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Pay TV, formerly Canal + Belgique, with the channels Be 1, Be 1 +1, Be Ciné, Be Be Séries, VOOsport World (1-4) French: Cable networks in Wallonia, Brussels and Flanders - (HD version of Be 1 and VOOsport World 1) Be Ciné: Pay TV, movies channel French: Cable networks in Wallonia, Brussels and Flanders - (HD version of Be Ciné) Be Séries
In June 2009, TF1 Group agreed to buy the channel from AB Groupe, as well as AB's 40% stake in TMC Monte Carlo (which would take TF1's total stake to 80%) and NT1. [2] The deal was cleared by France's competition authority and subsequently by the Council of State in December 2010, dismissing an appeal by Métropole Télévision .
Up to 70% of the French-speaking Belgians turn on a domestic channel on average every night, up from 55% a few years ago. The success of French channel TF1 makes this a more fragmented market with TF1 sometimes having up to 15% market share in the French part of Belgium. TF1 even has localised ad breaks.
TF1 (French: [te ɛf œ̃] ⓘ; standing for Télévision Française 1) is a French commercial television network owned by TF1 Group, controlled by the Bouygues conglomerate. TF1's average market share of 24% makes it the most popular domestic network. TF1 is part of the TF1 Group of mass media companies, which also includes the news channel LCI.
TFOU is TF1's children brand, also operating as the SVOD service TFOU MAX. Originally, the brand started as TF1's children website in 2000, and as a TV channel in 2003 (which run until 2008). It became TF1's children programming block in 2007. Since 2024, from Monday to Friday, the block airs in two parts on TF1 and TFX.
Discovery also took a 20% share in TV Breizh, Histoire, Ushuaia TV and Stylia – for €14m, with the option of increasing its shareholding to 49% in each channel in 2014. Discovery and TF1's production arm will also work together on making programmes. [11] TF1 Group's Newen agree to acquire a majority stake in Reel One of Montreal in July ...
The communications tower at the RTBF's headquarters in Brussels. Originally named the Belgian National Broadcasting Institute (French: INR, Institut national belge de radiodiffusion; Dutch: NIR, Belgisch Nationaal Instituut voor de Radio-omroep), the state-owned broadcasting organisation was established by law on 18 June 1930, [citation needed] and from 1938 was housed in the Flagey Building ...
With the shutdown of analogue television, TF1 Group initially was set to launch a reformated version of the Breton language channel TV Breizh, to be called 'tv-b'. However, Brussels ordered the cessation of the new channel slots from the former analogue terrestrial companies, i.e. TF1 Group, Canal+ Group and M6 Group. The plans for TV Breizh ...