Seoul Broadcasting System

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Seoul Broadcasting System (SBS)
Native name
Hangul
Revised RomanizationJushikhoesa Eseubieseu
McCune–ReischauerChusikhoesa Esŭbiesŭ
Formerly
Hangul
Revised RomanizationSeoul Bangsong Jusikhoesa
McCune–ReischauerSŏul Pangsong Chushikhoesa
TypePublic
KRX: 034120
Industry
Founded14 November 1990; 30 years ago (1990-11-14)
Headquarters
161, Mokdongseo-ro, Yangcheon District, Seoul
,
South Korea
Area served
South Korea
Key people
  • Yoon Se-young (Founder)
  • Park Jung-hoon (President)
Revenue792,884,228,900 (2015)
₩42,152,487,870 (2015)
₩34,884,042,815 (2015)
Total assets₩934,369,945,679 (2015)
Total equity₩91,262,910,000 (December 2015)
Owner
Number of employees
1,141 (December 2015)
ParentSBS Media Holdings
Subsidiaries
  • SBS A&T
  • Mediacreate Co., Ltd.
Websitewww.sbs.co.kr
SBS Media Holdings, Ltd.
Native name
Hangul(주)에스비에스미디어홀딩스
Revised RomanizationJusikhoesa Eseubieseu Midieoholdingseu
TypePublic
KRX: 101060 (2008.3.24)
Industry
FoundedSeoul, South Korea (4 March 2008 (2008-03-04))
Headquarters
161, Mokdongseo-ro, Yangcheon District, Seoul
,
South Korea
ServicesBroadcasting holding company
Revenue473,523,143,447 won (2015)
23,260,805,348 won (2015)
25,227,364,840 won (2015)
Total assets881,606,449,180 won (December 2015)
Total equity69,948,095,000 won (December 2015)
OwnerTaeyoung Engineering & Construction Co., Ltd: 61.42%
Kiturami Boiler Co., Ltd: 8.78%
National Pension Service: 6.98%
Parent [ko] (KRX: 009410)
SubsidiariesSBS
SBS Contents Hub
SBS Medianet
SBS ViacomCBS
Websitewww.sbsmedia.co.kr

Seoul Broadcasting System (SBS) (Korean에스비에스; RRe-seu-bi-e-seu) is a national South Korean television and radio network company, owned by the Taeyoung Construction. In March 2000, the company legally became known as SBS, changing its corporate name from Seoul Broadcasting System (서울방송). It has provided digital terrestrial television service in the ATSC format since 2001, and T-DMB (Digital Multimedia Broadcasting) service since 2005. Its flagship terrestrial television station is Channel 6 for digital and cable.

History[]

After the 1987 South Korean democratic reform, the government had decided to create a new commercial broadcaster in South Korea. Eventually, MBC was a mouthpiece of KBS to broadcast sporting events like the 1986 FIFA World Cup, and however, the purpose for South Korea's new commercial broadcaster has to become an alternative channel to the audience that it was before 1990 mastered by MBC. Then, during the separation of MBC from KBS, the government had luckily succeeded it, and by that, it introduced a new South Korean commercial broadcaster called SBS. According to the National Pension Service, SBS is South Korea's second commercial broadcaster after MBC, and it were founded on 14 November 1990, when the government allowed the creation of a second commercial station in Seoul. At the same time, during its establishment, SBS were first marking its start by beginning its experimental demo emissions, and then later, it were therefore commencing its test transmissions for its TV and radio channels on 1 December 1990, that same year. Later, on 20 March 1991, SBS started its regular broadcasts by launching SBS Radio's first regular broadcasts on AM 792kHz.[1] 9 months later, on 1 December 1991, that same year, when MBC celebrated its 30th anniversary, SBS commenced its official broadcasts with the introduction of SBS TV at 10:00am in Seoul, and it was designated as "The Day of Birth of SBS",[2] as it broadcast by MBC on the program MBC Newsdesk.[3] Initially, SBS were only broadcasting terrestrially in Seoul and its surrounding areas. On 9 October 1992, the government began accepting applications for private broadcasting stations in other regions of the country. SBS had planned for a television and radio broadcast affiliate network that aims to air SBS' programs in other new regional channels before its 5th anniversary. In 1994, the private channels KNN in Busan, TJB in Daejeon, TBC in Daegu, and kbc in Gwangju were created after government approval.[4] On 14 May 1995, SBS launched its national television network with its new local affiliates, KNN, TJB, TBC, and kbc. SBS had managed a network that airs SBS programs in other regional channels while local stations created local programming to suit the local residents needs.[5]

