public nbsp TV Uniao Rede Uniao Teenage nbsp Amazon Sat Nature Eco General Commercial nbsp TV Pai Eterno Religious nbsp TV8 General Commercial nbsp Astral TV General Commercial nbsp Boa Vontade TV Religious nbsp TVT Government nbsp Ideal TV General Commercial nbsp TV da Gente Afro Educational nbsp Futura Educational nbsp TV Escola Educational nbsp SescTV Educational nbsp Rede Gospel Religious nbsp Rede Genesis Religious nbsp TV Camara local Subchannel Government nbsp Kiss TV Subchannel Music nbsp Rede Seculo 21 Religious nbsp Rede Super Religious nbsp TV Evangelizar Religious nbsp RIT Noticias News nbsp Rede Boas Novas Religious nbsp TV Feliz Religious nbsp TV Nazare Religious nbsp TV Senado Government nbsp TV Universal Religious nbsp Rede Mundial Religious nbsp TV Mundo Maior Religious nbsp TV Plenitude Religious nbsp Canal Saude Subchannel Public nbsp TV Camara Government nbsp TV Assembleia Subchannel Government nbsp TV Justica Government nbsp Ponto Jus Subchannel Government nbsp TV Verdade Religious nbsp Terra Viva Rural nbsp MCI TV Subchannel Music nbsp Canal Educacao Subchannel Public nbsp Univesp TV Subchannel Public nbsp Multicultura Educacao Subchannel Public nbsp Rede Vida Educacao Subchannel Educational nbsp Future free national terrestrial channels Channel Category SituationRede Massa General Commercial From a free regional terrestrial broadcaster with the intention of national expansionRTN TV General Commercial From a free regional terrestrial broadcaster with the intention of national expansionTV Gazeta Goias General Commercial From a free regional terrestrial broadcaster with the intention of national expansionFree regional terrestrial channels Channel Category LocationTV Parana Turismo E Parana Public State of ParanaCBI TV Mega TV Religious Commercial Sao PauloRede Sul de Televisao TV Urbana General Commercial State of Rio Grande do SulTV Transamerica General Commercial Curitiba State of ParanaSanta Cecilia TV Educational Coast of the state of Sao PauloTV Thathi Educational Some parts of the interior of the state of Sao PauloTV Aldeia Public State of AcreFonte TV Religious Educational State of GoiasTV Horizonte Religious State of Minas GeraisRede New Interactive Commercial In some regions98 Live General Commercial State of Minas GeraisCJC Religious Rio de JaneiroRBC Religious State of PernambucoRede 41 Educational Some parts of the interior of the state of Sao PauloTVCI RCI Religious Commercial State of ParanaTV Ativa General Commercial Some parts of the interior of the state of Sao PauloTV Verde Vale Educational State of CearaTV Terra do Sol Public State of CearaTV Padre Cicero Religious State of CearaTV Mato Grosso General Commercial State of Mato GrossoTVM Belem General Commercial State of ParaTV Templo Religious Sao PauloTV 10 Maringa General Commercial State of ParanaTV Caravelas Public Community Some parts of the interior of the state of Minas GeraisCOM Brasil TV Public Community Rebroadcast by some affiliatesUTV Brasil General Commercial In some regions of the state of Sao Paulo Goias and DFCanal Um Europa Religious Sao PauloTV FL Religious Sao PauloRede America General Commercial Some regions of the state of Sao Paulo and Minas GeraisUniverso TV Religious State of Minas GeraisCanal Empreender Entrepreneurship Commercial Sao PauloRegional Educational Subchannels RES Subchannel Educational In some affiliatesChannels from prefectures and other small companies Public Commercial In some citiesDefunct extinct or replaced free terrestrial channels Channel Category PeriodTV Shoptime Commercial 1995 2023ZTV General Commercial 2022 2023TV Brasil 2 Public 2019 2023Loading Pop and Geek Commercial 2020 2021TV NBR Government 1998 2019Cine Films Commercial 2016 2019Esporte Interativo BR Sport