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National Public Radio (NPR) (1970) [8] American Public Media (2004) Public Radio International (1983) Public Radio Exchange (2003) New York Public Radio (1924) Chicago Public Radio (April 1943) Pacifica Radio (1949) Boston Public Radio (1951) Minnesota Public Radio (1967)
List of European television stations is a list of television stations which are notable in Europe. Notability refers to them being the dominant stations within their countries in terms of viewers. Notability refers to them being the dominant stations within their countries in terms of viewers.
Category: Broadcasting in Europe by country. 8 languages. ... Broadcasting in Spain (4 C) Broadcasting in Sweden (4 C, 1 P) T. Broadcasting in Turkey (2 C, 1 P) U.
KiKA Der Kinderkanal — public, non-commercial children's TV, with support of ARD and ZDF; Arte — public Franco-German culture channel from ARD, ZDF and France Télévisions; 3sat — cultural network from the ARD, ZDF, ORF (Austrian Broadcasting), and SRG (Swiss Broadcasting).
The European Broadcasting Union (EBU; French: Union européenne de radio-télévision, UER) is an alliance of public service media organisations whose countries are within the European Broadcasting Area or who are members of the Council of Europe.
The public broadcasters still share a building in Brussels, a leftover from the time when the Public Television was still a national (Belgian) competence, however, they have split operations altogether with French language broadcaster RTBF occupying the right half of the building and Flemish broadcaster VRT occupying the left half of the building.
The strongest revenue segment in Germany is public funding (€4,430 million in 2008), followed by advertising (€4,035 million) and subscription (1,150 € million). [4] This dominant market position of public and advertisement funded free TV channels in Germany explains why the German pay TV segment is significantly underperforming in an ...
The Swedish public broadcasting system is largely modelled after the system used in the United Kingdom, and Sveriges Television shares many traits with its British counterpart, the BBC. SVT is a public limited company that can be described as a "quasi-autonomous non-governmental organisation."