Viaplay Group
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2018) |
File:Nordic Entertainment Group Logo.png | |
Company type | Publicly traded Aktiebolag NASDAQ: class A (NENT-A.ST) and class B (NENT-B.ST) |
---|---|
Industry | Media |
Founded | July 1, 2018 |
Headquarters | Sweden |
Key people |
|
Brands |
|
Subsidiaries | Viasat Viaplay SplayOne |
Website | www |
Nordic Entertainment Group (NENT Group) is a pan-Nordic media and entertainment company. The company operates the video streaming services Viaplay and Viafree, advertising-funded TV and radio channels, the pay-TV and broadband operator Viasat, and more than 30 production companies.
History
Nordic Entertainment Group was conceived in March 2018 as Modern Times Group (MTG) decided to become two companies by spinning off its then Nordic Entertainment and MTG Studios business segments plus Splay Networks. This was initiated after the failed sale of these assets to TDC A/S as the TDC board had agreed to purchased by the Australian Macquarie Group a month earlier. The MTG executive vice president and CEO of Nordic Entertainment was named president and CEO of NENT Group.[1] In mid-April 2018, additional executives were named including MTG Denmark CEO Kim Poder as executive vice president and group chief commercial officer and Denmark CEO. Morten Mogensen would continue as CEO of Nice Entertainment Group production.[2] MTG chief strategy officer Gabriel Catrina was named chief financial officer in May to go along with his April announced positions of executive vice president, chief strategy officer and head of merger and acquisitions.[3]
NENT Group began operating separately on July 1, 2018.[4] In September 2018, DRG founder and chairmen Jeremy Fox left DRG, which was acquired by NENT in 2013. NENT agreed to purchase Fox's remaking stake in DRG while naming NENT Studio CEO Mogensen as DRG chairman while Richard Halliwell was appointed Atrium CEO to replace Fox.[5] On 28 March 2019, Modern Times Group had completed Nordic Entertainment Group stock distribution to its share holders. The two class A and B started trading that day on Nasdaq Stockholm exchange.[6]
NENT Group took a stake in Erik Feig's Picturestart media company along with a first look Nordic rights at Picturestart's May 2019 launch.[7]
Company structure
Advertising funded television (Free-TV)
Nordic Entertainment Group operates advertising funded channels in Scandinavia . Typically, the portfolio structure for these channels is one primary channel (TV3), and then secondary channels (TV6, TV3+ etc...) These channels generate primarily advertising revenues, and are classified as free-TV, but a majority of the Scandinavian free-TV channels are encrypted and subject to decoding fees.
Networks[4]
Channel type | Sweden | Norway | Denmark |
---|---|---|---|
General | TV3 Sweden | TV3 Norway | TV3 Denmark |
General secondary | TV6 Sweden (Free) | Viasat 4 | TV3+ Denmark |
Supplementary | TV8 TV10 |
TV6 Norway | TV3 Puls TV3 Max TV3 Sport |
Pay television
TV services
Nordic Entertainment Group operates the Viasat satellite platform[4] in the Scandinavia, offering both in-house and third party channels.
The sports channels available in the different Scandinavian countries differ somewhat depending on different rights held for different markets and different business agreements.