Commercial 2007 2018TV Ultrafarma Commercial 2015 2017TVCOM General Commercial 1995 2015TV Shop Tour Commercial 1987 2015Mix TV Music and Young People Commercial 2005 2014MTV Brasil Youth and Entertainment Commercial 1996 2009TV Show Time Commercial 2006 2008Rede Mulher Woman Commercial 1994 2007TVE Brasil Public 1975 2007TV JB General Commercial 2007TV General Commercial 1999Manchete General Commercial 1983 1999TV Jovem Pan General Commercial 1991 1995Rede OM General Commercial 1982 1993REI General Commercial 1969 1989Rede Tupi General Commercial 1950 1980TV Continental General Commercial 1959 1971TV Excelsior General Commercial 1960 1970Emissoras Unidas General Commercial 1959 1967Displaced free terrestrial channels Channel Category SituationPolishop TV Commercial 2020 from free TV to cable and satellite TVRede CentralTV Brasil General Commercial 2019 from free TV to cable and satellite TVLife Channel Brasil General Commercial 2018 from free TV to cable and satellite TVTV Mackenzie Academic Scientific 2008 2017 from free TV to web TVTV Ra Tim Bum Subchannel Children 2008 2016 from free TV to cable and satellite TVUlbra TV General Commercial 2005 2013 from own broadcaster to affiliate of TV CulturaPlayTV General Commercial 2006 2008 from free TV to cable and satellite TVCanal Rural Rural Commercial 1998 1999 from free TV to cable and satellite TVGloboNews News Commercial 1996 2016 from encoded TV to cable and satellite TVESPN Sport Commercial 1989 1994 from free TV to cable and satellite TVCable and satellite editMajor pay television providers are Claro cable and satellite SKY satellite Vivo TV cable IPTV satellite Oi TV satellite television National channels Arte1 HD simulcast BandNews HD simulcast BandSports HD simulcast Bis HD simulcast Canal Brasil HD simulcast Canal OFF HD simulcast Canal Rural SD Only Canal Viva HD simulcast Chef TV SD Only CineBrasil TV SD Only CNN Brasil Combate pay per view channel available in HD simulcast Curta HD simulcast ESPN Brasil HD simulcast Fish TV HD simulcast Futura HD simulcast Gloob HD simulcast GNT HD simulcast GloboNews HD simulcast Globosat HD simulcast Jovem Pan News HD simulcast Multishow HD simulcast Music Box Brazil HD simulcast PlayTV SD Only Premiere FC pay per view channels available in HD simulcast Prime Box Brazil HD simulcast Rede Telecine All channels available in HD simulcast Telecine Premium Telecine Action Telecine Touch Telecine Fun Telecine Pipoca Telecine Cult Shoptime com SD Only SporTV HD simulcast SporTV 2 HD simulcast SporTV 3 HD simulcast TV Ra Tim Bum HD simulcast Woohoo HD Simulcast ZooMoo HD simulcast Sexy Hot SD Only Sextreme SD Only Multinational channels A amp E HD simulcast AMC HD simulcast Animal Planet HD simulcast AXN HD simulcast Baby TV SD Only Cartoon Network HD simulcast Cartoonito HD simulcast Cinecanal HD simulcast Cinemax HD simulcast Comedy Central HD simulcast Discovery Channel HD simulcast Discovery Civilization HD simulcast Discovery HD Theater HD only Discovery HD World HD only Discovery Kids HD simulcast Discovery Home amp Health HD simulcast Discovery Science HD simulcast Discovery Turbo HD simulcast Disney Channel HD simulcast Dog TV HD only E HD simulcast ESPN HD simulcast ESPN Extra HD simulcast ESPN HD simulcast Eurochannel SD Only Euronews SD Only Fashion TV HD simulcast Film amp Arts HD simulcast Fox Sports HD simulcast Fox Sports 2 HD simulcast Star Channel HD simulcast FX HD simulcast Food Network HD simulcast History HD simulcast H2 HD simulcast Nickelodeon HD simulcast ID Investigacao Discovery HD simulcast I Sat SD Only Lifetime HD simulcast Megapix HD simulcast MTV HD simulcast absolutely perfect quality MTV Live HD only National Geographic Channel HD simulcast Nick Jr HD simulcast Paramount Network