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Play Rapport is a Swedish web based video news service created by Sveriges Television (SVT). The name comes from SVT Play , which is the general brand for video-on-demand services from SVT, and Rapport , which is SVT's main news programme.
Rapport ("Report") is one of the two main news programmes from the Swedish television broadcaster Sveriges Television (SVT). Rapport's main bulletin is broadcast every day at 19:30 on SVT1. It runs for thirty minutes every day except Saturday, when it runs for fifteen minutes. Ever since the 1970s, it has been the most watched news bulletin in ...
These are styled SVT Nyheter. SVT also broadcasts video news on the Internet through a service called Play Rapport. SVT provides news programmes in various minority languages: Uutiset in Finnish, Nyhetstecken in Swedish Sign Language, and, in co-operation with NRK and Yle, Ođđasat in Northern Sami, as well as special editions of Sverige idag ...
The 6pm bulletin was moved to SVT2 in 1997, followed on 15 January 2001 by the 9 pm edition. The year before, editorial responsibility for Aktuellt, Rapport (SVT1's news programme), and SVT's news channel, SVT24, was unified; nevertheless, the name "Aktuellt" continues to be used to designate SVT2's news programmes.
The brand was introduced in December 2006, when the existing streaming television service got a new name. [1] In September 2007, SVT launched their own channel on YouTube. [2] From late 2007 until end of 2008 SVT Play was also available as a channel on Joost. [3] SVT claims that the service offers more than 2,000 hours of television.
As part of the revamp, TV2's popular news programme Rapport (Report) moved to the first network while Aktuellt moved to the second network. Alongside Rapport , SVT's main entertainment shows air on the first channel, including Melodifestivalen , Så ska det låta and På spåret are broadcast on this channel.
SVT24, stylized as svt24, formerly known as SVT 24 (then stylized svt 24) or 24 is a Swedish language TV channel broadcast by Sveriges Television (SVT). It started broadcasting in 1999 as a dedicated news channel. In 2003 it extended its scope to include other current events-related programmes and sports at the weekend.
Axess TV (culture and information) - owned by Axel and Margaret Johnson Foundation for Public Benefit Purposes (DTT) (DTT); Regional terrestrial channels: Kanal 12 (DTT); Kanal 10 a.k.a 'Kristen TV i Sverige', a privately owned Christian TV channel in Sweden, was founded in 2003 by Börje Claesson.