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Rede Brasil signed on for the first time on April 7, 2007. [2] As the channel was building its line-up, most of the schedule consisted of programming from government channels, such as TV Brasil and TV Escola.
TV Globo (stylized as tvglobo; Portuguese: [teˈve ˈɡlobu], "Globe TV", or simply Globo and alternatively as Global), formerly known as Rede Globo, is a Brazilian free-to-air television network, launched by media proprietor Roberto Marinho on 26 April 1965.
TV Brasil is a Brazilian public television network owned by Empresa Brasil de Comunicação.Its main headquarters are in Brasília, DF and Rio de Janeiro, RJ, with owned-and-operated stations in São Paulo, SP and in São Luís, MA, as well as 21 states where its affiliated broadcasters operate, all components of the Rede Pública de Televisão.
TV Colosso (1993-1997) Uni-Duni-Tê (1965-1968) Vila Sésamo (Brazilian version of Sesame Street, co-produced with TV Cultura; 1972-1977) Xou da Xuxa (first program hosted by Xuxa on Globo; 1986-1992) Bobeou Dançou (1989) Paradão da Xuxa (1992) Programa Xuxa (1993) Xuxa Park (1994-2001) Planeta Xuxa (1997-2002) Xuxa no Mundo da Imaginação ...
The channel features programs from TV Globo and the pay channel GNT on alternative schedules. [1] The channel focuses on women and the family. [2] It exhibits miniseries, dubbed films, telenovelas, television series and variety programs. It also reruns Estrelas, Caldeirão do Huck, Mais Você and Malhação, all in alternative schedules.
Black logo, used from 1995 to 1996 (similar to the American Broadcasting Company logo).. The Sistema Brasileiro de Televisão (Brazilian Portuguese: [sisˈtemɐ bɾaziˈlejɾu dʒi televiˈzɐ̃w]; SBT [ˈɛsi ˈbe ˈte]; "Brazilian Television System") is a Brazilian free-to-air television network founded on Wednesday, 19 August 1981, by the businessman and television personality Silvio Santos.
The daily average of TV sets turned on dropped from 65% in 1982–1991 to 42% in 2008. [11] In the decade, the top five TV networks in the country lost altogether 4.3% of their share. [12] SBT lost 44% of its viewership in the prime time, while Globo lost 9%. [13]
TV Record was the fourth station to operate in the country after TV Tupi São Paulo (1950), TV Tupi Rio de Janeiro (1951) and TV Paulista (1952). During the 1960s, the channel became popular, even leading in audience, with the exhibition of music festivals such as MPB and Jovem Guarda . [ 5 ]