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Total TV is a satellite television provider co-owned by Serbian Serbia Broadband and United Group. It broadcasts via Eutelsat 16A satellite (16.0E) and has over 1 million subscribers in Southeast Europe, namely Croatia , Bosnia and Herzegovina , Montenegro , North Macedonia , Serbia and Slovenia .
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.
BKTV - belongs to BK Group, Serbia (lost license in June 2006 and is no longer on the air, revived in 2017 as a new name of Nova.rs and was closed in 2020) Studio B - city of Belgrade, Serbia; Art - Serbia (closed as of 2016) Politika - Serbia (now closed) Hallmark - Serbian version, Serbia (became Universal Channel and then Diva)
Total TV may refer to: TotalTV (Canadian TV provider), a Canadian television service; TotalTV, a Serbian television service; Total TV, Inc., a defunct American regional cable television company started by Jim Fitzgerald in 1964 and discontinued in 1998; TV total, a German TV show; Total TV (India), an Indian news channel
Serbia Broadband (branded as SBB; full legal name: Serbia Broadband - Srpske kablovske mreže d.o.o.) is a cable television and broadband internet service provider in Serbia. The SBB company operates as part of the United Group , leading media and telecommunication operator in Southeastern Europe .
RTS 1 is the oldest television station in Serbia, launched on 23 August 1958 as Televizija Beograd. It is available nationally free-to-air and is the most watched television channel in the country beating the other two most popular television networks in Serbia, RTV Pink and Prva . [ 31 ]
RTV Studio B, more often called Studio B (Serbian Cyrillic: Студио Б), is a radio and television broadcaster in Belgrade, Serbia. It was the first broadcast station outside the national electronic media system. [3]
The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and Pauline Adès-Mével, a representative of Reporters Without Borders, described N1 as “the only big independent television station in Serbia”. [9] [10] [11] Workers have been constantly labeled as “traitors” and “foreign mercenaries” and received hundreds of insults ...