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Radiotelevisiun Svizra Rumantscha (RTR, English: Radio-Television Romansh Switzerland or Swiss Romansh Radio-Television), formerly known as Radio e Televisiun Rumantscha (English: Romansh Radio and Television), is a Swiss broadcasting company (part of SRG SSR) which offers programming to Romansh-speakers in Switzerland and around the world.
100% (via Jeunesse TV) 18 November 2005 Tiji: Pay-TV channel for children under seven: 15 December 2000 Canal J: Pay-TV channel for children over seven: 23 December 1985 M6 Suisse Swiss subfeed, available in free-to-air on satellite: 100% (advertising window operated by Goldbach Media) 2 October 2001 W9 Suisse 2 August 2011 6ter Suisse 2014
M6 Suisse: Swiss version of M6. It differs from the latter only in the regionalised advertising. W9 Suisse: Swiss version of W9. It differs from the latter only in the regionalised advertising. Cartoon Network (French TV channel) Disney Channel (French TV channel) Nickelodeon (French TV channel) Comedy Central (French TV channel)
The Swiss Broadcasting Corporation [1] (German: Schweizerische Radio- und Fernsehgesellschaft; French: Société suisse de radiodiffusion et télévision; Italian: Società svizzera di radiotelevisione; Romansh: Societad Svizra da Radio e Televisiun; SRG SSR) is the Swiss public broadcasting association, founded in 1931, the holding company of 24 radio and television channels.
Cartoon Network (French TV channel) Cartoon Network (German TV channel) Cartoon Network (Italian TV channel) Cartoon Network (Western European TV channel) Cartoonito (Central and Eastern European TV channel) Cartoonito (Europe) CHTV
The first TV broadcasts date back to 1958, at first produced in studios in Zürich and transmitted with Italian subtitles. [1] In 1961, with the foundation of Televisione svizzera di lingua italiana (TSI), the studios were relocated in Paradiso, near Lugano. This was eight years after the experimental debut of television in Zürich and Geneva.
RTS Radio Télévision Suisse: Sister channels: RTS 1, RTS Info: History; Launched: 1 September 1997: Replaced: S Plus Schweiz 4: Former names: TSR 2 (1997–2012) RTS Deux (2012–2019) Links; Website: Official site (Only in Switzerland) Availability; Terrestrial; Digital: DVB-T (only for French-speaking Switzerland; ceased on 3 June 2019)
TSI launched its second channel in 1997, basing it on programming for a younger audience and sports.Unlike RSI La 1, RSI La 2 is not broadcast across the whole of Switzerland, but only in the Italian-speaking Switzerland.