Vietnam Television

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Vietnam Television
Đài Truyền hình Việt Nam
TypeBroadcast television
Country
 Vietnam
AvailabilityNationwide
International
SloganĐồng hành cùng khán giả
(Accompanying the Audience)
Headquarters43 Nguyễn Chí Thanh, Giảng Võ, Ba Đình, Hanoi, Vietnam
OwnerGovernment of Vietnam
Key people

(General Director)


(Deputy Managing Director)
Launch date
7 September 1970; 51 years ago (7 September 1970)
Former names
Independent Television System (7 September 1970 – 4 July 1976)
Central Television (5 July 1976 – 30 April 1987)
Official website
vtv.vn

Vietnam Television, or VTV (Vietnamese: Đài Truyền hình Việt Nam), is the national television broadcaster of Vietnam. As the state broadcaster under the direction of the government of Vietnam, VTV is tasked with "propagating the views of the Party, policies, laws of the government".[1]

History[]

The first television broadcast in Vietnam was in 1966 when the United States set up 2-channels (1-Vietnamese and 1-English) in Saigon for the Republic of Vietnam. Named Đài Truyền hình Việt Nam (Vietnam Television), the network operated until the fall of Saigon.

VTV was established with technical assistance and training from Cuba on 7 September 1970,[2][3] in Hanoi, as a department of Voice of Vietnam. During the Vietnam War it broadcast intermittently from a mountainous region.

After reunification in 1975, the former US-run stations in the south became part of the national network, and broadcasting was extended to the entire country.

Color television was experimented in 1977 and adopted the French SECAM standard and fully implemented in 1986.[4] Vietnam Television became an official name on 30 April 1987. And by 1990, VTV viewers had two national TV channels to choose from as VTV2 was launched and that year switched to PAL.[5][6]

VTV's regional broadcasting centres are located in Ho Chi Minh City, Huế, Da Nang, Nha Trang (formerly in Phú Yên), and Cần Thơ. Programming is relayed nationwide via a network of provincial and municipal television stations. There are transmitters in most outlying areas of the country. By 2003, more than 80% of all urban households owned a television set. The percentage was considerably less in rural areas, but even the most remote village cafe has a TV and video or DVD player.[citation needed]

In addition, each major city and most of the 51 provinces have their own television stations.[citation needed]

Between 19 March and 30 April 2020, as a safety precaution due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Vietnam, Vietnam Television temporarily suspended the overnight timeslot on most channels, with the exceptions of VTV1, VTV4 & VTV7, and limited the broadcast time to 19 hours per day. The overnight timeslot returned to these channels as of 00:00, 1 May 2020.

Channels[]

VTV today has the following channels:[7][8][9][10]

  • VTV1: News and current affairs channel; 24/7.[11] The channel also broadcasts live important national events and parliament meetings. Music and movies are the only fields that largely fall outside its format. VTV1 initially broadcast on 7 September 1970. An HD version of VTV1 was launched on 31 March 2014. It is considered one of seven must-carry national channels, and it must be carried free-to-air by all satellite and cable providers in Vietnam.
  • VTV2: Science and education channel; broadcast 24/7. The channel also broadcasts China and South Korea TV series. VTV2 started transmission on 1 January 1990. An HD version of VTV2 was launched on 19 May 2015.
  • VTV3: Entertainment channel, broadcast 24/7. VTV3 officially launched on 31 March 1996. An HD version of VTV3 was launched on 31 March 2013. This channel is the first channel in VTV to broadcast in High Definition.
  • VTV4: An international channel officially launched in 1998, offering a best-of package of programming from VTV's domestic channels to Vietnamese worldwide, now available at Taiwan CHT MOD Channel 215. An HD version of VTV4 was launched on 19 June 2015.
  • VTV5: Ethnic language channel, broadcast 24/7. VTV5 launched on 10 February 2002. An HD version of VTV5 was launched on 1 July 2015.
  • VTV6: Youth channel that targets an audience between 18–34 years old and sports shows and events, broadcast 24/7. VTV6 started broadcasting on 29 April 2007. An HD version of VTV6 launched on 7 September 2013.
  • VTV7: National education television channel, broadcast from 06:00 to 24:00. VTV7 and VTV7 HD both soft-launched from 20 November 2015 and began broadcasting officially from 1 January 2016.
  •  [vi]: Specialized channel for viewers in the Central and Central Highlands region of Vietnam, broadcast 24/7. VTV8 and VTV8 HD launched on 1 January 2016.
  •  [vi]: Specialized channel for viewers in the Southern region of Vietnam, launched on 8 October 2007; HD simulcast launched on 28 August 2015.

