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Yle TV2 (Finnish: Yle TV Kaksi; Swedish: Yle TV Två) is a Finnish television channel owned and operated by Yle.TV2 was launched in 1965 as the successor to the former television channels TES-TV (Tesvisio) and Tamvisio and broadcasts public service programming, sports, drama, children's, youth, and music programmes.
In 1964, Yle obtained TES-TV and Tamvisio, which were merged into Yle TV2. In 1969, the Finnish Broadcasting Company began broadcasting television programmes in colour, but due to the high cost of colour technology, colour only became standard in the late 1970s. On 1 May 1977, Tv-uutiset (TV-news) and TV-nytt switched to colour.
Elisa Viihde was founded in 2009 [4] as an online recording service. [2]In spring 2010 Elisa and Finnish Broadcasting Company Yleisradio launched their collaboration that provided hundreds of Yle Areena programmes via Elisa Viihde. [5]
Yle TV1 (Finnish: Yle TV Yksi, Swedish: Yle TV Ett) is a Finnish television channel owned and operated by Finnish public broadcaster Yle. It is the second-oldest television channel in Finland, after TES-TV, and is the oldest currently existing television channel in the country. More than 70% of the channel's programs are documentaries, news, or ...
TV Finland; Y. YLE Extra; ... Yle Teema & Fem; Yle TV1; Yle TV2; YLE24 This page was last edited on 17 January 2018, at 18:45 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
TV news, weather and sport started every day at 21.50 on TV2, but at 22.00 on YLE24. The late broadcast of TV news was only shown on TV1. Important sporting events (such as the Olympic Games and the World Championships) and important political events (such as Parliamentary Question Time and the inauguration of the President of the Republic ...
Suomen Televisio (now Yle TV1), as the channel was called, also featured commercial programming from MTV, a separate channel that leased programming blocks from Yleisradio. This arrangement would last until 1993. Yleisradio acquired Tesvisio in 1964 and reorganized its assets into a second TV channel (now Yle TV2). Despite MTV's demands that ...
The channel also broadcasts Swedish-language news (including the Swedish-language evening bulletin TV-nytt), factual and children's programmes and entertainment as part of the "Fem" hours. It also shows many Nordic films and series and previously aired the Sami-language Ođđasat until that show got moved to Yle TV1. Finnish and Swedish ...