In 1996, plans for an FM radio station, which will complement the existing AM station came into fruition. On 14 November 1996, SBS Power FM began broadcasting on 107.7 MHz as a music-centric station. On 4 January 1999, the original SBS Radio on AM 792 kHz began broadcasting on FM as well. The station rebranded as SBS Love FM on 103.5 MHz, simultaneously airing on both AM and FM frequencies.[6] High-definition digital television was introduced in 2001. Digital Multimedia Broadcasting (DMB) was introduced in 2005.

SBS introduced its current logo on 14 November 2000, after its 10th anniversary celebration titled SBS 10th Anniversary Special: Thank You, Viewers to ensure the overall coherence of the current identity. SBS' logo has three embryos placed in a circle of the model where three colors are used to represent the symbol of human-centered, cultural and creative, future-oriented management philosophy, showing that the 'life' and 'the seeds of civilization' has centered on the theme of SBS.[citation needed] SBS' branding is used in all sectors such as vehicle, microphone, envelopes, business cards, memorabilia, helicopter, signs, ganpanryu, seosikryu, uniforms, program title, etc. SBS also had used the slogan "Humanism thru Digital" until January 2010 where a new slogan is currently used. Gomi is the mascot of SBS-oriented as the new face of 'Humanism thru Digital' through the harmony of nature and human life where green environment is important.[7] On 29 October 2012, SBS TV became South Korea's second channel to go 24/7, but it had discontinued in 2017 thus, have reverted to daily sign-off routines during overnights (alongside MBC TV).

The network's current advertising slogan is Together, we make delight (함께 만드는 기쁨), as used in a new station identification video with apl.de.ap's "We Can Be Anything" as background music.[8][9]

SBS channels[]

  • 1 terrestrial TV (SBS TV Channel 6)
  • 3 radio stations
Name Frequency Power (kW) Transmitter Site
SBS Love FM 792 kHz AM
103.5 MHz FM
98.3 MHz FM
50 kW (AM)
10 kW (FM)
Neunggok-dong, Goyang City, Gyeonggi Province (AM)
Mount Gwanaksan, Seoul (FM)
Icheon City, Gyeonggi Province (FM)
SBS Power FM 107.7 MHz FM
100.3 MHz FM
10 kW
100W
Mount Gwanaksan, Seoul
Saengyeon-dong, Dongducheon City, Gyeonggi Province
SBS V-Radio CH 12C DMB 2 kW Mount Gwanaksan, Seoul

Family companies[]

Name Description
SBS Media Holdings Archived 12 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine Parent company of SBS
SBS International, Inc. Operates SBS America and Coming Soon in United Kingdom.
SBS Academy Trains and manages employees
SBS Artech Provides creative support
SBS Newstech Provides information technology
SBS Contents Hub Distributes media online
SBS Culture Foundation Provides support for broadcast and cultural innovation
Seoam Foundation Provide scholarships to deserving individuals
SBS Medianet Operates the cable channels of SBS Biz, SBS Plus, SBS Sports, SBS Golf, and SBS funE
SBS ViacomCBS (SBS and ViacomCBS) Operates the cable channels of SBS MTV and Nickelodeon
Studio S
(formerly The Story Works)
Provides in-house drama production
Vlending Co., Ltd. (SBS and MBC) Provides music distribution

SBS Regional[]

Channel Corporate Name Broadcast Region Since
SBS SBS Seoul Capital Area 14 November 1990
KNN KNN Busan and South Gyeongsang April 1994
TJB TaeJon Broadcasting Daejeon, Sejong and South Chungcheong 9 April 1994
JIBS Jeju Free International City Broadcasting System Jeju Island 10 April 1994
TBC TBC Daegu and North Gyeongsang 10 August 1994
kbc Kwangju Broadcasting Corporation Gwangju and South Jeolla 10 August 1994
CJB Cheongju Broadcasting North Chungcheong 5 July 1996[10]
ubc Ulsan Broadcasting Corporation Ulsan 4 September 1996
JTV Jeonju Television North Jeolla 25 January 1997
G1 G1 Gangwon 16 November 1999

