TV6 (Sweden)
TV6 | |
---|---|
Launched | 9 May 2006 |
Owned by | Viasat |
Picture format |
576i (SDTV) 1080i (HDTV) |
Audience share | 4.8% (2011, [1]) |
Country | United Kingdom |
Broadcast area | Sweden |
Replaced | ZTV (on cable networks) |
Website | http://www.tv6.se/ |
Availability | |
Digital terrestrial | Channel 6 |
Satellite | |
Viasat | Channel 6 |
Cable | |
Com Hem | Channel 6 |
Canal Digital | Channel 6 |
Tele2Vision | Channel 6 |
TV6 is an entertainment television channel broadcasting to Sweden (but also technically possible - albeit not strictly legally - to receive in the surrounding countries of Finland, Norway, Denmark, parts of Germany, Poland, Russia and the Baltic countries, through the Sirius satellite) and now most of Europe through the Thor 2 satellite. It is owned by Modern Times Group.
The channel has origins in the youth channel ZTV that started broadcasting in the early 1990s. In 2004, MTG started repositioning the channel by introducing sports broadcasts and other programming that mainly targeted men.
In February 2006, MTG received a license to broadcast a channel called TV6 in the terrestrial network. This channel would take over virtually all ZTV programming, except the music videos that ZTV showed during the day. TV6 launched in May 2006 and simultaneously replaced ZTV in most cable networks. When ZTV was rebranded as TV6, a new ZTV channel started that only showed music videos.
TV6 focuses on entertainment and occasional but high-profile sports broadcasts (like the UEFA Champions League), comedy, sitcoms, action, science fiction and reality programmes from the USA are popular fixtures. Its inaugural night of broadcasting set the tone by scheduling a game from the 2006 ice hockey World Championships and the movie Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines.
Sports broadcasts are among the most popular programmes on the channel. At its launch, TV6 took over the coverage of UEFA Champions League and Formula One. The Champions League final was broadcast on 17 May 2006 and attracted 820,000 viewers, which was the highest viewing share ever recorded for a channel that wasn't one of the five major channels. In December 2007 it was revealed that TV6 would take over the coverage of the Ice Hockey World Championships from TV3 in 2008. The Ice Hockey Championships has been one of the most popular events on TV3 since they started broadcasting it in 1989.[2]
The channel isn't to be confused with another channel with the same name launched by the same company in 1994. It is now known as Viasat Nature/Crime.
TV6 (along with several other Viasat channels) are broadcast from London in the United Kingdom making them exempt from strict Swedish advertising laws. They did however agree not to advertise alcoholic beverages or broadcast advertising targeting children as part of their terrestrial license. This has however made them subject to broadcasting laws in the UK, with a broadcast of Family Guy in April 2015 breaching Ofcom rules.[3][4]
After the launch in Sweden, MTG have launched TV6 in Hungary and the Baltics. TV6 Latvia was launched on 22 April 2007, TV6 Hungary on 28 January 2008, TV6 Estonia on 24 March 2008 and in September 2008, Tango TV changed its name to TV6 Lithuania. In Scandinavia its counterparts are Viasat4 in Norway, and TV3+ in Denmark. TV 3+ uses graphics similar to the TV6 channels.
Programming
- According to Jim
- Angel
- Burn Notice
- Cheers
- Chuck
- COPS
- Eureka
- Family Guy
- Flash Gordon
- How I Met Your Mother
- Highlander: The Series
- I Survived a Japanese Game Show
- Knight Rider
- LA Ink
- London Ink
- Married... with Children
- Miami Ink
- Scrubs
- Seinfeld
- Stargate Atlantis
- Stargate SG-1
- Stargate Universe
- Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles
- The Last Reality Show
- The Simpsons
- Two and a Half Men
- Weeds
References
- ↑ Årsrapport 2011 (PDF), Mediamätning i Skandinavien, archived from the original (PDF) on May 28, 2013
- ↑ TV6 tar över hockey-VM, Dagens Media, 27 December 2007 Archived December 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/2015/07/28/22912/c4_orders_matt_lucas-narrated_series
- ↑ http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/binaries/enforcement/broadcast-bulletins/obb284/Issue_284.pdf
External links
- Official site (Swedish)