Defunct regional channels (5)[]

Since 2003, all the above channels are also available via satellite, digital terrestrial and digital cable networks across Vietnam. The VTV itself offers 15 pay TV channels through satellite television and digital cable which are called K+ and VTVCab, respectively, with channels such as Reuters, ESPN, Disney Channel, Discovery Channel, BBC, HBO plus about 40 original channels.

Changes to VTV regional channels were made on 1 January 2016. , , and ceased programming and became VTV8, a specific channel for Central and Highland Regions of Vietnam. Both the old VTV9 (which was only for Ho Chi Minh City and Southeast Vietnam regions) and (which was only for Cần Thơ City and Hậu Giang Province) merged to form the new VTV9 for both southeast and southwest of Vietnam, while was renamed VTV5 Tây Nam Bộ, a bilingual Khmer-Vietnamese channel and the first regional variation of VTV5. (Initially, VTV used to intend to broadcast VTV10 based on their local-channels in Can Tho (VTV Cần Thơ 1 and VTV Cần Thơ 2). However, it didn’t happen and they’ve cancelled the suggestion.)

On 17 October 2016, VTV5 Tây Nguyên, a channel for ethnic minorities in Central Highlands of Vietnam and another regional variation of VTV5, was also launched.

Future channels[]

  • VTV6-4K: An ultra high definition version of the youth-oriented channel VTV6, mainly used for live sport events.
  • VTV World will be the successor channel to the now-airing VTV4 as the new official Foreign Affairs channel of the government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.[12]

List of VTV channels on VTVcab[]

EPG no. EPG name Channel name Channel type Availability Notes
1 VTV1 VTV1 Free TV Free-to-air News and current affairs channel.
2 VTV2 VTV2 Free-to-air Science and education channel.
3 VTV3 VTV3 Free-to-air Entertainment channel.
4 VTV4 VTV4 Free-to-air International channel.
5 VTV5 VTV5 Free-to-air Ethnic language channel.
6 VTV6 VTV6 Free-to-air Youth channel.
7 VTV7 VTV7 Free-to-air National education television channel.
8 VTV8 Free-to-air Specialized channel for viewers in the Central and Central Highlands region of Vietnam.
9 VTV9 Free-to-air Specialized channel for viewers in the Southern region of Vietnam.

Programming[]

VTV has its own film production company, the Vietnam Television Film Centre (formerly Vietnam Television Film Company), or VFC, which makes made-for-television movies and miniseries. However, only about 30% of the entertainment programming shown on VTV is made locally. The rest is imported and dubbed in Vietnamese. Shows include Korean and Chinese serial melodramas, which are the mainstay of nightly programming on VTV3.

Aside from news and current affairs programming, VTV1 devotes itself to orchestral concerts, ballets, traditional theatre, ethnic minority culture shows and films.

Also, on Vietnamese New Year's Eve, VTV broadcasts some programmes and comedy show like Last Afternoon of the Year, News Special, Gặp nhau cuối năm, music concerts, and firework shows, until 01:00 or 02:00.

On millennium celebration, VTV broadcasts some programmes and music concerts, and firework shows on 2000 Today in record time 36 hours (until Friday, 31 December 1999, 12:00 to Saturday, 1 January 2000, 24:00)

Details : List of television programmes broadcasts by Vietnam Television (VTV)

VTV Worldwide Bureaux[]

As of 2020, VTV has 15 bureaux with stationed staff and correspondents at:

  • Vientiane, Laos
  • Phnom Penh, Cambodia
  • Singapore, ASEAN region
  • Beijing, China
  • Tokyo, Japan
  • Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
  • Manila, Philippines
  • Moscow, Russia
  • Paris, France
  • Brussels, Belgium, Europe region
  • London, United Kingdom, UK & Ireland area region
  • Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Middle East region
  • Washington, D.C., United States
  • New York City, United States
  • Los Angeles, United States

Criticism and controversies[]

Political[]

VTV4 has been criticized by South Vietnamese refugees and Vietnamese emigrees who find the channel's one-sided support of the one-party Communist state distressing and offensive.[13][14] This controversy had been engaged in 2004, when the Australian public broadcaster SBS began to air news bulettin from VTV4 as a part of WorldWatch, a program which transmitting news program from public broadcasters around the world. VTV4's bulettin was quickly removed after the backlash.

