[Prev][Next][Index]

TELE-satellit News - 31 December 1995




This news is provided free of charge to on-line users by TELE-satellit 
magazine and TS News Service GB. IT IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY. It may 
not be reproduced for commercial reasons by any means what so ever. If 
you wish to reproduce this news or redistribute it for non commercial 
use please contact the email address below.

Der TS Nachrichtendienst ist ein Service fuer die Freunde von 
TELE-satellit und TS-TV und ist nur fuer persoenliche infromation 
freigegeben.
______________________________________________________________________

This newsletter is now available direct via email. To subscribe send a 
message to listserver@tele-satellit.com with the message "subscribe 
ts-news <your name>" You should receive a welcome message within a few 
minutes. If you don't something has probably gone wrong. Most likely 
the return address in your email that majordomo uses is invalid and it 
attempts to send you a message but it bounces back to me.

If you get no response try subscribing by typing your email address 
into the message. 

****If that still fails to work email me and I'll sort it out !

______________________________________________________________________

We wish all our readers a Happy New Year
______________________________________________________________________


TELE-satellit
EUROPE'S SATELLITE MAGAZINE
International Satellite Broadcasting News
Number 82, Week ending 31 December 1995
By Martyn Williams
News Desk : Internet martyn@twics.com  or CompuServe CIS:martynw
(c) TELE-satellit Magazine


CLT BID RUMORS SURFACE
  LUXEMBOURG (TS) -- Reports of various bidders and buyers for all or 
part of CLT, Cie Luxembourgeoise de Telediffusion, have emerged in the 
past two weeks. CLT owners large stakes in all of the RTL television 
and radio channels plus parts of other broadcasting and media ventures 
in Europe.
  Shortly before Christmas German news magazine Der Spiegel reported a 
Franco-German consotrium was interested in buying CLT for three 
billion marks.
  The report prompted a press release denying current speculation, but 
not ruling out the possibility of a bid.
  The group is made up of Germany's Bertelsmann AG, French pay-TV 
group Canal Plus and French media company Havas, which each had 
pledged one million marks for a third share of the group.
  The three were apparently interested in buying a majority stake in 
CLMM, a company that controls CLT owned by Belgian financier Albert 
Frere and his Groupe Bruxelles Lambert SA.
  Havas already owns 40% of CLMM and the consortium is now interested 
in making it a majority stake.
  Earlier the same week CLT was forced to deny rumors that Rupert 
Murdoch's BSkyB was to buy a 30% stake in the company.


YELTSIN VETOES LAW BANNING ORT
By Laura Belin
  MOSCOW, Russia (OMRI) -- As expected, President Boris Yeltsin vetoed 
the law on reorganization, privatization, and liquidation of state 
radio and television companies passed by the Duma on 24 November and 
approved by the Federation Council on 9 December, ITAR-TASS reported 
on 21 December.
  The president vetoed a similar measure in June. In particular, the 
law would have suspended the creation of Russian Public TV (ORT), 
created as part of a November 1994 presidential decree ordering the 
restructuring of Ostankino. ORT has broadcast on Channel 1 since 1 
April, and Ostankino was liquidated under a 6 October presidential 
decree.


ECHOSTAR I LAUNCHED
  ENGLEWOOD, California, USA (ESC) -- EchoStar Communications Corp., 
confirmed on December 28th it has successfully achieved geotransfer 
orbit and completed final separation of the rocket from the company's 
first direct broadcast satellite, EchoStar-I after an early morning 
launch the same day from Xichang, China.
  EchoStar-I will reach final orbit at approximately the end of the 
first week of January. Once final orbit is achieved, the solar panels, 
antenna and deflectors will be deployed and in-orbit testing will 
begin.  The satellite is expected to be ready for full commercial 
transmission by mid-February.
  EchoStar is developing a state-of-the- art DBS system, the DISH 
(Digital Sky Highway) Network, expected to be operational early next 
year with programming transmitted from EchoStar-I.  A total of over 
200 channels of digital video, audio and data services are expected to 
be delivered to homes throughout the continental United States with 
the launch of EchoStar-II in mid-1996.