Logos[]

Programming[]

SBS dramas have been part of the "Korean Wave", exported to many countries across the world. Sandglass has one of the highest viewership ratings in South Korea, and is considered the breakout drama for the network.[11] Other dramas that have enjoyed high viewership include Lovers in Paris,  [ko], Brilliant Legacy, Rustic Period, Temptation of Wife, The Heirs, and My Love from the Star.[12] SBS airs a variety of entertainment programs ranging from informational, comedy, music, reality, talk shows, and auditions. Many programs are popular throughout Asia, including X-Man, Family Outing, Running Man, The Music Trend, and many more.[13][14] SBS documentaries encompass a wide range of issues, from foreign affairs to the environment.  [ko] premiered in 1992, and has since earned notoriety for its investigations from a journalistic standpoint. SBS also broke tradition by creating its flagship newscast SBS 8 News, airing at 20:00 instead of 21:00, giving itself the slogan "News an hour earlier".[15] It also produces news-analysis programs such as Morning Wide, Nightline, SBS Current Affairs Debate, Curious Stories Y, and In Depth 21 covering the political, economic, social and cultural issues of the days.

Foreign partners[]

Americas[]

Country Private Television
Argentina Clarin Group, El Nueve, Telefe
Bolivia Bolivisión, Red Uno
Brazil Rede Record, SBT, Rede Globo, Rede Bandeirantes
Canada Global Television Network, Citytv
Chile La Red y Telecanal, 13
Colombia RCN TV
Costa Rica Repretel, Teletica
Dominica Antena 7 and Antena 21
Ecuador RTS Group, Teleamazonas
El Salvador Red Salvadoreña de Medios, Telecorporación Salvadoreña
Guatemala Chapín TV
Honduras Televicentro, VTV
Mexico Televisa, TV Azteca, Grupo Imagen
Nicaragua SNTV, Ratensa Group
Panama RPC-TV. Telemetro
Paraguay SNT Group, Telefuturo
Peru ATV Group, América Televisión
United States ABC, CBS, The CW, Fox, NBC
Uruguay Channel 10, Teledoce
Venezuela Televen, Canal i

Europe[]

Country Private television
Germany RTL Germany, Sat.1
Belgium RTL Belgium
Croatia RTL Croatia
Spain Atresmedia
France M6 Group, TF1 Group, Canal+ Group
Hungary RTL Hungary, TV2
Italy Mediaset
Luxembourg RTL Télé Lëtzebuerg
Netherlands RTL 5, RTL 4
Portugal Sociedade Independente de Comunicação
Turkey Kanal D, Star TV
United Kingdom ITV (TV network), Channel 5

Asia[]

Country Private television
Cambodia Channel 3
China Shanghai Media Group, Jiangsu Broadcasting Corporation
India Viacom 18, Star India
Indonesia SBS One, Trans TV, SCTV
Japan Nippon Television, TV Asahi, Tokyo Broadcasting System
Malaysia SBS One, TV3, NTV7
Philippines ABS-CBN, GMA Network, TV5
Thailand Channel 7
Taiwan Taiwan Television, Chinese Television System
Vietnam Vietnam Multimedia Corporation

Oceania[]

Country Private television
Australia Ten Network Holdings
New Zealand New Zealand Media and Entertainment

Controversies[]

SBS Eight O'Clock News Jang Ja-yeon letter case misreporting[]

SBS Eight O'Clock News, the network's flagship newscast, reported “Actress Jang Ja-yeon had ‘entertained’ 31 guests for a total of 100 times.” The newscast also showed a 230-page document directly written by Jang which however was not her writing. the newscast said "A 50-container/230-page document directly written and delivered to friends by Jang Ja-yeon, who committed suicide in March 2009, has been obtained. In the document, a narrative titled ‘Snow’ draws the story of how unknown celebrities are forced into an ugly entertainment industry." The newscast cited the documents, stating, "The police who were investigating Jang Ja-yeon's case knew of this fact but chose to overlook it. Jang Ja-yeon asked for ‘revenge’ in the document." They added, "Jang Ja-yeon entertained a total of 31 people, 100 times - being forced to give sexual favors. However, claims by representative Kim from her past agency reveals a completely different story. Jang Ja-yeon had kept records of their jobs however, and within these records, it is supposed that officials, publisher officials, corporations, financial institutions, and media officials are involved." Also, "A handwriting expert has confirmed that the documents belonged to Jang Ja-yeon."

