RTL-TVI

RTL-TVI is a private French-language television station in Belgium that is owned by the RTL Group. Within the French-speaking area of Belgium, it is the most popular channel with a 20 percent viewing share. It was one of the first independent television stations in Belgium.

RTL TVI
LaunchedSeptember 12, 1987
NetworkRTL Belgium
Owned byRTL Group
Picture format720p HDTV
Audience share20.1% (2012, [1])
Slogan"Vos émotions en grand !"
(Your emotions in style)
CountryBelgium
LanguageFrench
Broadcast areaBelgium
Luxembourg
Formerly calledRTL Television (1982–1987)
WebsiteRTL TVI
Availability
IPTV
Proximus TVChannel 3 (SD)
Channel 42 (HD)

RTL TVI offers a schedule of family-oriented information, entertainment and fiction genres. In French-speaking Belgium, almost all of the foreign programs are dubbed in French, instead of retaining the original soundtrack.

In Belgium, RTL also operates the French-language channels Club RTL, Kidz RTL and Plug RTL.

History

Since 1955, Télé-Luxembourg, which became RTL Television in 1982, is broadcast from the Dudelange transmitter in Luxembourg. Following the collision of a Belgian military plane with the transmitter on July 31, 1981, the Compagnie Luxembourgeoise de Télédiffusion (CLT) obtained compensation from the Belgian government. The state monopoly on television broadcasting was lifted.

On September 12, 1983 the Belgian version of the JTL show, presented by Jean-Charles De Keyser, Eddy de Wilde and Bibiane Godfroid, was launched from a small studio in Roosevelt villa, Brussels. In December 1985, CLT created a Belgian company called TVI SA, which produced programs and sold advertising space specifically for RTL Belgium.

Belgian TV channel RTL became independent on September 12, 1987 with the launch of RTL-TVI (Télévision Indépendante), which now produces all its programming in Brussels. This was the first independent channel in the French Community of Belgium. The registration by the Government of the French Community on December 21, 1987 enabled it to legally access the Belgian TV advertising market, through its subsidiary IPB. This monopoly was broken in 1989 when the government allowed commercial advertising on RTBF channels.

Programming

References

  1. "Résultats public". CIM. Archived from the original on 21 August 2013. Retrieved 7 August 2013.


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