Television in Phinbella
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Phinbella’s television service was first introduced in -31BP, at which time the PhTA began trial broadcasts on September 10, -31BP. Phinbella became the second recipient in the Phineonesian region after Forajasaki when television broadcasting began on December 20, -29BP with the opening of TQKA-TV Channel 5/8, which is a public television service and is now known as FPPO 1, making it the first television in Phinbella and also the Free area of the Federation. On April 20, -20BP, the first pan-Phinbellan national television broadcast was launched in Tampines and it covered the entire Tampines area and much of Dimmsdale with the name Civilian Broadcasting Corporation Television and is now known as KBS 1TV, and on that date it is celebrated every year as Pan-Phinbellan Television Day. All televisions in Phinbella have been regulated by both government agencies, the Phinbellan Ministry of Communications and Multimedia and the Phinbellan Broadcasting Commission. Until today, there are several national television networks, of which the five largest television networks are KBS, SBS, NNN, SCB and MegaTXBN. Most of its major television studios are located in Nilam Puri, Kebun Jerok and Pandensor, Negara Awan and in Kampung Kelaboran, Pos Appat. Phinbella is the second country to introduce the MUSE Hi-Vision system after Hoenn, and it was introduced in -5BP and subsequently all terrestrial channels have converted it in stages in RP 2615.
Every household in Phinbella that has a television set is allowed to be mandated to pay a television license fee to funding all public broadcasters in Phinbella, including KBS, but TDPP is exempt from funding because it is a government-owned broadcaster, commercial adveristments are the second revenue for funding all public broadcasters. The payment varies from ðƒ4.00 to ðƒ20.00 only, according to the ability of each depending on the method and time of payment. This fee can be waived if the household cannot afford it, and there is no compulsion to pay it, only the amount it allocates can finance it.
History
Terrestrial television
In Phinbella, there are ten national television networks - of which five are owned by three national public broadcasters FPPO, KBS and TPP, and eight commercial network key stations. Although some of the television network names on Phinbella shown below are only used for news programming other than SBS, the organization also distributes various other programs to many of the same stations. At the end of September RP 2619, five television networks that broadcast in the former entities of the free area of the Federation (public FPPO, commercial ARF, DBS, FPNN and THN) have been made into national television networks but do not expanding the broadcast to the special administrative territories at this time.
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Private commercial networks
Network affiliation name | Number of affiliates | Main station in Negara Awan (Gangwol) |
Secondary station in Danville and Providenciales (Keijinshin) |
Affiliated newspaper(s) | |
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SBS | SBS-RCTP, TSR, GTV, Channel i | RCTP Network Keijinshin, TSR Keijinshin, Channel i Keijinshin | Koran SPhin | ||
NNN | NNN Negara Awan | NNN Danville | Nittoras | ||
THN | THB | ||||
FPNN | TBS | MBS | Maeil | ||
MegaTXBN | Channel TX | Islands | |||
ARF | De Veertiende | SFB | Dōmoyuchi | ||
DBS | DBS TV | DBS Keijinshin | Dōhō | ||
Relay-BRS | RTV-1, RTV-2 | RTV Keijinshin |
Gangwol region
Network | Channel name | Key Flagship (Negara Awan) | Traded as (Negara Awan) |
Transmitter area | Broadcast area | Type (associated newspapers and film company) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Analog | Digital | ||||||||
Call sign | Ch. | Call sign | LCN | ||||||
KBS | KBS 1TV | TQ04-AK-TV | 4 | TQ04-AK1-DTV | 4.1 | Mount Mariveles | Gangwol region (FSCT and minor outlying islands) |
Public broadcasting (none) | |
KBS 2TV | TQ10-AB-TV | 10 | TQ10-AB-DTV | 10.1 | |||||
Berita KBS | TQ04-AK3-DTV | 4.3 | |||||||
FPPO | FPPO 1TV | TQ05-FA-TV | 5 | TQ05-FA-DTV | 5.1 | ||||
FPPO 2TV | TQ08-FB-TV | 8 | TQ08-FB-DTV | 8.1 | |||||
FPPO 3TV | TQ33-FY-TV | 33 | TQ33-FY-DTV | 33.1 | |||||
RTPP | TPP | TQ01-QL-TV | 1 | TQ01-QL-DTV | 1.1 | ||||
SBS | SBS-RCTP | TQ06-KV-TV | 6 | TQ06-KV1-DTV | 6.1 | Commercial broadcasting (Koran Seputar Phinbella and MNC Pictures) | |||
