Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The tower of the Broadcasting Center in Prisavlje in 2013 An outside broadcast truck owned by HRT. Croatian Radiotelevision is the direct successor of Radio Station Zagreb (Radio stanica Zagreb) that started broadcasting on 15 May 1926, the first radio station to broadcast in the Balkans. [3]
HRT 2 (HTV 2, "Drugi program") is a Croatian free-to-air public broadcast television channel owned and operated by Hrvatska Radiotelevizija (HRT). Its line-up focuses mainly on entertainment, although it also broadcasts news and documentaries. The channel started 24-hour broadcasts on 14 January 2011. [1]
Radio Slunj 95.2 Town of Slunj: Varaždin County: Radio Megaton 104.9 Municipality of Vidovec: Sjeverni FM 92.8 Town of Ivanec: Radio Ludbreg 93.4 Town of Ludbreg: Radio Max 99.3 Municipality of Maruševec: Radio Novi Marof 97.5 Town of Novi Marof: Radio Sjeverozapad 95.2 City of Varaždin: Koprivnica-Križevci County: Radio Koprivnica 88.7 91. ...
Live radio is sound transmitted by radio waves, as the sound happens. Modern live radio is probably [original research?] most used to broadcast sports but it is also used to transmit local news and traffic updates. Most radio that people listen to today is pre-recorded music, and the days of solely live broadcast music are generally not as present.
BHRT must broadcast content in the country's three official languages: Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian. The group manages a radio station, a television channel, media and music production label, and an internet portal. The service is governed by BHRT statute. BHRT currently consists of three organizational units:
The first radio station in the Balkans and South-East Europe was established in Montenegro with the opening of a transmitter situated on the hill of Volujica near Bar by Knjaz Nikola I Petrović-Njegoš (1841–1921) on 3 August 1904. Radio Cetinje commenced broadcasts on 27 November 1944 and in 1949, Radio Titograd was formed.
[2] Between the years 2004 and 2007, Dnevnik HRT was the most viewed news broadcast in the European Broadcasting Union, with an average viewership figure being 37% of Croatia's population, who watched 75% of each broadcast on average. The program introduced significant changes in 2015 — the airing time was moved from 19:30 to 19:00, each ...
BHT1 Uživo (BHT1 Live), programme about discussing current topics with guests; Govor tišine - (Speech of silence), weekly review from other TV shows (like news) that are broadcast in sign language; Global - magazine about world news, business and politics; Euroimpuls - programme dedicated to Accession of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the European ...