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  2. Phoenix (German TV channel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix_(German_TV_channel)

    Phoenix (stylised as phoenıx, pronounced [ˈføːnɪks]) is a German free-to-air television channel which is operated jointly by public-service broadcasters ARD and ZDF. It broadcasts documentaries, news, special events coverage and discussion programmes. Phoenix's headquarters are in Bonn, the former West German capital.

  3. ZDFneo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZDFneo

    ZDFneo is a German free-to-air television channel, programmed for an audience aged 25 to 49 [1] to complement the primarily older-skewing main channels of public broadcasters ZDF and ARD. It replaced ZDF's documentary channel ZDFdokukanal on 1 November 2009.

  4. ZDF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZDF

    The new television company called the Freies Fernsehen Gesellschaft (Free Television Society) but derisively called Adenauer-Fernsehen (Adenauer's television) by critics, was founded on 25 July 1960. The Deutsche Bundespost began constructing a second transmitter network on UHF channels, which required new reception equipment.

  5. Joyn (streaming platform) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joyn_(streaming_platform)

    Joyn GmbH (formerly 7TV Joint Venture GmbH) is a German streaming company fully owned by ProSiebenSat.1 Media, which deals with streaming media products.Among other things, it operates the streaming platform Joyn, which has more than seven million users per month in January 2020, the pay-per-view service Maxdome Store and the streaming service Discovery+ (which subsumed Eurosport Player).

  6. Television in Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_in_Germany

    On 1 November 2009 the premium HD+ service launched with two channels, RTL HD and Vox HD, with Sat.1 HD, ProSieben HD and Kabel eins HD joining the service in January 2010. DSF HD (now called Sport1 HD) began test broadcasts in August 2010 and launched fully on HD+ on 1 November 2010, followed by Sixx HD and RTL2 HD on 1 December 2010.

  7. ZDFinfo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZDFinfo

    ZDFinfo is a German free-to-air documentary television channel owned by ZDF. It was launched on 27 August 1997 as ZDFinfokanal, [1] and it became ZDFinfo on 5 September 2011. [2] On 1 May 2012, a high-definition simulcast the channel was launched. [3] [4] ZDF offered another documentary channel, ZDFdokukanal, between 2000 and 2009.

  8. List of television stations in Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_television...

    KiKA Der Kinderkanal — public, non-commercial children's TV, with support of ARD and ZDF; Arte — public Franco-German culture channel from ARD, ZDF and France Télévisions; 3sat — cultural network from the ARD, ZDF, ORF (Austrian Broadcasting), and SRG (Swiss Broadcasting).

  9. 3sat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3sat

    3sat was established to broadcast cultural programmes, originally by satellite. The network was founded as a cooperative network by Germany's ZDF, Austria's ORF, and Switzerland's SRG SSR (formerly SRG SSR idée suisse). 3sat began broadcasting on 1 December 1984, with its first programme being simulcasted on FS2, TV DRS and ZDF. [2]