PRIVATE BROADCASTING APPROVED IN HUNGARY
  BUDAPEST, Hungary (TS) -- Hungarian law makers recently approved the 
beginning of private broadcasting in the country breaking state 
controlled MTV's monopoly.
  The legislature voted 264-31 in favor of the motion to allow private 
broadcasting to begin.
  Under the plan, MTV 1 and Duna TV will continue to be state operated 
while a new state run satellite channel is also established, by 
December 1996.
  Private channels will be able to use the current channels occupied 
by MTV 2 and the now unused channel 58 which used to relay Soviet 
Television.


CABLE CHANNELS ATTRACT MORE UK VIEWERS
  LONDON, England (TS) -- A recent study by the Independent Television 
Commission has found the share of viewing time taken by satellite and 
cable channels in cable homes is increasing.
  New channels grabbed a 39.6% share of total viewing time, up from 
34.9% last year. The biggest looser was BBC 1 which dropped to 21.2% 
from 24.1%. Channel 4 also lost share dropping 1.2% to 5.1% whilst the 
share of ITV and BBC 2 remained broadly constant.
  Average viewing per week amounted to 25 hours, virtually unchanged, 
although amongst children the amount of time spent watching TV has 
increased with the new channels. In th 2 to 9 year old age group, The 
Disney Channel accounted for around 10% of all viewing.


TWO PRIVATE ESTONIAN TV STATIONS TO MERGE
By Saulius Girnius
  TALLIN, Estonia (OMRI) -- The private television stations RTV and 
EVTV, which currently broadcast on alternate days on the same channel, 
will combine their programs from the beginning of 1996 as the first 
step toward their full merger as new station TV3, BNS reported on 27 
December.
  Some 70-80% of RTV's current shareholders are to take part in the 
founding of the new station while only one shareholder, Sweden's 
Kinnevik, will participate from EVTV.


PANAMSAT PICKS UP MORE ASIAN TRAFFIC
  HONG KONG (TS) -- PanAmSat-2, the recently launched Pacific Ocean 
Region satellite, has attracted more custom. Hong Kong's TVBI, 
Television Broadcasts Ltd International, has announced it has chosen 
the satellite to carry its signal across Asia. 


ORION GRABS NEW UK CABLE STATION
  LONDON, England (TS) -- Orion Atlantic has secured a contract to 
transmit Performance - The Arts, a UK cable arts channel. The 
broadcasts, direct to cable operators throughout the United Kingdom, 
will take place via the Orion 1 satellite.
  The contract was awarded by NTL with whom Orion offers transmission 
services via Orion 1 from a new, NTL-owned digital video satellite 
transmission facility located in Central London, England.
  Performance - The Arts is a 24-hour, 7 days a week cultural 
programming channel.
  Orion has already provided antennas to local cable operators who 
have contracted to receive the programming. Over 40 cable systems 
passing more than 3 million homes will have dishes pointed to Orion 1 
by the start of this service.
  The transmission service for Performance - The Arts will commence on 
February 1, 1996 along with Channel One which was announced last 
November. Channel One, a 24-hour, 7 days a week news and  
entertainment channel, will also be transmitted throughout the U.K.