The newscast revealed, "Jang Ja-yeon wrote, ‘Please get revenge. There is no way out of hosting. The men who come to receive services are evil. I was forced to host over 100 times. Whenever I get new clothes to wear, I had to meet another devil. Not just in Kangnam, but I also hosted at Suwon Karaoke and various room salons. Even on my parents’ memorial day, I was forced to host. Since I made a list, avenge me to the death. Even if I die, I will take my revenge to the grave.’".[16] however the National Institute of Scientific Investigation said that the letters were fabricated.[17] They said:"In these letters, the way that certain characters like ‘yo’ and ‘ya’ were written coincide directly with the writing habits of the late actress Jang Ja-yeon. The way the consonants and vowels were written are exactly alike, proving that these letters were written by the same person." SBS further added, "It is virtually impossible for Jun to have perfected the handwriting of Jang Ja-yeon by copying the picture of her suicide note from a newspaper. He could not have written 230 letters in her copied handwriting with such limited information, and it is also unlikely that three years worth of letters were merely the result of a concocted plan." SBS continued, "The letters also reveal detailed information regarding her agency's advancement plans, as well as information on the figures she ‘hosted’ that others would not be able to know. If anything, the letters and envelopes show that Jun tried his best to make sure that Jang Ja-yeon's identity was not leaked through the letters.".[18]

However the National Forensic Service confirms that Jang Ja-yeon's letters were fabricated. Yang Hoo-yeol the chief of the NFS opened an official briefing with the media and reported, "After comparing Jang Ja-yeon's original handwriting to Jun's handwriting and the letters in question, results have shown that the letters are not in line with Jang Ja-yeon's original handwriting. Many of grammatical errors are in line with the mistakes Jun made in his personal letters, so we believe that Jang Ja-yeon's letters were fabricated by Jun." He concluded, "The letters that Jun claimed were sent to him by Jang Ja Yeon have a completely different handwriting style to Jang Ja Yeon's original handwriting. Jang Ja Yeon did not write these letters.".[19]

SBS responded to the reports made by the National Forensic Service yesterday, in which they asserted that Jang Ja-yeon's letters were indeed fabricated. SBS stated, "We have no option but to accept the results declared by the NSF. We felt that we had gone through all of the correct measures in investigating the letters for our reports, so we are apologetic for reporting something that was not revealed to be the truth." The station went on to explain their process for their findings. "We made a detailed comparison of the court records and the content of the letters and decided that the possibility of Jang Ja-yeon having written the letters herself was high. We did not, however, investigate the documents at the time." SBS continued, "When we commissioned a handwriting analysis, results showed that it belonged to Jang. We had met with Jun, the owner of the letters, twice already, and even met with his family. His family revealed that they had not directly confirmed that the celebrity Jun knew was Jang Ja-yeon, just that he had a celebrity friend. We then decided that it would be impossible for an inmate to accurately record the whereabouts of someone else outside for over three years." "As it stands, we have no option but to accept the results of the NFS."

The 8 News concluded with an apology to the viewers. "We are extremely apologetic towards the viewers for adding confusion, and to the bereaved for causing distress. We will be continuing to work to find the truth behind Jang Ja-yeon's controversy.".[20]

Mini-skirt controversy[]

SBS 8 News also got into the fire for airing close-up footage of a girl's thighs with the upper part covered by a mini-skirt. It was a part of a news report about women wearing mini-skirts that might cause rape. However, netizens criticised the footage as: sexual assault, and a mini-skirt, what is the relationship, and SBS 8 o'clock news close-up footage of miniskirts, women are walking to the scene, it is only part of her thighs.[21]

Woman sues SBS for showing her breasts[]

