Radio 1989–2015: B92 Radio Radio B92 was founded in May 1989 in Belgrade as a predominantly youth-oriented FM station on 92.5 MHz. It received financial help from the
Open Society Foundations and the
USAID. It was briefly closed down by authorities in March 1991. During the
Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s, RTV B92 was one of the very few sources for news not controlled by the government. Although the authorities made repeated efforts to shut down its broadcasts, the station continued transmitting its programs through alternative means. With the help of Dutch internet provider
XS4All, RTV B92 started broadcasting their programs over the internet in 1996. These broadcasts were then also re-transmitted via the
BBC World Service while several local stations on the ground made the programs available throughout
Serbia. In 1996, the organisation Internationale Medienhilfe awarded Radio B92 the title “Radiostation des Jahres” (English: “Radio Station of the Year”). It was forced off the air for a time in 1999 when
NATO bombed Yugoslavia, and government agents cracked down on pro-Western reporting. The government took over the station in 1999 but the team continued broadcasting in borrowed studios as B2-92. In a dawn raid in May 2000 government troops seized everything.
2015–present: Play Radio On 13 July 2015, the new
Play Radio began on 92.5 MHz, broadcasting only music and the promo of the station, this time mentioning the B92 name. Following the name change, the B92's site's radio section now redirects to the
Play Radio website, which includes a stream, which lets visitors listen to the station. However,
Play Radio began as a summer schedule announcement on the now-closed Radio B92. The station began broadcasting on 31 August 2015 at 06:00.
2003–2011 On 11 October 2004, TV B92's news program Vesti B92 introduced the ticker, which was replaced by flipper on 19 March 2012. The ticker was returned on 4 February 2013, which was replaced by flipper again on 3 February 2014. In April 2006, TV B92 was officially given a national commercial broadcasting license along with
TV Pink,
Fox Televizija,
TV Avala and
TV Košava. The station's most notable regular TV programmes included
Utisak nedelje (
Impression of the week) by
Olja Bećković,
Poligraf (Polygraph) by Jugoslav Ćosić and Antonela Riha, and
Timofejev by Aleksandar Timofejev. The
Insajder (Insider) series by
Brankica Stanković were running intermittently and was one of the rare cases of
investigative journalism on Serbian television. Until 2006, TV B92 has undertaken a noticeable shift towards
commercialization. Since 2006, it was broadcasting the Serbian version of
Big Brother reality series (
Veliki brat), for which it received both a huge boost of ratings, as well as much criticism from its traditional viewers. The trend has continued with shows like
Uzmi ili ostavi and
Želite li da postanete milioner? quizzes (local versions of
Deal or No Deal and
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, respectively). TV B92 also held the Serbian market TV rights for the
UEFA Champions League from 2003 to 2006. In rating seasons starting September 2007 lasting until July 2008, TV B92 has introduced a much more commercialised line-up. It has heavily advertised its shows during the non-ratings season of summer 2007. The network has bought out rights to broadcast a new local show called
Naša mala klinika based around a small medicinal practice on the outskirts of town. The show features many famous Serbian actors and actresses. Another local show called
Vratiće se rode will be shown on TV B92. The network has also filmed a new season of popular comedy show
Mile vs. Tranzicija. The 2008–09 season started in October. The most important project for the season for the station was Operacija Trijumf. Operacija Trijumf (
Star Academy) was the biggest musical reality show in the Balkans and it was shown on television in Montenegro (
IN TV), Croatia (
Nova TV), Macedonia (
RTV A1) and Bosnia (FTV i
RTRS). In 2009, the station also bought TV rights for
Wimbledon (for the next 4 years, until 2013).
Champions league matches were also being aired by TV B92. On 7 April 2008, B92 Info was a
news broadcasting channel launched by TV B92, as a Serbian version of
CNN. The channel was broadcasting on all major cable systems in the country and over the Internet. All of TV B92's most popular news-related shows, including Poligraf, B92 Investigates, Insajder, Kažiprst, Dizanje, and sports programs, were broadcast on the channel. TV B92 had called Info channel launch as the biggest project of the company's television segment. B92 Info has since 2010 also been available in
Austria.
2011–2012 In the spring of 2011, the purple crystal-kryptonite which can be rotated, suddenly appeared in Belgrade. Because of that, TV B92 became surprised and made a speculation talking about the crystal-kryptonite at Knez Mihailova Street in Belgrade. From 19 April 2011 to 20 April 2011, TV B92 started to air some promos with this crystal-kryptonite and were advertising something, but during its news program Vesti B92 on 20 April 2011 at 11 pm, it was known that TV B92 is going to be rebranded on 21 April 2011. Then on 21 April 2011, TV B92 started the new season of 2011–12 and underwent a visual makeover. At the same time, it introduced a new logo that consists of a purple crystal-kryptonite that contains an orange slash while the "B 92" wordmark are appearing in the middle of the crystal-kryptonite. In addition to news and series, TV B92 introduced more sports programming and was broadcasting many
tennis events featuring Serbian players (
Grand Slam tournaments,
ATP Masters 1000 series,
ATP World Tour Finals),
football (
UEFA Europa League,
La Liga) and
basketball (
Liga ABA). But however, its purple crystal-kryptonite logo was short-lived and was only used for 12 months of believing in B92
2012–2017 In 2012, TV B92 got its fourth and final logo which was a purple cube with a golden flash. This purple cube had first arrived in Belgrade on 16 March 2012 when TV B92 made a discussion about the purple cube at Knez Mihailova Street in Belgrade. From 17 March 2012 to 18 March 2012, TV B92 began to air some promos with the purple cube and was advertising something. Later, Vesti B92 announced on 18 March 2012 at 11 pm, that TV B92 would implement a new logo and renewed on-air look on 19 March 2012. Finally on 19 March 2012, TV B92 discontinued its purple crystal-kryptonite logo and introduced a new logo that consists of a purple cube that has a golden flash as well as the "B92" wordmark are in the center of the purple cube, but is now spelled with a lowercase letter "b", known as
b92. The purple cube was the last logo to carry TV B92's franchise and it was used for 5 years from 19 March 2012 to 10 September 2017. On 18 March 2013, TV B92 aired the popular Croatian telenovela
Larin izbor and on 11 September 2013, that same year, it started showing
Turkish television drama for the first time as the last major Serbian commercial TV station to do so. A year later on 3 November 2014, TV B92 started broadcasting in 16:9. Finally, on 18 December 2016, the cable channel B92 Info ceased operations and was replaced by Prva World.
2017–2020: Rename to O2 In late October 2014, Serbian newspaper
Blic reported that TV B92 will be possibly renamed to OTV by the end of 2014, with the result made after a petition made by former TV B92 employees telling the network to change its name, and around 1,500 people signed for the petition. One last step by that decision was the removal of the Serbian most popular political late-night talk show
Utisak nedelje. TV B92 denied those claims labeling them as "false claims". The planned channel was said to be an entertainment-oriented TV station, but the logo and was unknown at the time. It was also said that the change would not affect the cable channel B92 Info, "which will continue to air with this name", and Radio B92 would continue to work in the same format. Three years later on 11 September 2017, TV B92 completed the proposed re-branding and started broadcasting under the name of
O2.TV. It was also announced that the web portal
b92.net would continue operating unchanged, while O2.TV would launch a separate website. ==Ownership==