Television in Colombia


Television in Colombia or Colombian television is a media of Colombia. It is characterized for broadcasting telenovelas, series, game shows and TV news. Until 1998 it was a state monopoly. There are two privately owned TV networks and three state-owned TV networks with national coverage, as well as six regional TV networks and dozens of local TV stations. There are numerous cable TV companies operating in Colombia under each Colombian department statutes. These cable companies also develop their own channels, in addition to a variety of international channels. Television in Colombia has always relied on technological advancements from developed countries importing almost all the equipment.

History

Schedule of the first Colombian television broadcast

Source:

13 June 1954 from 21:00


Television in Colombia was inaugurated on 13 June 1954 during the government of General Gustavo Rojas Pinilla, who became impressed with the new invention during a visit to Nazi Germany as a military attaché. Rojas imported Siemens and DuMont equipment and hired Cuban technicians to set up a TV station in time for the commemoration of Rojas's first year in office. A test broadcast was made 1 May 1954 covering Bogotá and Manizales.

Early years

Initially television in Colombia was public, with emphasis on education and cultural topics until, in 1955, the government developed a system of concessions, in which the State was in charge of the television infrastructure and gave programming slots in the channels to private companies known as programadoras. These companies bid for timeslots on the national channel to show their programs. The first of these companies to be founded was Producciones PUNCH, followed quickly by RTI Colombia. In 1963 Inravisión, the public broadcaster, was created. Before that, it was operated by the Televisora Nacional, part of the Radiodifusora Nacional de Colombia. In 1966 the government then tried to privatize the sector, opening bidding for a private license in Bogotá. Caracol, RTI and Punch would bid on the license, but the winner was Consuelo Salgar de Montejo and her Teletigre. Teletigre was a huge success. Mrs. Montejo made an alliance with ABC and brought many of the US shows translated into Spanish to the local viewers. Her programming was so good, that it eclipsed the government owned channel by taking most of the audience. This created envy among many local business men whom felt threatened by an emerging business woman, in a totalitarian male chauvinistic society. The government recognized the power of the media and therefore did not renew the broadcast license for Teletigre. Teletigre would return to state hands and become Tele 9 Corazón and, in 1972 Segunda Cadena, with national coverage. Mrs. Montejo attempted on many occasions to get back in broadcasting TV, but the government controlled monopoly would never give her a slot.

Color broadcasts

On 11 December 1979, regular color television broadcasts started in Colombia using the NTSC standard. Color television had already been introduced in October 1973, when programadora Cenpro Televisión made a color broadcast during an education seminar with Japanese-made equipment. The inauguration and the first match of the 1974 FIFA World Cup were broadcast live in color, but they could be seen in color only on big screens in Bogotá and Cali.
In the 1970s and 1980s, the Colombian national television system had three national networks: Cadena Uno, Cadena Dos and Cadena Tres. The first two worked under the concessions system while the Cadena Tres remained under complete government control and focused on cultural and educational programming.
In 1984, the first of the regional networks in the country was created, Teleantioquia which signed on the next year. Other regional networks, such as Telecaribe and Telepacífico, were created by the then-Minister of Communications Noemí Sanín. In the 1990s Teveandina, Telecafé, and Teleislas would join them.
1987 saw the introduction of cable television to the country after bidding in 1985. TV Cable began operations at the end of December 1987.
The 1991 bid triggered competitiveness as a first step toward privatization. Cadena Dos became Canal A, and the programming companies, which numbered 24 at the time, received from that point slots on one channel to compete among each other for ratings. Cadena Uno would be rebranded Canal Uno in January 1998.
The Colombian Constitution of 1991 and a law in 1995 created the Comisión Nacional de Television, an autonomous entity in charge of policies for public television and regulation of television contents. The CNTV started working in 1995.
In March 1993, more ratings information came to Colombian screens. A court decision forced Inravisión to ban sexual and violent scenes from the franja familiar. Programadoras were now required to state if the program was appropriate for minors to view. In addition, programadoras had to submit their material to Inravisión 72 hours in advance to determine its suitability; television was classified in two types of franjas, including the franja infantil and franja familiar as well as ratings for the profitability and value of the timeslots, ranging from AAA to D.
In 1997, the government through the CNTV gave away licences to set up privately owned television networks. These licences were granted to Cadena radial colombiana and Radio Cadena Nacional, which had started as radio networks and were in the hands of the main economic groups of Colombia. Both private stations began functioning as TV networks on 10 July 1998.
The recession of the Colombian economy during the late 1990s weakened the state-run networks and the programadoras. But the companies that produced the networks' shows also had to face a new landscape of Colombian television, as Caracol and RCN now dominated. Ratings fell steadily as the programadoras became merely production companies for Caracol or RCN or disappeared outright. Names famous in Colombian television, like PUNCH, Cenpro, Producciones JES, the famous Noticiero 24 Horas, and TeVecine, left the public airwaves. Others required financial intervention to stay afloat. The programadoras had continued working independently and never collaborated to establish a better program service against the newly organized privately owned networks.
By 2003, Canal A was almost entirely filled with cultural and educational programs produced by the government-run programadora. In 2003, the only production company left on Canal A was transferred to Canal Uno, which left four programadoras there to receive an equal share of the channel's program slots. Canal A then was turned into the Canal Institucional and became under total control of the government. Later in 2004, Inravisión would be liquidated and Radio Televisión Nacional de Colombia was created.
In 2009 a licence for a third national private television network was to be granted by the Colombian government. Spanish groups PRISA and Planeta, and Venezuelan tycoon Gustavo Cisneros were bidding, each of them allied with Colombian shareholders, for the licence. As of July 2020, there is still no third private channel in Colombia.

