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In the early days of television in New Zealand, Māori-language programming was scarce. Suggestions were made as far back as 1976 by the New Zealand Māori Council to create a Māori and Polynesian current affairs programme, followed by a second petition in 1978 to create a Māori production unit within the BCNZ, with the aim of adding "a Māori dimension to regular viewing".
The Māori Television Service (abbr. MTS; Māori: Te Aratuku Whakāta Irirangi Māori [1]) is a state sector organisation in New Zealand that was established on 7 May 2003 under the Māori Television Service (Te Aratuku Whakaata Irirangi Māori) Act 2003 [2] to replace the Te Reo Māori Television Trust (Te Awhiorangi).
To the same page name with diacritics: This is a redirect from a page name that does not have diacritical marks (accents, umlauts, etc.) to essentially the same page ...
Notes. The PAL-B&G (analogue) television switch off was completed on 1 December 2013. [1] AM and FM radio is unaffected. DVB 64-QAM terrestrial channels use ITU system G channel allocations within UHF television band IV and band V.
Oriini Kaipara (born 1983) is a New Zealand broadcaster, journalist and translator and interpreter of Māori and English. Kaipara has worked for Mai FM, TVNZ 1, Māori Television, and Three.
Marae is a bilingual Māori and English language current affairs show on TVNZ 1, presented by Scotty Morrison and Miriama Kamo. [1] [2]It is the longest Māori running current affairs programme on New Zealand television, starting in 1992. [3]
TVNZ+ (Māori: Te Reo Tātaki Ā-Tono), formerly known as TVNZ OnDemand, [2] [3] is an over-the-top New Zealand television and video on demand streaming service offered by TVNZ.
Show Release date Channel Notes 1News: 3 November 1969 TVNZ 1: News service, regular updates live from 6am weekdays; the main bulletin is at 6:00 pm everyday, with lunchtime and late night bulletins also broadcast on weekdays.