In the 2010s, some of VTV's news items has controversially contained many elements from Chinese political documents. These also include a six-star flag, originated from the Chinese flag.

On the 2019 Lunar New Year edition of the cultural show Vietnamese Beauties (Vẻ đẹp Việt), VTV used the figure of Trần Lệ Xuân, the former South Vietnamese First Lady to illustating about Vietnamese áo dài styles through the times. Two days later, on the variety show called 12 Zodiacs (12 Con Giáp), VTV callous unintentionally let out a frame that showed a member of P336 band worn a yellow jacket with three-stripe red patterns. This patterns shares similarities to South Vietnamese flag, which is a highly sensitive political issues after 1975.

Copyright infringement[]

According to Thanh Nien News, on 28 February 2016, VTV admitted that they had used a copyrighted content without permission in some of its programs, confirming that the violation has caused VTV's YouTube channel to be terminated. On this day, VTV, was notified by YouTube that the video sharing website had received multiple third-party claims of copyright infringement regarding videos on its official YouTube channel. The channel was terminated the following morning. VTV then told local press that some of its editors used some footage they found online in their news and current affairs programs without asking permission of the copyright holders. The programs were then uploaded on the YouTube channel. The case was exposed after Bui Minh Tuan, 35, reported that VTV had repeatedly used his drone videos, posted on his YouTube channel named Yamaha Trung Ta, without seeking his permission. Tuan, who runs a motorcycle trading company in the central Quang Tri Province, told ICTNews that he had spent a lot of time and money to produce the aerial videos capturing beautiful scenes across the country. He claimed that over 2015-2016 he had sent many complaints to VTV, the Department of Copyright and the Vietnam Ministry of Information and Communications to report around 20 copyright infringements by VTV, but no response was received. Tuan decided to report the case to Google, the owner of YouTube. Since September he has reportedly filed three complaints. He told ICTNews he is not trying to seek damages and that he wants VTV to respect copyright laws. Tuan said VTV needs to make a public apology to him in a news program and hold a press conference on the matter.[15]

This is not the first time VTV met with copyright issues since their roaming into digital lifespan. In 2008, VTV lost its rights of transmitting the Miss World competition due to infringements from illegal internet on-demand media sites. This was repeated in 2016 when VTVCab, VTV's subscription television corporation, lost the broadcasting rights of UEFA Champions League 2015-16 season.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Chức năng, nhiệm vụ và cơ cấu tổ chức của Đài Truyền hình Việt Nam". Đài Truyền hình Việt Nam. 9 January 2018. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Important milestones". Vietnam Television. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  3. ^ "VTV: Overall". Vietnam Television. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  4. ^ Giới thiệu VTV - Đài Truyền Hình Việt Nam | VTV.VN
  5. ^ VTV Official Site - Overall Archived 3 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ VTV Official Site - Milestones Archived 27 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ VTV Official site - Channel list Archived 30 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ vtv6.vtv.vn. "VTV6 - Ban Thanh thiếu niên - Đài Truyền Hình Việt Nam". VTV6. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  9. ^ "VTV sẽ có thêm 3 kênh truyền hình mới". Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  10. ^ "Ra mắt kênh truyền hình VTV9". Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  11. ^ "Lịch phát sóng - Lịch phát sóng truyền hình VTV - VTV.VN". Đài truyền hình Việt Nam. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  12. ^ "Phê duyệt Quy hoạch phát thanh, truyền hình đối ngoại đến năm 2020"
  13. ^ "Crunch time for SBS over Vietnamese news bulletin". Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  14. ^ "Breaking the news at SBS". Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  15. ^ "National network VTV admits to copyright infringement after YouTube block". 3 March 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2016.

External links[]

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