MORE EURO MONEY FOR WIDESCREEN
  BRUSSELS, Belgium (EC NEWS) --

Commission grants aid for wide-screen television broadcasting
     EUROPEAN COMMISSION PRESS RELEASE: IP/95/1463
     DOCUMENT DATE: DECEMBER 21, 1995
     +
     EUROPEAN ACTION PLAN HELPS AUSTRIA, DENMARK AND ITALY TO
     ENTER THE WORLD OF WIDE-SCREEN TV - DENMARK EVEN IN DIGITAL
     +
   Following a proposal of Mr. Martin Bangemann, its member in charge 
of Industry, Information Technologies and Telecommunications, the 
Commission has decided to grant a contribution of ECU 4.395 million to 
support 2000 hours of wide-screen television broadcasting by seven 
television stations in five European countries (see below).
  The decision will enable the Austrian ORF, the Italian Telenuovo, 
Synthesia and Videolina and the Danish Danmarks Radio to present 
widescreen TV to their viewers for the first time. The Danish service 
will be the first wide-screen service to start using the digital 
satellite TV standard developed by the European Digital Video 
Broadcasting Group.
  Veronica from Holland and Granada from the UK will also receive 
support from the programme.
  The Commission decision is a part of the Action Plan for the 
Introduction of Advanced Television Services in Europe(1) . The new 
cinema-like format, also called 16:9-format because of the relation 
between the width and the hight of the screen, is wider than the old 
4:3-format. The overall objective of the Action Plan is to accelerate 
consumer uptake of wide-screen TV by overcoming the "chicken and egg" 
problem: broadcasters would not transmit 16:9 without TV sets while 
manufacturers would not produce them without broadcasting. 
  The Action Plan breaks the vicious circle by contributing towards 
broadcasters' and producers' extra costs incurred in introducting 
16:9.
  Broadcasters in countries with no wide-screen services until now 
qualify for funding up to 80% of their expenses, in other countries up 
to 50%.
  "The announcement of a digital wide-screen service by Danmarks  
Radio is of strategic importance because it shows that 16:9 really has 
the potential to become the screen format of the Information Society," 
commented Mr Bangemann, "Wide-screen is a bridge between analogue and 
digital television for the consumer.
  It works with either technology and therefore futureproofs consumer 
investments in the most expensive part of the TV system, the screen 
itself."

Country        TV station     Hours allocated Total in ECU

80% Grants
---------------------------------------------------------------- 
Italy          Telenuovo      300            740,000
               Synthesia      200            540,000
               Videolina      200            540,000
---------------------------------------------------------------- 
Austria        ORF            360            860,000
---------------------------------------------------------------- 
Denmark        DR             400            940,000
----------------------------------------------------------------

50 % Grants
---------------------------------------------------------------- 
Holland        Veronica       400            587,500
----------------------------------------------------------------
UK             Granada        150            187,500
---------------------------------------------------------------- 
Grant total                   2010           4,395,000

     (1) see IP/95/618 and IP/95/1000
  END OF DOCUMENT


______________________________________________________________________

   
TELE-satellit is available from newsstands in central Europe of via 
subscription worldwide. You can get a one-time sample copy at a 
special price from our UK subscription centre. UK readers pay just 
GBP 2, Europe GBP 4, RoW GBP 6.

TELE-satellit GB
  PO Box 1124
  Ascot
  Berkshire
  GB-SL5-0XH

email : 100574.1003@compuserve.com

______________________________________________________________________

CREDITS,

Reports in TELE-satellit news are from our worldwide network of 
reporters and sources. In particular we would like to thank :

Curt Swinehart for keeping us up to date with all parts of the 
satellite industry.

Don Fitzpatrick of DFA in San Francisco for providing permission to 
reproduce articles from Shoptalk, the TV news industry's daily news 
and information magazine.

OMRI material was reprinted with permission of the Open Media Research 
Institute, a nonprofit organization with research offices in Prague, 
Czech Republic. For more information on OMRI publications, please 
write to: info@omri.cz

Reproduction in part of Jonathan's Space Report was maded possible by 
kind permission of Jonathan McDowell. To read the full edition see 
http://hea-www.harvard.edu/QEDT/jcm/space/jsr/jsr.html or 
ftp://sao-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/jcm/space/news/news.*

News from Radio Sweden is made possible by Geroge Wood, presenter of 
Sweden Calling DXers/MediaScan,  the world's oldest radio program 
about international broadcasting. Radio Sweden has presented this 
round-up of radio news, features, and interviews on Tuesdays since 
1948. It's currently broadcast on the first and third Tuesdays of the 
month. http://www.sr.se/rs


___
This piece of news is from ts-news provided by TELE-satellit (http://www.TELE-satellit.com)



[Other mailing list archives]