Mreža TV
Mreža TV is a Bosnian television network founded in 2011.
Type | Private syndicated network |
---|---|
Country | |
Slogan | Mreža TV |
Headquarters | Sarajevo, Tešanjska 24 (Avaz Twist Tower) |
Broadcast area | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Launch date | 26 February 2011 |
Callsigns | Mreža |
Affiliates | O Kanal Televizija K3 |
Former affiliations | OSM TV Behar TV |
Official website | www.mrezatv.ba |
Replaced | TV1 Mreža |
With a syndicated broadcasting programme under the "Mreža" label, 8 TV stations[2] have managed to cover a 92.12 procent of the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina,[3] including major Bosnian cities (Sarajevo, Banja Luka, Mostar, Brčko, Tuzla).
Mreža TV airs TV series, telenovels, movies and entertainment shows. Its direct competitor in BiH is Program Plus network.
Current broadcasters
- O Kanal from Sarajevo
- TV Alfa from Sarajevo
- Televizija K3 from Prnjavor
- TV HIT from Brčko
- TV Slon Extra from Tuzla
- Centralne Nacionalne Novosti from Sarajevo[2][4]
Former broadcasters
Former affiliations were:
- Behar TV
- OSM TV
- NTV 101 [5]
- HTV Oscar C 2
- RTV Zenica
- RTV USK
- RTV TK,[1]
- RTM Mostar
gollark: The fact that the cheesegrater screen doesn't already ship with even a VESA adapter is ridiculous and yet so Apple.
gollark: <@290217153293189120> no asp.net or φπ (php).
gollark: PHP? Stop now.
gollark: Oh dear.
gollark: `apt install potatOS`
References
- Ekrem, Dupanović. "Will Ivan Ćaleta reign supreme over the media space in the region?". www.media-marketing.com. www.media-marketing.com. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
Hoće li Ivan Ćaleta potpuno zagospodariti medijskim tržištem u regionu?
- "TV1 Pokrivenost". www.tv1.ba (in Bosnian). www.tv1.ba. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
- "Partnerske stanice" (in Bosnian). www.mrezatv.ba. www.mrezatv.ba. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
- "RAK - Korisnici dozvola za radijsko emitovanje putem zemaljske radiodifuzije". www.rak.ba (in Bosnian). www.rak.ba. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
- "TV1 vlasnik "Nove mreže": Program 11 TV stanica signalom pokrio 90 posto BiH". www.vijesti.ba. www.vijesti.ba. 8 September 2015. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.