First years and first closure OTV was launched in 2000 as
Oglinda TV (
oglinda being the
Romanian word for
mirror) by
Dan Diaconescu, following the imminent closure of the Romanian TV station
Tele7ABC, where Diaconescu moderated a
talk show, which was called
Senzațional. The station's main show has been from its start
Dan Diaconescu Direct (
Dan Diaconescu Live), a tabloid talk show lasting several hours, from early evening until late night, and featuring obscure guests such as
spiritual mediums,
manele singers and local petty criminals. Other Romanian TV stations soon launched similar late-night talk shows, in a process called by Diaconescu
the "otevisation" of Romania.
Politics Traian Băsescu,
President of Romania in 2009, was also guest in Diaconescu's show, where he talked about politics and personal affairs. The station soon started calling itself
Televiziunea Poporului (''People's Television'') and Dan Diaconescu started being called the future president of Romania. The People's Party was created on 19 September 2011, under the name ''People's Party - Dan Diaconescu
, because a party with the name People's Party'' already existed. Violet and white were chosen as the party's distinctive colors and several graphical elements of the OTV broadcast turned violet. The first congress of the party took place on 21 January 2012 and was broadcast live by OTV. In his speech, Dan Diaconescu, president of the party, said that "he would be the
Vlad Țepeș of 2012", that the "dictator"
Traian Băsescu, then-president of Romania, would be ousted, and that
Victor Ponta and
Crin Antonescu were "his [Băsescu's] people". During the
Romanian riots of January 2012, OTV maintained its sensationalist and propagandistic approach when broadcasting live footage of the violent events in Bucharest. The text running on the screen claimed that OTV had become "the emergency service of Romania", that OTV was "the only news television station", that railway transport would be frozen, and that protesters were coming "to ask Diaconescu to become president". These claims were called by Romanian independent media watchdog
Pagina de Media, "fantasies" of Diaconescu. Diaconescu claimed that the decision was commanded by president Băsescu and his show in the evening featured a relatively large number of people gathered in the studio, many of them members of Diaconescu's ''People's Party'', waving the
Romanian flag and singing party anthems. Nevertheless, the show did not bring much attention from the public, placing OTV only on the 9th place in the rating top. Two weeks after this decision was made by the council, the same sanction was imposed again, on the grounds of continued propaganda for PPDD, halving once more the remaining timespan of the licence of OTV. Following this second sanction, OTV was due to be shut down on 4 July. On 24 April, the sanction was imposed for the third time, which was an unprecedented event in Romanian broadcasting. OTV was then due to be shut down on 29 May. At about 11 PM, Diaconescu appeared on air and held a relaxed free speech, during which he accused various politicians of corruption and also accused members of the NCA of bribery.
Second licence retraction and the Vatican-based television In January 2013, after the members of the council were reelected, a review of the fines not paid by television stations over the last few years was made. It has been calculated that OTV had not paid fines totalling over 1 million lei. Within three hours from the receipt of the decision from the council, the broadcast ceased on cable. Shortly afterwards, an online live stream broadcasting the channel was set up and is live as of March 2013. OTV now airs mostly reruns and recordings of Diaconescu's appearances on other TV stations, notably
România TV. Diaconescu made an attempt at circumventing the decision of the council by settling the television in the city of
Vatican, with the Vatican-based OTV broadcasting most of its shows from the studios in Romania, but under the name of a foreign company. Even so, OTV is not viewable in most Romanian networks.
OTV Live on România TV On 15 July 2014, 533 days after OTV's broadcast interruption, Dan Diaconescu relaunched his flagship show under a different name,
OTV Live, after an agreement with the news television station
România TV. Diaconescu stated that he chose România TV because "of the news television stations, România TV was closest to the pattern of [the former] OTV", "studies [had] shown that much of OTV's audience turned to România TV", and called the agreement a 'barter', since România TV would broadcast the show throughout the night and the Vatican-based OTV would also retransmit shows produced by România TV in the rest of the day. Diaconescu's appearance with his revamped show on România TV was interpreted by some, notably politician
Cozmin Gușă, as an effect of the political alliance that had been agreed between the
Social Democratic Party (PSD), which has allegedly been using România TV as it mouthpiece, and Diaconescu's party, PPDD.
Diaconescu's imprisonment On 4 March 2015, Dan Diaconescu was condemned to five and a half years in prison, having been charged with blackmailing a Romanian mayor, whom he had allegedly threatened with the public disclosure of "real or imaginary facts, such as [his corruption]" on OTV. Reacting to the decision, Diaconescu stated that "they have shut down my TV station, they have shut down my party, now they shut me behind bars". ==
Dan Diaconescu Direct ==