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TV 1 – Commercial channel. News, current affairs, sports and general entertainment. Aired from February 10, 1997 to October 3, 2001, when it shut down after debt issues. Neljas – music, news and general entertainment channel. Kalev Sport – sports channel, a predecessor of TV4. TV4 (Kalev Sport) – sports channel, a predecessor of TV14.
The National TV Channel ETV has maintained an archive since 1955 in which broadcasts of unique aspects of Estonian culture are held. Northern Estonia receives television signals from Finland . During the 1970s and 1980s, Finnish broadcasts were more popular than Soviet-Estonian offerings until the Singing Revolution , [ 2 ] with many Estonians ...
Eesti Rahvusringhääling (ERR) – Estonian Public Broadcasting – is a publicly funded and owned radio and television organisation created in Estonia on 1 June 2007 to take over the functions of the formerly separate Eesti Raadio (ER) (Estonian Radio) and Eesti Televisioon (ETV) (Estonian Television), under the terms of the Estonian National Broadcasting Act.
This is the list of television programmes broadcast in Estonia. The list is incomplete. Name Channel which broadcast ... TV presenters: Grete Lõbu, Marko Reikop [1 ...
Pages in category "Television channels in Estonia" The following 29 pages are in this category, out of 29 total. ... (Central and Eastern European TV channel) Cartoon ...
TV6 is a television channel targeted at entertainment television channel in Estonia, launched in 2002. TV8 is an entertainment television channel, launched as a digital sister channel to TV3 in 2009. For several years, TV3 had better ratings than the other private channel, Kanal 2 .
TV6 Estonia is an entertainment television channel broadcasting to Estonia featuring series, music, fashion and sports.. The channel's programming has been primarily geared towards men, and features a selection of cartoons, TV series and movies from comedy, reality, action-adventure, science fiction, fantasy, and horror genres.
Today a small group of local private companies owns most newspapers, though some small publications receive aid from regional or municipal governments. Estonia's most popular medium is television, while print media's popularity has been reducing in favour of online media outlets.