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Network television
A television network is a distribution network for television content whereby a central operation provides programming for many television stations. Until the mid-1980s, television programming in the United States was dominated by a small number of broadcast networks, but with the advent of cable television the cost of creating a television network has been reduced and there have been a huge increase in the number of networks with most of the newer networks catering to a small group. Many early television networks evolved from earlier radio networks.
Broadcast television networks:
Argentina
Australia
Brazil
Canada
Chile
China, Peoples Republic of
China, Republic of
See entry for 'Taiwan below.
Colombia
Finland
- Yleisradio (YLE, Finnish Broadcasting Corporation) - state broadcaster
- MTV3 - (Mainos-TV) commercial station
- Nelonen - (Channel Four Finland) commercial station
Germany
- ARD (Arbeitsgemeinschaft der öffentlich-rechtlichen Rundfunkanstalten der Bundesrepublik Deutschland) - publicly-owned network
Germany's many other TV channels are not networks since they do not consist of individual stations but brodcast identical contents, nationwide or within their single local area.
India
Ireland
- note: BBC NI and UTV are based in Northern Ireland, RTÉ and TV 3 in the Republic of Ireland. However all four are available to most viewers throughout the island of Ireland, with UTV now accepting advertising from the Republic and targeting some of its programmes specifically at viewers in the Republic. Access to the Republic's stations (but in particular RTÉ) in Northern Ireland was a requirement of the Good Friday Agreement peace deal in 1998.
Japan
Mexico
Sweden
Taiwan
United Kingdom
United States
U.S. Broadcast television networks
U.S. Cable and Satellite television networks
Major:
Premium:
Venezuela
See also
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