Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In the show, contestants called "zadrugari" (eng. cooperators) live together in a specially constructed community that is isolated from the outside world.The show's former title refers to the term zadruga, a type of rural community in which the institution of zadruga held people's property, herds and money in common, with usually the oldest (patriarch) member ruling and making decisions for ...
Red TV is a Serbian pay television channel distributed in Bosnia, Montenegro and Serbia, owned by Pink International Company. Launched on 4 November 2012 as Pink 2, as Red TV it began broadcasting on 3 October 2020.
Zadruga Farma ( Serbian Cyrillic : Фарма , "The Farm") was a Serbian version of the reality TV series The Farm . The show aired in Serbia on RTV Pink , in Montenegro on Pink M and in Bosnia and Herzegovina on Pink BH .
Pink International provides production content for two global satellite channels (Pink Extra and Pink Plus) broadcast to subscribers in Europe, Australia and North America. There are nine direct-to-home (DTH) satellite channels that have been created in cooperation with Serbia's largest cable company, Serbia Broadband (SBB) although some ...
Some 67% of households are provided with pay television services (i.e. 38.7% cable television, 16.9% IPTV, and 10.4% satellite). [5] There are 90 pay television operators (cable, IPTV, DTH), largest of which are SBB (mainly cable) with 48% market share, Telekom Srbija (mts TV) with 25%, followed by PoštaNet with 5%, and Ikom and Kopernikus with 4% and 3%, respectively.
Pink is a privately owned, national radio station and TV channel in Serbia. Pink's parent company is the Belgrade-based Pink International Company , a member of the Pink Media Group (PMG), which is owned by Željko Mitrović .
Nacionalna Televizija Happy (often shortened to Happy) is a privately owned TV channel in Serbia.Happy has gained a strong reputation for its entertainment programming. The station offers a compilation of international and domestic movies, American sitcoms, dramas, Indian soap operas and Latin telenovelas, as well as locally produced talk/variety shows.
Within the zadruga, all of the family members worked to ensure that the needs of every other member were met. The zadruga system eventually went into decline beginning in the late 19th century, as the largest zadrugas started to become unmanageable and broke into smaller zadrugas or formed traditional villages with related extended families ...