HD simulcast Sony Channel HD simulcast Space HD simulcast Studio Universal HD simulcast Sundance Channel HD only SyFy HD simulcast The Golf Channel HD only TBS HD simulcast TCM SD Only TLC HD simulcast TNT HD simulcast TNT Series HD Simulcast Tooncast SD Only TruTV HD simulcast Universal TV HD simulcast Warner Channel HD simulcast HBO HBO HD simulcast HBO2 HD simulcast HBO Family HD simulcast HBO Signature HD simulcast HBO Plus HD simulcast HBO Plus 2 SD Only HBO Pop HD simulcast HBO Xtreme HD simulcast HBO Mundi HD simulcast Playboy TV HD simulcast Venus SD Only Glitz Discontinued Criticism editAs referenced by journalist Eugenio Bucci the problem of audiovisual media ownership concentration is relatively sharper in Brazil when compared to the United States 30 According to the study Donos da Midia English Media owners Rede Globo alone controls 340 television stations more than SBT and Rede Record combined 31 This is largely attributed to the fact that television in the country was launched in the early 1950s by the private sector without much state regulation and control 32 in a manner very similar to the system of for profit private networks of American TV and away from the state owned public TV stations in Europe and in the Communist bloc The first national public television network TV Brasil was only launched on December 2 2007 before that since the 1960s there were local public educative TV stations controlled by the state s governments the same day that digital television was introduced in the country initially limited to the cities of Brasilia Rio de Janeiro Salvador Sao Luis and Sao Paulo citation needed Intellectuals and journalists in Brazil mainly in the left of the political spectrum criticize Brazilian TV as being too much Americanized and promoter of irrational superficial consumerism and of having a general conservative bias neglecting representation and respect in relation to traditionally oppressed classes and peoples like the Afro Brazilian peoples and religion Native Brazilians poor women favela inhabitants atheists peasants and LGBT people citation needed Most viewed channels editThis list does not include thematical TV channels streaming games and Internet YouTube and others Viewing shares 2023 Position Channel Group Share of total viewing 1 Globo Organizacoes Globo 41 0 2 Record Central Record de Comunicacao 12 9 3 SBT Grupo Silvio Santos 11 5 4 Cable and Satellite TV channels Cable and Satellite TV channels 10 3 5 Band Grupo Bandeirantes de Comunicacao 6 0 6 TV Brasil Brazil Communication Company 2 1 7 RedeTV Grupo TeleTV 2 0 8 TV Cultura Padre Anchieta Foundation 1 9 9 Rede Brasil Sistema de Comunicacao Pantanal Ltda 1 5 10 TV A Critica Rede Calderaro de Comunicacao 1 4 11 Gazeta Fundacao Casper Libero 1 3 12 TV Aparecida Rede Aparecida de Comunicacao 1 2 13 Record News Central Record de Comunicacao 1 0 14 Rede Vida INBRAC Grupo Monteiro de Barros de Comunicacao 0 8 15 TV Mais Familia Grupo Patati Patata 0 6 16 Rede Meio Norte Grupo Meio Norte de Comunicacao 0 5 17 CNT Organizacoes Martinez 0 4 18 Cancao Nova Fundacao Joao Paulo II 0 3 19 RIT Fundacao Internacional de Comunicacao 0 2 20 NGT Fundacao de Fatima Fundacao Veneza 0 2 Others Other terrestrial channels 2 9 See also editList of Latin American television channels List of newspapers in Brazil List of Portuguese language television channels News media of Brazil pt Radio in BrazilReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Straubhaar Joseph BRAZIL The Museum of Broadcast Communications Archived from the original on 22 June 2011 Retrieved 27 June 2023 TV Ano 70 O Inicio Episodio 1 archived from the original on 2021 12 21 retrieved 2021 04 14 Renato Cruz 2008 TV digital no Brasil tecnologia versus politica