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Híradó (Hungarian: [ˈhiːrɒdoː], or often M1 Híradó ([ˈɛmː ˈɛɟː ˈhiːrɒdoː]) for clarity, means News Station or M1 News) is the main news program of MTVA, the Hungarian public broadcaster. It was broadcast daily on M1 at 19:30 before 15 March 2015.
Magyar Televízió (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈmɒɟɒr ˈtɛlɛviːzijoː], Hungarian Television) or MTV is a nationwide public television broadcasting organization in Hungary. Headquartered in Budapest , it is the oldest television broadcaster in Hungary and today airs five channels: M1 HD , M2 HD , M3 , M4 Sport and M5.
The channel originally launched on 1 May 1957, as a generalist channel, and was the flagship channel of Magyar Televízió. On 15 March 2015, M1 was relaunched as a 24-hour news channel , with all variety and entertainment programming being transferred to the channel Duna .
Duna Media Service Provider (Hungarian: Duna Médiaszolgáltató), also known as simply Duna Média, is Hungary's public service broadcaster for radio, television and new media. The company was established in July 2015, and operates six TV channels , seven radio stations, a news agency and online services.
M3: Entertainment channel, started broadcasting on 20 December 2013, closed as a TV channel on 1 May 2019 (Free-to-air on DVB-T). M4 Sport: Sports channel, started broadcasting on 18 July 2015. (Free-to-air on DVB-T). M4 Sport+: Sports channel, started broadcasting on weekends in place of Duna World between 2:00 pm and 10:00 pm on 12 September ...
M1 (TV channel) or Magyar TV1, news channel of the Hungarian MTVA TRT 1 , the first Turkish national channel, formerly using TV1 as logo TVNZ 1 , formerly TV One, New Zealand
The Duna TV channel become the main generalist channel, replacing the first Magyar Televízió channel M1, the oldest in Hungary, which changed its format/genre and assumed continuous broadcast of news related programming. [8] Among other things, MTVA is responsible for distributing funds and resources to the various departments in Duna Media.
On July 1, 2015, Magyar Rádió and the three other public media organisations managed by the MTVA were merged into a single organisation called Duna Media Service (Hungarian: Duna Médiaszolgáltató). [3] This organization is the legal successor to Magyar Rádió and is an active member of the European Broadcasting Union. [4] [5]