Rte guide tv listings ten Continue For the radio station RTS, watch Radio RTS 1. RTE1 redirects here. For sister service channel, see Irish television station This article needs additional quotes to check. Please help improve this article by adding quotes to reliable sources. Non-sources of materials can be challenged and removed. Найти источники: РТЗ Один - новости газеты книги ученый JSTOR (March 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) RTÉ One / RTÉ a hAonCountryIrelandBroadcast areaIreland & Northern IrelandWorldwide (online)SloganFuel Your Imagination Stay at home (during the Covid 19 pandemic)HeadquartersDonnybrook, DublinProgrammingLanguage(s)EnglishIrishIrish Sign LanguagePicture format1080i 16:9 (HDTV) (2013–) 576i 16:9 (SDTV) (2005–) 576i 4:3 (SDTV) (1961–2005)Timeshift serviceRTÉ One +1OwnershipOwnerRaidió Teilifís ÉireannKey peopleGeorge Dixon(Channel Controller)Sister channelsRTÉ2RTÉ News NowRTÉjrTRTÉHistoryLaunched31 December 1961Former namesTelefís Éireann (1961–1966) RTÉ (1966–1978) RTÉ 1 (1978–1995)LinksWebsitewww.rte.ie/tv/rteone.htmlAvailabilityTerrestrialSaorviewChannel 1 (HD)Channel 11 (+1)Freeview (Northern Ireland only)Channel 52CableVirgin Media IrelandChannel 101Channel 107 (+1)Channel 135 (HD)Virgin Media UK (Northern Ireland only)Channel 875SatelliteSaorsatChannel 1 (HD)Channel 11 (+1)Sky IrelandChannel 101 (SD/HD)Channel 201 (+1)Channel 801 (SD)Sky UK (Northern Ireland only)Channel 161IPTVEir TVChannel 101Channel 107 (+1)Channel 115 (HD)Streaming mediaVirgin TV AnywhereWatch liveAer TVWatch live (Ireland only)RTÉ PlayerWatch live (Ireland Only / Worldwide - depending on rights) RT'One (Irish : RTH hAon) is the main television channel of the Irish state broadcaster, Raidi'teilif's Siranne (RTW), and it is the most popular and most popular television channel in Ireland. It was launched as Telefes Siranne on December 31, 1961, it was renamed RTH in 1966, and it was renamed RTS 1 after the launch of RTW 2 in 1978. It is partly financed by the government's licence fee; the remainder of the funding is provided by commercial advertising. Because the RTH is partly funded by the licence fee, it shows significantly less advertising than most other channels available in Ireland and Northern Ireland. RTS One is available to 98% of the Irish population in HD on the saorview DTT service. It is also available in Northern Ireland through Saorview, Freeview, Sky, and cable provider Virgin Media. The channel is also available online through RT' Player. The history of RTS One began his life as Telefes Siranne in 1961. It was renamed simply RTH in 1966, after the renaming of the Office of Radio Siranne to Radio Telefes Siranne, and became RTS 1 after the launch of RTW 2 in 1978. Originally broadcast in black and white across the country A 625-line standard, as well as a 405-line television system in the northern and eastern parts of the country; Since the mid-50s, many people in these areas already have 405-line TVs receiving BBC and UTV/HTV broadcasts from Wales and Northern Ireland. A standard conversion unit was used to provide the 405-line service, but when the electronic device failed, optical conversion was reportedly used by pointing the 405-line camera at the 625-line monitor. The first program pre-recorded for the new television service was School Around the Corner, an interview/quiz created and presented by Paddy Crosby and produced by James Plunkett. PAL color transmissions began in 1968, and the first program made and transmitted in color was John Hume's Derry. The first external broadcast in color for RTW television was the 1971 Gaelic Athletic Association Final, and shortly thereafter, the Eurovision Song Contest 1971 from Dublin. In the 1970s, studios in the TV center RTW began to be equipped with color, the first was a news studio in 1974, Studio 2 in 1975 and finally Studio 1 (the largest studio used for such productions as The Late Late Show) in 1976. RTW was also the only Irish TV channel until 1978, when RTW 2 was established (known as Network 2 between 1988 and 2004). The Irish language station TG4 began in 1996 as Teilif's na Gaeilge (TnaG). Since 1998, RTS One has also competed with Virgin Media One (formerly known as TV3). Since it began broadcasting, RT'One has competed with BBC One and UTV from Northern Ireland, and in the 1980s, RTW began to compete with other satellite and cable channels, which are widely available throughout Ireland through cable subscription services due to the high level of cable television from pan-European and British channels from the 1960s, as well as the continued release of MMDS and satellites throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Since 1961, RTS television will be broadcast only from 5:35 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. during the winter months. In 1975, this changed slightly with the transmission starting at about 3:30 p.m. and ending around midnight (00:00). The 24-hour broadcasting began in the late 1990s. In 1988, at 1 p.m., RTS One launched a schedule with a new news bulletin. In the