In 1991,
Li Ka-shing started his
STAR satellite television network. At the end of the year,
Subhash Chandra of the
Essel Group finished a round of negotiations with HutchVision, after a series of rejections, and the condition that Chandra would pay US$5 million a year for the satellite transponder. Li signed the deal in India a few months later and approached interested companies, but nobody was interested in paying the transponder fees. Chandra was the last possible man to sign the contract, by gathering money from his non-resident Indian friends and in the creation of a holding company for the channel, Asia Today. Zee TV was launched on 2 October 1992, as the flagship channel of the Zee Telefilms Ltd. The channel initially broadcast three hours a day, with its output consisting mainly of old Hindi movies and reruns of
Doordarshan serials. The channel's initial manager was a Doordarshan news reporter who was on leave from his employer. Three months later, the airtime had doubled to six hours. while others within the network called it an "upbeat clone of Doordarshan". To offset such negative criticism, Zee TV began producing more original content, Zee TV rejected a 1993 bid to broadcast
Sun TV during the afternoons, forcing Sun TV to negotiate with competitor
ATN instead. It began full-day broadcasts in 1993. By year-end 1995, Zee TV already had three channels, the other two being Zee Cinema, a Bollywood channel, and EL TV, which broadcast in English and regional languages. Numerous competitors had also emerged around this time. In 1996, Zee TV was airing a programme produced by NDTV, precisely at a time when their programmes were leaving Doordarshan and moving to Star Plus. Its reputation began to falter when, on 4 January 1997, news head Rajat Sharma resigned, while 43 out of 48 staff in the news team quit. The 10pm bulletin that day was completed thanks to the help of a team of outsiders. This was largely triggered by STAR's plan of "Indianising" local operations and putting the only independent TV channel in India (in terms of news operation) at risk. Over time, STAR TV's relations with Zee began to sour more, with Murdoch preferring Star Plus. The network had strengthened its presence in October 1996 when it appointed
Rathikant Basu as its director, increasing the amount of Hindi programmes on the channel and deviating attentions from Zee. On 7 October, Murdoch wanted to float the channel at the
New York Stock Exchange, which he thought was "very profitable". Zee TV lost its leadership to Star Plus, which took over its role after Murdoch sold his stake in Asia Today. In 2013, Zee TV, along with its sister channels, underwent a branding overhaul. On 15 October 2017, coinciding with Zee's 25-year silver jubilee, all of its channels were rebranded, with the main channel adopting its current slogan,
Aaj Likhenge Kal and the brand anthem "Andekha, Ansuna, Anchua" used for the official jingle of these Zee channels. On 30 May 2021, Zee TV planned to revamp its look and air four new television series, but because of the
COVID-19 pandemic in India, the idea was postponed and thereafter scrapped. Zee TV unveiled a new logo on 8 June 2025, with its coverage of the 2025 Zee Cine Awards. The new logo features a Z mark, while the channel adopted a new slogan,
Yours Truly, Z. The new logo was heavily criticized by netizens, seeing it as a downgrade or similar to the
JioHotstar logo. == Programming ==