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History; Launched: 3 November 1956 (as ČST Bratislava) 1 January 1993 (as STV1) Former names: ČST Bratislava (1956–1970) ČST1 (1970–1990) F1 (1990–1993)
Slovenská televízia (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈslɔʋenskaː ˈteleʋiːzɪɐ]; "Slovak Television"; STV) was a state-owned public television organisation in Slovakia.It was created in 1991 as the Slovak part of the former Czechoslovak Television and was headquartered in Bratislava.
:1 is a generalist channel, family-oriented television, broadcasting Slovak movies, children's programming, news and documentaries, major sport events on club and international level. :2 ( Dvojka ) broadcasts documentaries, mature-oriented shows, minor sport events, old Slovak dramas and movies, and also frequently shows classic and art foreign ...
Television stations in Slovakia broadcast in both DVB-T format (MUX-2 and MUX-3) and DVB-T2 format (MUX-1 and MUX-4). Broadcasting is mostly in the Slovak, state-owned channels have some dedicated broadcasting for ethnic minorities (always subtitled).
In accordance with STV's "new start" under the slogan "Television that looks at you" on the evening of January 1, 2004 led by Richard Rybníček, STV2 was renamed Dvojka aiming at a niche audience, with most cultural, sports and minority/regional programming moved to this channel.
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The organisation was created in 2011 following a merger of Slovenská televízia (Slovak Television) with Slovenský rozhlas (Slovak Radio). [1] It was headquartered in Bratislava. [2] [3] Like its two predecessor organisations - Slovenská televízia (STV) and Slovenský rozhlas (SRo), RTVS was a member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU).
The 9th and 10th season were watched by 731,000 and 778,000 people respectively, with the latter being televised on two STV sister's channels at the same time; Jednotka (STV 1) and Trojka (STV 3). Since the 2010s, the show format gains considerably less — roughly half a million audiences each year —, yet still making it the most watched ...