past, RTS One did not offer breakfast television, but since 2013 the station has now been airing an early morning current affairs show called The Morning Edition, which is also simultaneously on RTS News now, Virgin Media One is the only indigenous broadcaster in direct competition for this early morning market with Ireland AM since 1999. RTH One during the Olympic Games and special breaking news or election coverage, will provide a special bulletin in the morning. On July 6, 2017, RTC One extended its airwaves Now the channel started working at 6:00 a.m., not at 6:20 a.m. On December 16, 2013, the company RTS One HD RTS One HD was launched. RTH One One currently broadcast exclusively in high-definition (HD) on the national service DTT Saorview, and the simultaneous definition of the standard definition ends on April 2, 2014. However, RTS still provides a standard definition (SD) output of RTS One to pay TELEVISION operators on cable and satellite, for those subscribers who still have equipment that does not support HD. RTS Television decided to launch a new HD service shortly before the Christmas period to draw the audience's attention to the new service available to viewers. RTH began converting its main production studios into HD, the first of which was Studio 5 in 2012, which is used mainly for sports productions. Any programs still produced in standard definition are upscale on the channel, and it is planned that the vast majority of channel outlets will be in due course in high definition. RTS One's SD will continue to be available on Virgin Media Ireland until more of their customers have been upgraded to HD. Sky Ireland launched the channel on 14 December 2015, as part of a new long-term partnership with RTW, however the channel was not available on Sky UK Northern Ireland EPG. In response to inquiries, RTW is currently advising Northern Ireland Sky subscribers to contact Sky on the matter while Sky responds that it is a question for RTW about whether they are making their HD channel available. On May 27, 2011, the channel RTS-1 was launched and shares the channel space with RTS. The channel has been available on Saorview since its launch, UPC Ireland replaced the City Channel on RTW 1 on March 13, 2012. Reeling in the Years does not broadcast on this channel due to restrictions on music rights. It was named RTS One Deferred in easy TV commercial DTT multiplex app, Easy TV was made up of RTS NL and UPC Ireland. In May 2008, RTW also plans to create a third channel called RTS 3 together with the Deferred Act, as reported in the Sunday Business Post. RTS Three has been dropped for an alternative to RTS Plus/RTS. RTW Plus would initially be a time shift channel for the prime-time schedule of RTS One, starting every night at 7 p.m. after the RTJjr ends overnight. This Phase 1 OF HG Plus was due to start broadcasting in May 2011. Phase 2 RTS Plus was to consist of a completely different schedule than that of RTS-1, RTS hoped that it would be available in May 2012. Minister Pat Carey has given the go-ahead for RTW No 1 for a maximum of four years, after which it will be considered. He did not give permission for the second stage of the channel as he informed BAI that it could cause problems for commercial service providers such as TV3. As part of a new long-term partnership with Sky, RT'2 HD was launched on Sky 115 on 14 December 2015, bringing RT'2 HD down to 278. On May 1, 2018, channels No.1 and - Documentary sections of the channel were moved to 201 - 299 to coincide with the channel, not to be channel number 1. For example, RTS One is on Channel 101, and RTS One No.1 on 201. At its launch from 19:00 to 02:00, the TV channel RTS No.1 was broadcast. On February 15, 2019, RTS One No.1 began broadcasting 24 hours a day to coincide with the launch of RTS2 No.1. [17] Budget References The following figures were issued by RTÉ as part of their Annual reports 2008[18] and 2012[19] Income Income Type 2008 2012 Licence Fee €81,992,000 €56,139,000 Commercial Income €106,496,000 €65,351,000 Total Income €188,488,000 €121,490,000 Total Costs Cost Type 2008 2012 Network and other related costs €17,773,000 €14,362,000 Sales Costs €5,278,000 not given Acquired Programming €13,614,000 €14,897,000 Irish Productions €147,999,000 €100,478,000 Total Costs €184,664,000 €129,737,000 Profit and Loss 2008 2012 €3,824,000 (€8,247,000) Breakdown of Irish Productions Production House 2008 2012 RTÉ €93,454,000 €70,448,000 Independent Producers €54,545,000 €30,030,000 Total €147,999,000 €100,478,000 The table below outlines RTÉ One's total in-house and commissioned programming by genre in 2008 and 2012: Genre 2008 2012 Factual €42,951,000 €27,919,000 Drama €38,776,000 €21,425,000 Entertainment €23,918,000 €18,073,000 Music €2,215,000 €1,311,000 News Current Affairs and Weather 38,834,000 euros 30 866 000 euros Sport 1,305,000 euros 884,000 young people Programming Total 147,000 euros August 13, 2015 RTS One showed a line-up for the 2015/2016 season at a rate of 100,478,000 euros.
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