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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 ...
A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at [[:fr:La Première (radio belge)]]; see its history for attribution. You may also add the template {{Translated|fr|La Première (radio belge)}} to the talk page. For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation
The two main Belgian public TV networks, VRT in the Flemish Community and RTBF in the French Community of Belgium, broadcast their channels via operators using cable, satellite, IPTV and digital terrestrial television . In the French community of Belgium the channels of RTBF can be received by DVB-T2 free of charge. The privately owned channels ...
France Télévisions [22] France 2; France 3; France 4; France 5; France Info; Radio France [23] France Inter; France Info; France Culture; France Musique; FIP; Ici; Mouv' France Médias Monde [24] Radio France Internationale; France 24; Arte [25]
In 1997, the Parlement de la Communauté française made RTBF an autonomous public company, with RTBF 1 being renamed RTBF La 1 along with RTBF 21 into RTBF La 2. RTBF La Une became the first Belgian television channel to broadcast 24 hours a day, unlike its Flemish counterpart, BRTN TV1 (now known as één) which closed down during the day.
The Office de radiodiffusion-télévision française (French pronunciation: [ɔfis də ʁadjodifyzjɔ̃ televizjɔ̃ fʁɑ̃sɛːz]; ORTF; transl. French Broadcasting and Television Office, or French Radio and Television Broadcasting Office) was the national agency charged, between 1964 and 1975, with providing public radio and television in France.
Tout ça (ne nous rendra pas la Belgique) or Bye Bye Belgium, also called "The Flemish Secession Hoax," was a hoax perpetrated by the French-language Belgian public TV station RTBF on Wednesday, December 13, 2006.
On 5 April 2016, the channel became free-to-air and began broadcasting on channel 26 via digital terrestrial television in France. Since October 2022, LCI, as well as the free DTT channels of the TF1 group, have been accessible free to air, via the Astra 1 satellite.