Sao Paulo Brazil Editora Senac p 39 ISBN 978 85 7359 755 4 Sonia Maria Dorce Esta no ar Guia do Estudante guiadoestudante abril com br Archived from the original on 2013 12 18 Digital TV in Brazil a path to health democracy Rnp br 2005 01 21 Retrieved 2013 11 04 a b c Shah Angilee Network Builder Describes Role in Brazil s TV Globo Archived 2011 06 05 at the Wayback Machine UCLA International Institute Newcomb Horace 2014 02 03 Encyclopedia of Television Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 19472 7 Cole Richard R 1996 Communication in Latin America Journalism Mass Media and Society Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8420 2559 1 Audiencia De Televisao IBOPE 2010 10 07 Retrieved 2013 11 04 in Portuguese Tomazzoni Marco Internet bate TV aberta como passatempo nacional Ultimo Segundo August 31 2010 a b c Audiencia das novelas da Globo Archived 2011 06 15 at the Wayback Machine Veja November 2008 a b c d Internet bate TV aberta como passatempo nacional Ultimosegundo ig com br Retrieved 2013 11 04 a b in Portuguese Feltrin Ricardo SBT perde um terco de telespectadores na decada Folha de S Paulo December 18 2009 in Portuguese Prado Antonio Carlos Viver a vida e trair Istoe February 12 2010 Record consolida segundo lugar e se aproxima da Globo Ultimosegundo ig com br Retrieved 2013 11 04 Salto da Record foi maior no Rio e a noite Ultimosegundo ig com br Retrieved 2013 11 04 Audiencia do Fantastico chegou a cair pela metade em dez anos Ultimosegundo ig com br Retrieved 2013 11 04 Com Tropa de Elite Record supera audiencia da Globo no Rio Diversao terra com br Retrieved 2013 11 04 Globo perde audiencia e fica em 3º lugar no Rio Oreporter com Retrieved 2013 11 04 Record deixa Globo para trĂAs e lidera audiĂSncia no Rio de Janeiro pela 1AS vez Contigo abril com br 1976 08 29 Retrieved 2013 11 04 Ibope de TV paga DVD e games ultrapassa Record e e o novo vice lider Noticias uol com br Retrieved 2013 11 04 a b c in Portuguese TV por assinatura Archived 2010 04 16 at the Wayback Machine Instituto Brasileiro de Defesa do Consumidor TV paga no Brasil passa barreira de 10 milhoes de assinantes Noticias uol com br Retrieved 2013 11 04 Globo vende parte das acoes na Sky Oglobo globo com 8 June 2010 Retrieved 2013 11 04 in Portuguese 1 teleco com br teleco com br Retrieved 2013 11 04 Brazil Delays Analog Switch Off to 2018 Meio amp Mensagem 30 July 2013 Retrieved 25 January 2014 Brazil s Ginga middleware slips to 2013 Advanced Television 2 March 2012 Retrieved 12 April 2014 Key ATSC 3 0 Technologies Selected By Brazil For Its Next Generation Digital TV Standard Press release Advanced Television Systems Committee 18 January 2022 Retrieved 25 January 2022 BUCCI Eugenio Sobre Etica e Imprensa Sao Paulo Companhia das Letras 2000 in Portuguese Donos da midia As redes de TV Archived 2011 10 08 at the Wayback Machine Lima Venicio April 24 2010 Quem controla a midia Observatorio da Imprensa in Portuguese 586 ISSN 1519 7670 Archived from the original on April 29 2010 Here in Brazil we always had concentration on media control because unlike what happens in the rest of the world there has never been concern from our legislators with cross ownership of mediaFurther reading editReuters Institute for the Study of Journalism University of Oxford 2020 Brazil Digital News Report UK OCLC 854746354 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a author has generic name help External links edit in Portuguese 10 anos da Lei de TV a Cabo sobre conquistas e desafios in Portuguese SBTVD Development in Brazil Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Television in Brazil amp oldid 1189153095, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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