TV Vitória is a Brazilian television station based in Vitória, capital of the state of Espírito Santo. It operates on channel 6 (UHF digital 38) and is affiliated to Record. It is owned by Rede Vitória de Comunicação, a subsidiary of the Buaiz Group, also responsible for the radio stations Jovem Pan FM Vitória and Jovem Pan News Vitória. The broadcaster maintains studios at the Buaiz Group headquarters in Parque Moscoso, in addition to commercial offices in Praia do Canto, and its transmitters are at the top of Morro da Fonte Grande.
City | Vitória |
---|---|
Channels | |
Branding | TV Vitória |
Programming | |
Affiliations | Record |
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
History | |
Founded | 1961 |
First air date | September 8, 1961 |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: 4 (VHF, 1961–1974) 6 (VHF, 1974-2018) |
Rede Tupi (1961-1980) TVS-Record (1980-1981) SBT (1981-1984) Rede Manchete (1984-1998) | |
Technical information | |
Licensing authority | ANATEL |
Transmitter coordinates | 20°18′32.5″S 40°20′22.2″W / 20.309028°S 40.339500°W |
Links | |
Public license information | Profile |
Website | folhavitoria |
History
editTV Vitória was the first television station in Espírito Santo, being opened on September 8, 1961, on the 410th anniversary of the capital of Espírito Santo, Vitória, by Diários Associados. Initially, it produced local programs and retransmitted attractions produced by TV Tupi São Paulo, the embryo of Rede Tupi, which emerged in the following decade. The station was opened without a concession to operate, and its status was only regularized in June 1979, under the administration of communications minister Haroldo Corrêa de Mattos.[1][2]
With the end of Rede Tupi in 1980, TV Vitória was one of the Associated broadcasters that was freed from revocation. After a period of independent programming and the retransmission of programs produced by TVS Rio de Janeiro and Record, TV Vitória became, in 1981, one of the first affiliates of SBT. In 1984, Diários Associados sold the station and Rádio Vitória to the Buaiz Group, after businessman João Calmon bought the shares from the other shareholders and resold the station to Américo Buaiz Filho. In the same year, the broadcaster became affiliated to Rede Manchete.[2]
In 1992, the broadcaster launched Rede Vitória de Notícias, which consisted of a partnership with newspapers in the interior of the state to disseminate articles that were broadcast over the telephone by a reporter from the local newspaper during the broadcast of the news, and in return, the TV broadcast the name of the newspapers in the credits. This partnership lasted for two years, because newspaper owners started asking for money and the company was not willing to pay. On October 1, 1998, after two and a half years of negotiations and the decline of Rede Manchete, TV Vitória became affiliated to Rede Record, which was expanding across the country.[2]
Technical information
editBased on the federal decree transitioning Brazilian TV stations from analogue to digital signals, TV Vitória, as well as other stations in Vitória, ceased broadcasting on channel 06 VHF on October 25, 2017, following the official schedule of the ANATEL. The switch-off happened at 11:59 pm, during the airing of the Gugu program.[3]
Programming
editAs well as relaying Record's national programming, TV Vitória produces and airs the following programss:[4]
- ES No Ar: news, with Eduardo Santos;
- Balanço Geral ES: news, with Michel Bermudes;
- Fala Espírito Santo: variety, with Roberta Salgueiro;
- Cidade Alerta ES: police news, with Fernando Fully;
- Jornal da TV Vitória: news, com Juliana Lyra;
- Balanço Geral ES Edição de Sábado: news, with Amaro Neto;
- Mundo Business: news, with Ricardo Frizera;
- Agro Business: agricultural news, with Stefany Sampaio;
- Mais Doce: culinary competition, with Alessandro Eller;
- Chef de Família: culinary competition, with Alessandro Eller;
- Espirito Startups: program about startups;
- Mega Vendedor: reality format.
References
edit- ^ "Decreto nº 83.562, de 11 de junho de 1979". Planalto. 11 June 1979. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
- ^ a b c Carvalho, Marcelle de Almeida (1999). "A Evolução do Telejornalismo no Espírito Santo: A busca por uma identidade regional". UFRGS. Retrieved 8 November 2018.
- ^ Higa, Paulo (15 February 2016). "Quando a TV analógica será desligada na sua cidade". Tecnoblog. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
- ^ "Portal Rede Vitória: TV VITÓRIA". Retrieved 5 January 2024.