A female whose breasts were exposed on SBS Wide eNews 840 (aired after SBS 8 News) is suing SBS and CJ E&M Media for compensation damages. According to the Seoul Central District Court on the 14th[when?], they stated: "A teacher working at a university in Seoul by the name of Kim claims she has suffered damage from a scene where her breasts were exposed, and has filed in a lawsuit against SBS and CJ Media for damage compensation." Kim stated, "SBS filmed me at a proximity where people can recognize my identity. I had to suffer because of their negligence in editing. tvN and its owners, CJ (E&M) Media, showed an unnecessary scene in a corner of the ‘most watched news program’ which stimulated sexual suggestions." She continued, "Because of this incident I suffered from acute laryngitis, and I demand 100 million won ($86,000 USD) for medical expenses and damage compensation." On 31 July 2010, the scene of Kim-ssi's exposed breasts during summer vacation was shown. Viewers who saw this complained, to which SBS responded by immediately deleting the scene and stated, "There was a mistake with processing and editing broadcasts at KNN."[22]

2008 Summer Olympics opening ceremony broadcast controversy[]

On 30 July 2008, SBS gave out a programme to show a full-time rehearsal of the Beijing Olympic opening ceremony before it could be legally watched on 8 August 2008. In this programme, the rehearsal was clearly illustrated, including the show, the organization, and the torch. Some of the sections had been uploaded to YouTube, which therefore made them available to all over the world. Though YouTube later removed the videos, SBS was still blamed for copyright infringement, and some people and groups were even threatening to seek compensation from the company for infringing the broadcasting rights of the IOC.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "건강한 사회를 위한 강한 방송 SBS 출범" (PDF) (in Korean). SBS. January 2001. Retrieved 29 September 2012.
  2. ^ "SBS TV 9일 오전 10시 정식 개국" (in Korean). Naver News. 4 December 1991. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  3. ^ "서울방송(SBS TV) 오늘 오전 개국[백지연]" (in Korean). Naver News. 9 December 1991. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  4. ^ "새 시대, 새로운 방송 SBS TV 개국" (PDF) (in Korean). SBS. January 2001. Retrieved 29 September 2012.
  5. ^ 창사 5주년, 세계로 미래로 (PDF) (in Korean). SBS. January 2001. Retrieved 29 September 2012.
  6. ^ "마음에서 마음으로, SBS 라디오" (PDF) (in Korean). SBS. January 2001. Retrieved 29 September 2012.
  7. ^ "SBS의 새 캐릭터 '고미' 탄생" (in Korean). Naver News. 1 July 2005. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  8. ^ "SBS, 창사 25주년 맞아 새 슬로건 발표..함께 만드는 '기쁨'". Chosun Ilbo (in Korean). 13 November 2015. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
  9. ^ 창사 25주년 '함께 만드는 기쁨' SBS. YouTube. SBS NOW.
  10. ^ CJB
  11. ^ "<방송> SBS '모래시계' 시청률 60% 돌파" (in Korean). Naver News. 15 February 1995. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  12. ^ "SBS '파리의 연인' 완전해부" (in Korean). Naver News. 27 July 2004. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  13. ^ "'X맨' 중국서 인기...예능 프로그램도 '한류 열풍'" (in Korean). Naver News. 5 March 2007. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  14. ^ '런닝맨', 亞 9개국 수출..한류 예능 '일등공신' (in Korean). Naver News. 10 November 2011. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  15. ^ "SBS 창사 20주년…시청자와 함께한 '8시 뉴스'" (in Korean). SBS. 13 November 2010. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  16. ^ "SBS reports Jang Ja-yeon's revealing document, "hosted 31 customers over 100 times"". allkpop. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  17. ^ "Investigators suspect that Jang Ja-yeon's letters were fabricated". allkpop. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  18. ^ "IFSL & netizens respond to the claims of Jang Ja Yeon's letters being fabricated". allkpop. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  19. ^ "National Forensic Service confirms that Jang Ja Yeon's letters were fabricated". allkpop. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  20. ^ "SBS accepts that Jang Ja Yeon's letters were fabricated, apologizes to viewers for adding confusion". allkpop. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  21. ^ "미니스커트가 성폭행 원인? SBS 보도 '논란'". Naver. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
  22. ^ "A woman sues SBS for 100 million won for showing her breasts". allkpop. Retrieved 27 February 2013.

External links[]

Coordinates: 37°31′44″N 126°52′26″E / 37.52884°N 126.873881°E / 37.52884; 126.873881

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