Česká Televize is Czech public broadcaster owned by the Government of the Czech Republic. The company have six television channels.
History[]
Česká Televize was established on January 1, 1992 as a legal entity that manages its own property based on property transferred from Československá Televize. Česká Televize initially broadcast on ČTV and OK3 programs for the Czech part of the federation, while producing programs for the federal Czechoslovak channel F1 until the breakup of Czechoslovakia and the dissolution of Československá Televize.
With the emergence of the independent Czech Republic and the demise of the federal program circuit, from January 1, 1993 renamed the individual TV channels: on the frequencies of the former ČTV began to broadcast ČT 1, on the frequencies of the former federal circuit F1 started to broadcast ČT 2 and the program OK3 was renamed ČT 3. Other changes took place on February 4, 1994, when ČT 3 was canceled without compensation, and the program ČT 2, which had to release the frequency of the former federal circuit for Nova, was transferred to its frequency. For the next few years Česká Televize has broadcast only on two channels: ČT 1 and ČT 2.
The extension of the program offer occurred after more than eleven years, when the broadcasting of ČT 24 was launched on May 2, 2005. Less than a year later, it was further expanded when the sports channel ČT 4 Sport (nowadays ČT Sport) was broadcast on 10 February 2006 at 9:00. On August 31, 2013, the long-awaited children's and educational channel ČT :D was launched, as well as ČT Art focused on cultural programs. ČT :D and ČT Art share a common frequency from the start, with the children's channel being broadcast from 6:00 to 8:00 pm and the art channel in the rest of the time.
Logos[]
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Česká Televize | ||||||||||
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Former channels |
1993-2022 |