Digital television

Satellite and Cable
HDTV-ready television sets have been available in Colombia since 2003. Ten years later cable companies started to broadcast HD content to their subscribers. Satellite television, like DirecTV Colombia, offer HD channels.
Terrestrial
Señal Colombia —a state-owned channel— first made digital terrestrial television broadcast tests in 2006, in northwest Bogotá and downtown Cartagena. Transmissions were made in the three DTV formats. Also the Chinese standard DMB-T/H was considered but couldn't be tested.
On August 28, 2008, Colombia adopted the European digital terrestrial television standard, DVB-T using MPEG4 H.264 and a channel bandwidth of 6 MHz.
On December 28, 2010, Caracol TV and RCN TV officially started digital broadcasts for Bogotá, Medellín and surrounding areas on channels 14 and 15 UHF using DVB-T h264. Señal Colombia and Canal Institucional started test digital broadcasts earlier in 2010.
On January 9, 2012 Colombia adopted the latest European digital terrestrial television standard, DVB-T2, using a channel bandwidth of 6 MHz. The reneging on their earlier decision to use DVB-T meant that many early adopters were left with incompatible set top boxes and televisions.
The transmitters in Bogotá and Medellín transmitted DVB-T2 and DVB-T in parallel for three years. DVB-T from these two masts was switched off in August 2015. The TV transmitters in Barranquilla and Cali were the first T2 only enabled transmitters; these started in May 2012. As with Barranquilla and Cali, all other masts will be DVB-T2 only.
As of June 2020, there are around 40 state owned DVB-T2 masts and around 150 private DVB-T2 masts.
, a Ku satellite system using DVB-S2, is planned and will enable 100% geographic coverage. As of July 2020, it is not yet available.

Programming

NetworkCoverageType
Caracol TVNationalprivate
RCN TVNationalprivate
Canal UnoNationalmix
Señal InstitucionalNationalpublic
Señal ColombiaNationalpublic
TeleantioquiaRegional: Antioquia Departmentpublic
Canal 13Regional: Bogotápublic
Canal CapitalRegional: Bogotápublic
CitytvRegional: Bogotáprivate
CaucavisiónRegional: Cauca Departmentprivate/cable
TelecaribeRegional: Caribbean Region of Colombiapublic
TelecaféRegional: Colombian Coffee-Growers Axispublic
TeleislasRegional: San Andrés y Providencia Departmentpublic
Canal TRORegional: Santander Departmentpublic
TelepacíficoRegional: Pacific Region of Colombiapublic
TelemedellínRegional: Antioquia Departmentmix
Canal URegional: Antioquia Departmentpublic
Enlace Piedemonte Canal 2Regional: Casanareprivate