TSR | TQ37-RX-TV | 37 | TQ06-KV2-DTV | 6.2 | |||||
GTV | TQ38-GX-TV | 51 | TQ06-KV3-DTV | 6.3 | |||||
Channel i | TQ39-NX-TV | 30 | TQ06-KV4-DTV | 6.4 | |||||
NNN | Channel 7 | TQ07-AX-TV | 7 | TQ07-AX-DTV | 7.1 | Commercial broadcasting (The Nittoras Post and TBA) | |||
THN | THB | TQ09-CE-TV | 9 | TQ09-CE-DTV | 9.1 | Commercial broadcasting (TBA and TBA) | |||
FPNN | TBS | TQ11-KR-TV | 11 | TQ11-KR-DTV | 11.1 | Commercial broadcasting (The Maeil Times and TBA) | |||
MegaTXBN | Channel TX | TQ12-TX-TV | 12 | TQ12-TX-DTV | 12.1 | Commercial broadcasting (The Islands Times and TBA) | |||
ARF | De Veertiende | TQ14-FX-TV | 14 | TQ14-FX-DTV | 14.1 | Commercial broadcasting (Dōmoyuchi Shimbun and TBA) | |||
TQ15-xx-TV | 15 | TQ15-xx-DTV | 15.1 | Commercial broadcasting (TBA and TBA) | |||||
DBS | DBS TV | TQ16-SQ-TV | 16 | TQ16-SQ-DTV | 16.1 | Commercial broadcasting (The Dōhō Press and TBA) | |||
Relay-BRS | RTV-1 | TQ17-SG-TV | 17 | TQ17-SG-DTV | 17.1 | Commercial broadcasting (TBA and TBA) | |||
RTV-2 | TQ18-xx-TV | 18 | TQ18-xx-DTV | 18.1 |
- This channel are nationwide programming networks, regional service are broadcast in analog channel.
Although there are national broadcasters, especially commercial broadcasters are broadcast to the whole of Phinbella, but the special administrative territories also have their own broadcasters, either public broadcasters or commercial broadcasters. Commercial broadcasters in the special administrative territories, especially Oriental Hispanioéire Taemhwan (which is divided into four linguistic areas) and Tanah Baharu also have local stations in each of their media market areas due to their large territory area.
Digital television
Cable television
Satellite television
Programs
Programming from one station to another varies according to the assigned slot, most generalizations have been made. Most commercial stations start their broadcasts before 5:00 a.m. every morning, it begins with a program schedule filled with selected songs, followed by the Phinbellan national anthem, Die Stem van Phinbella. After that, it was followed by the recitation of the Quran and zikr for the Umraists (majority religion in Phinbella) and several public service announcements before the first program began. The early morning hours are dominated by news and talk shows, usually between 6 and 8 a.m., most stations broadcast programs dedicated to children between 7 and 8 a.m., for them to prepare for school. Afterwards, to be targeted at housewives who complete their homework, late-morning programs such as telenovelas (for local programming) and lifestyle shows will be aired. After the afternoon news, programs to target the youth such as quizzes, documentaries and informative programs were broadcast, most of the stations broadcast foreign dramas, the programming was at 1 to 4 pm. A child-oriented animated show airs starting at 4 p.m. Peak hours between 5 or 6 pm to 8 or 9 pm are also broadcast various shows such as game shows and concerts in national programming, affiliate stations in the Gangwol region (except SBS) broadcast telenovelas. The evening news program airs at 8pm or 9pm and ends at 9 or 10pm. NNN aired a variety of shows for the evening after its main news program. Between 10pm and 12 midnight, they turned to television dramas (such as the Federation dramas in the Free area of the Federation, Creole dramas in Oriental Hispanioéire Taemhwan) that focused on the young and old age groups. The stations were broadcasting late night news at 12 midnight. After that, programs targeted at mature audiences like telenovelas (for Gangwol regional programming) and anime were aired and it didn’t expect enough viewing, most of the stations re-broadcast the missed drama episodes. Most commercial stations end their broadcasts between 1 a.m. and 2 a.m. each night; only KBS and NNN stations in Gangwol region broadcast it 24 hours a day via UHF wavy digital broadcasts. All broadcasters close their broadcasts late nights of Friday and Sunday or other days for technical maintenance. KBS is required to broadcast it 24 hours a day except Friday and Sunday.
Drama
Local animation
Variety shows
Most-viewed channels
Position | Channel | Group | Share of total viewing (%) |
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See also
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