MarketCroatian Radiotelevision
Company Profile

Croatian Radiotelevision

Hrvatska radiotelevizija, or Croatian Radiotelevision, is a Croatian public broadcasting company. It operates several radio and television channels, over a domestic transmitter network as well as satellite. HRT is divided into three joint companies – Croatian Radio, Croatian Television and Music Production, which includes three orchestras and a choir.

History
Croatian Radiotelevision is the direct successor of Radio Station Zagreb () that started broadcasting on 15 May 1926, the second radio station to broadcast in the Southeast Europe. The station was initially a private company, before Radio Zagreb was nationalized on 1 May 1940. During the Independent State of Croatia, the station was known as Hrvatski krugoval. After World War II, it began to operate as a state-owned radio station. At the end of the first year of operation, Radio Zagreb company had a little over four thousand subscribers. On the 30th anniversary of the establishment of Zagreb Radio Station, on 15 May 1956, the first television programme was broadcast from the transmitter built at Sljeme. Television Zagreb's first live broadcast aired on 7 September 1956, making Croatia the first Yugoslav republic to have television. For the next two years this was the only television broadcasting service in the southeast European area. Colour television broadcasts began in 1972. In 1970s, Radio Zagreb Correspondence Center and to a lesser extent Zagreb TV were the main coordinators of cooperation with other units of the Yugoslav Radio Television in production of media content for numerous Yugoslav citizens abroad. The program was aired by Radio Cologne, Frankfurt, Free Berlin, Zurich, Vienna, Paris, Liege, Luxembourg, Hilversum and Stockholm while the second program of the German public television aired Zagreb made "Good Morning Yugoslavia" show. The television channels were aired under the name Croatian Television () between 1990 and 1993. Since then, the current name has been used. The radio broadcast unit is referred to as Croatian Radio (). Following Tuđman's death and the 2000 election in Croatia which brought Stjepan Mesić to power, HRT started changing its editorial policy and staffing, aligning with more liberal views. == Funding ==
Funding
In 2014, more than 85% of HRT's revenue came from broadcast user fees with each household in Croatia required to pay 79 HRK (~€10) per month for a single television set, with the remainder being made up from limited advertising. ==Television==
Television
ChannelsHRT 1 (or Prvi program): HRT's first TV channel, previously known as TVZ 1. This is a general channel with daily news around the world, documentaries, religious programmes, series and movies. • HRT 2 (or Drugi program): HRT's second channel, previously known as TVZ 2. It is primarily used for sports broadcasts and entertainment programmes. The channel is known for its extensive footage of vintage films. It also broadcasts educational programmes. • HRT 3 (or Treći program): HRT's third channel, primarily used for culture, films, children's shows and documentaries. It was relaunched in September 2012. • HRT 4 (or Četvrti program): HRT's fourth channel, broadcasting news programmes, started airing in December 2012. • HRT International, formerly HRT 5 (or Peti program): HRT's fifth and international channel, broadcasting a wide range of programmes from its domestic channels for the Croatian diasporas in Europe, North America, South America, Australia and New Zealand. In the 1980s, there was a third channel called Z3 and later HTV Z3. It was taken off-air on 16 September 1991 when its main transmitter, the Sljeme TV tower, was damaged in an air raid. On 7 November 1994, the channel came back on the air, this time called HRT 3. The channel was later shut down with its frequency de-nationalized and put up for lease in a public tender in 2004 and it has been used by RTL Televizija ever since. It was replaced by satellite channel HRT Plus until its relaunch in 2012. Regional TV channels • '''' ()'' • '''' ()'' • '''' ()'' • '''' ()'' • '''' ()'' Streaming In October 2015, HRT Launched HRTi, an over-the-top streaming service free to all registered users. HRTi offers a live stream of HRT's television and radio channels, as well as access to select catalogue of HRT's original and acquired programming. Programming '' is one of HRT's popular news-programs . • Dnevnik HRT (), popular midday, evening and midnight news programDobro jutro, Hrvatska (), mosaic morning show from 7:00 to 9:00 am • Dobar dan, Hrvatska (), mosaic afternoon show • Nedjeljom u dva (), weekly talk show • Transfer, show about the alternative culture and arts (visual arts, music and web culture) • TV kalendar (), long-running daily historical documentary television series, narrating about historical events, birth/death of people or their discoveries on the same date • Tko želi biti milijunaš? (Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?), quiz show • Zvijezde pjevaju (), big Saturday singing show • Lijepom Našom (), a show focused on Croatian cultural heritage • Otvoreno (), daily political talk show Former showsDan za danom (), mosaic afternoon show • Kviskoteka (quiz show), hosted by Oliver Mlakar, aired in the 1980s and 1990s, later briefly aired on Nova TV. • Male tajne velikih majstora kuhinje () • Motrišta (), political informative magazine aired in the 1990s • The Pyramid, weekly show hosted by Željka Ogresta, winner of Rose d'Or, aired 2004–2008; 2014 • Slika na sliku (), political magazine aired in the 1990s • Upitnik (), quiz show hosted by Joško Lokas, aired in the 2000s, later briefly aired on Nova TV, taken off-air in 2004 • Turbo Limač Show (), hosted by Siniša Cmrk • Željka Ogresta i gosti () (talk show), aired in the start of the 1990s and in the start of the 2000s • Ples sa zvijezdama (Dancing with the Stars), Saturday dancing show ==Radio==
Radio
The Croatian Radio (Hrvatski radio) runs three national and eight local (county-level) stations. National stations The three national stations are available on FM, DAB+, throughout the country and are streamed live via the Internet. • HR 1 – The primary national-level station, mainly serious programming. News every full hour with oldies and local pop music. • HR 2 – Entertainment programming including popular music, with news followed by traffic reports at the half-hour mark • HR 3Classical music and radio drama Regional stationsHR Dubrovnik – based in Dubrovnik, covers the Dubrovnik-Neretva County • HR Knin – based in Knin, covers the Šibenik-Knin County • HR Osijek – based in Osijek, covers the Osijek-Baranja County • HR Pula – based in Pula, covers the Istria County • HR Rijeka – based in Rijeka, covers the Primorje-Gorski Kotar County • HR Sljeme – based in Zagreb, covers the city and the counties of the Northern Croatia • HR Split – based in Split, covers the Split-Dalmatia County • HR Zadar – based in Zadar, covers the Zadar County The mediumwave transmitter at Zadar was at one time one of the most powerful in Europe and at nighttime could be heard throughout most of the continent with JRT (Yugoslav) and later HR (Croatian) programming from Zagreb and Pula. However it was badly damaged during the Serbian shelling of the city in the early 1990s, and has operated on somewhat reduced power since on 1134 kHz. Transmitter was rebuilt in 2004. It consists of 4 masts, every is 132 meters high. It was taken off the air on 1 January 2014. International serviceVoice of Croatia (Glas Hrvatske): Airs programming for Croatians living abroad, Croatia's minority groups and the international community. While mostly in Croatian, the station also features short news and segments in English, German, Italian, Hungarian, and Spanish at different times of the day. The Voice of Croatia broadcasts 24 hours a day via the following satellites; in Europe, North Africa, the Middle East on the Eutelsat 13C at 13°E and Eutelsat 16A at 16 degrees east for Central and East Europe. ==Logos==
Logos
File:Radiotelevizija Zagreb logo.svg|1956–1990 File:HRT logo 1990.png|1990 File:HRT logo 1990-1999.png|1994–1999 File:Hrvatska Radiotelevizija logo.svg|1999–present (black strips) File:Logo of the HRT.svg|1999–present (white strips) ==See also==
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