Type | Radio, television and online |
---|---|
Country | |
Availability | Regional |
Founded | 26 May 2006 (Current form) |
0.40% (TV advert, 2014–15)[1] 1.27% (TV rating, 2014–15)[1] <1.00% (Radio rating, 2014–15)[1] | |
Revenue | €18.06 million (2017)[2] |
(€1.11 million) (2017)[2] | |
Headquarters | Kamenicki put 45, Novi Sad |
Broadcast area | Serbia |
Owner | Government of Serbia |
Key people | Jozef Klem (General Director) |
Launch date | 29 November 1949 (Radio) 26 November 1975 (Television) |
Former names | TVNS, RTS NS |
RTV 1, RTV 2 | |
Radio stations | RNS 1, RNS 2, RNS 3, Oradio |
Official website | www |
Radio Television of Vojvodina (Serbian Cyrillic: Радио Телевизија Војводине, Serbian: Radio Televizija Vojvodine, Hungarian: Vajdasági Rádió és Televízió, Slovak: Radio Televizia Vojvodiny, Romanian: Radioteleviziunea Voivodinei, Rusyn: Радіо Телебачення Воєводини; abbr. РТВ/RTV) is the regional public broadcaster in the Serbian province of Vojvodina. Its headquarters is in Novi Sad.
History
Formerly, it was known as Radio Television Novi Sad (Serbian: Радио Телевизија Нови Сад (РТНС)/Radio Televizija Novi Sad (RTNS)). The television service was launched in 1975 on the basis of the regional Radio Television Belgrade relay transmitters. In 1992 Radio Television Novi Sad, together with Radio Television Belgrade (RTB) and Radio Television Pristina (RTP), became a part of Radio Television of Serbia, with RTNS serving as the network affiliate for Vojvodina providing multilingual programming in addition to RTS' national programs.
In 1999, the RTNS studios in the Mišeluk neighborhood of Novi Sad were bombed and destroyed by the NATO airforce. After the war, the RTNS was moved to the new building in the city centre.
In May 2006, the Radio Television of Serbia (Public Service of Serbia), based in Belgrade, ended its local services in Vojvodina, and with the reorganization of broadcasting services, Radio Television of Vojvodina (Public Service of Vojvodina), with headquarters in Novi Sad, was now formed on the basis of the old RTNS and part of the RTS bureaus for the region.
Languages
Radio Television of Vojvodina produces programmes in 10 languages: Serbian, Hungarian, Croatian, Slovak, Rusyn, Romanian, Romany, Macedonian, Bunjevac language and, since 2011, German.
Certain TV shows are also translated into Sign language. In addition, Serbian-subtitled versions of Deutsche Welle's English-language programmes are broadcast.
Radio
RTV has the following radio channels:
- Radio Novi Sad 1 (Радио Нови Сад 1), in Serbian
- Radio Novi Sad 2 (Радио Нови Сад 2), in Hungarian
- Radio Novi Sad 3 (Радио Нови Сад 3), in Croatian, Slovak, Rusyn, Romanian and Romany
- Oradio (online radio station)
Television
Current channels
- Rаdio television of Vojvodina 1 (Радио телевизија Војводине 1), in Serbian.
- Radio television of Vojvodina 2 (Рaдио телевизија Војводине 2), in Serbian and minority languages.
Former channels
1999 to 2006
Before the transformation of television into Radio Television of Vojvodina, the Radio Television Novi Sad had two channels:
- TV Novi Sad 1 (TВ Нoви Сад 1)
- TV Novi Sad 2 (ТВ Нови Сад 2)
Before 1999
Before the NATO bombing, the Radio Television Novi Sad had two channels:
- TV Novi Sad (ТВ Нови Сад)
- TV Novi Sad plus (TВ Нови Сад плус)
Programming
International
Original name | Local name | Origin |
---|---|---|
Tarzán | Тарзан Tarzan | United States |
The Brothers Karamazov | Браћа Карамазови Braća Karamazovi | Russia |
Les Jurés | Доба злочина Doba zločina | France |
Frasier | Фрејжер Frejžer | United States |
Nothing Too Good for a Cowboy | Каубоју никад удовољити Kauboju nikad udovoljiti | Canada |
Rachael Ray | Рејчел Реј Rejčel Rej | United States |
La tassinara | Таксисткиња Taksistkinja | Italy |
Domestic
See also
References
- 1 2 3 Ipsos Strategic Marketing (2015). "Analiza medijskog tržišta u Srbiji" (PDF) (in Serbian). Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 September 2018. Retrieved 2 October 2018 – via Regulatorno telo za elektronske medije.
- 1 2 "Bilans uspeha (2017) - RTV". Agencija za privredne registre (in Serbian). Retrieved 2 October 2018.
- ↑ "Čarde na Dunavu". Radio-televizija Vojvodine (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 2012-06-21. Retrieved 2012-06-15.
- ↑ "Kuhinjica". Radio-televizija Vojvodine (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 2012-05-21. Retrieved 2012-06-15.
- ↑ "Njuškanje". Radio-televizija Vojvodine (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 2011-05-02. Retrieved 2012-06-15.