Lithuanian National Radio and Television
Lithuanian National Radio and Television (Lithuanian:
Public broadcaster | |
Industry | Media |
Founded | 1926 1957 (television) | (radio)
Headquarters | S. Konarskio g. 49, Vilnius , |
Area served | Lithuania |
Key people | Monika Garbačiauskaitė-Budrienė (CEO) |
Services | Television, radio, online |
Owner | State-owned |
Website | lrt.lt |
History
The Lithuanian Radio started regular broadcasting in 1926. The television service has been broadcasting since 1957. Radio and television services are now operating from LRT headquarters in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. At the end of 2019, LRT employed approx. 600 people.[2] In May 2007 LRT started a project of converting all of its films, including some five thousand hours of cinefilm and some 30,000 hours of videotapes to digital. The oldest entry dates back to 1895.
LRT comprises seven media channels broadcasting nation-wide. The content of all the channels is integrated and shared across all three platforms: television, radio, and on-line (web-portal and LRT's accounts on social media networks). LRT produces around two-thirds of its content in-house, while one third is commissioned from external producers. [3]
In delivering international news coverage, LRT cooperates with private and public media, including Deutsche Welle, Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, and others. LRT was admitted as a fully active member of the European Broadcasting Union on 1 January 1993.
Governance
The LRT Council is the highest governing institution of LRT. The Council supervises the implementation of the LRT mission, approves the annual income and spending by LRT administration. The Council comprises twelve members prominent in social, scientific and cultural fields, appointed for six-year terms.
On financial issues, the LRT Council and the management are being consulted by the LRT Administrative Commission. The Administrative Commission is made up of five members – management and (or) finance specialists – who are appointed by the Council for a term of four years. Currently, the LRT Council is chaired by Liudvikas Gadeikis.[4]
Budget
LRT operations are funded by taxpayers. LRT budget depends directly on taxes collected in the year before the last. The state allocates 1.5 percent of the personal income tax and 1.3 percent of the collected excise duties. The LRT's budget for 2019 stood at 41.65 million euros. Budget project for 2020 envisages allocating 46.30 million euros for LRT.[5]
Facilities and equipment
LRT has TV studios of 70 sq.m, 120 sq.m, two studios of 300 sq.m and one studio of 700 sq.m. LRT also uses OB stations for broadcasting. Studio facilities include modern computer graphics equipment.
Platforms and channels
LRT TV and radio live broadcasts are accessible globally on LRT.lt (except for the foreign content the broadcast of which in other countries is restricted by authors rights).
Radio
- LRT Radijas – main generalist radio programme;
- LRT Klasika – culture content and classical music as well as specialised content for Lithuanian ethnic minority groups;
- LRT Opus – contemporary music and content for younger audiences.
Television
- LRT televizija (HD) – broadcasts HD content aimed at a wide audience;
- LRT Plius (HD) – focuses on culture and sports;
- LRT Lituanica – broadcasts exclusively Lithuanian content of two other LRT TV channels around the clock via satellite and the internet. It can be accessed through the LRT.LT webpage and is also streamed live on YouTube.
Online
- LRT.lt – beyond the main news page in the Lithuanian language, it also has News in English and News in Russian. LRT.LT English version has been operating since 2019 and is one of the main sources of English-language news from Lithuania and the region.
- All content which was published or aired on LRT channels is permanently stored and is freely accessible at LRT's digital archive Mediateka