Nordic Entertainment Group also operates Viaplay, a streaming service in the Nordic countries.[4]
Viafree - streaming service in Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden[4]
Scandinavia
The following channels are available in all Scandinavian countries:
- Viasat Film Premiere (SD/HD)
- Viasat Film Action (SD/HD)
- Viasat Film Family
- Viasat Film Comedy (SD/HD)
- Viasat Film Hits
- Viasat Series (SD/HD)
- eSportsTV (HD)
- Viasat Golf (SD/HD)
- Viasat Hockey (SD/HD) (except Denmark)
- Viasat Ultra HD (UHD)
These channels are only available in Sweden:
- Viasat Sport Sweden (formerly known as Viasat Sport 1) (SD/HD)
- Viasat Fotboll (formerly known as Viasat Sport 2) (SD/HD)
- Viasat Motor (formerly known as Viasat Sport 3) (SD/HD)
- Viasat Sport Premium HD (HD)
These channels are only available in Norway:
- Viasport (SD/HD)
These channels are available in Finland:
- Viasat Urheilu (HD)
- Viasat Jalkapallo (HD)
- Viasat Jääkiekko (HD)
Radio
Viasat owns several radio networks and stations in Sweden and Norway:
- Rix FM, national network in Sweden
- Star FM, national network in Sweden
- Bandit Rock, station in Stockholm and Uppsala
- Power Hit Radio, station in Stockholm
- P4 Radio Hele Norge, national network in Norway (DAB+)
- P5 Hits, national network in Norway (DAB+)
- P6 Rock, national network in Norway (DAB+)
- P7 Klem, national network in Norway (DAB+)
- P8 Pop, national network in Norway (DAB+)
- P9 Retro, national network in Norway (DAB+)
- P10 Country, national network in Norway (DAB+)
- P11 Bandit, national network in Norway (Internet)
- NRJ Norway, national network in Norway (DAB+)
- I Like Radio, streaming service[4]
Nent Studios
Nent Studios comprises 28 production companies in 16 countries, including Strix Television, Paprika Latino, Novemberfilm, Redaktörerna, DRG, Monster, One Big Happy Family, Playroom, Rakett, Titan, Baluba, Nice Drama, Moskito, Production House, Grillifilms and Gong. It also includes Splay, the largest Swedish MCN ('Multi Channel Network') on YouTube.
NENT Studios
formerly Nice Entertainment Group head by CEO Morten Mogensen[2]
- DRG (2013) stake purchased 2013 and the founder's remaining stake in 2019[5]; UK distribution company[8]
- Atrium TV - formed in 2017, Atrium is a scripted drama commissioning club for regional streaming services and telecom operators: Viaplay (Nordics), BT (UK), Orange (France), Movistar+ (Spain), Deutsche Telecom (Germany), iflix (Asia/MENA), Sky (New Zealand), Antenna (Greece), Yes TV (Israel), Newfilm (Russia), Big Flix (India), and Showmax (Poland and South Africa)[5]
- Double Yellow Television - founded by Mark Wells and Glen Middleham to produce factual, factual entertainment and entertainment programming. DRG invested in the company in February 2018 and was to co-locate at DRG's Central London offices.[8]
- Norway
- Monster (Norway)
- One Big Happy Family (Norway)
- Playroom (Norway)
- Rakett
- Sweden
- Titan
- Baluba
- Nice Drama
- Finland
- Moskito
- Production House
- Grillifilms
- Denmark
- Gong[9]
- Central Eastern Europe
- Paprika Studios (Hungary, Romania, Slovenia, Czech, Slovakia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania)
References
- ^ Thomson, Stuart (23 March 2018). "Modern Times Group to split in two". Digital TV Europe. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- ^ a b Thomson, Stuart (19 April 2018). "MTG unveils Nordic Entertainment Group management team". Digital TV Europe. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- ^ McDonald, Andrew (29 May 2018). "MTG strategy chief to become Nordic Entertainment Group CFO". Digital TV Europe. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f Briel, Robert (June 11, 2018). "Nordic Entertainment Group launches new brand". Broadband TV News. Retrieved May 3, 2019.
- ^ a b c Bylykbashi, Kaltrina (13 September 2018). "Fox departs DRG as NENT's Mogensen steps up". TBI Vision. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- ^ Clover, Julian (28 March 2019). "NENT Group shares debut on Nasdaq Stockholm". Broadband TV News. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- ^ Kroll, Justin (2 May 2019). "Veteran Producer and Exec Erik Feig Launches Media Company Picturestart". Variety. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- ^ a b Whittock, Jesse (14 February 2018). "DRG buys into ex-ITV Studios execs' new prodco". TBI Vision. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- ^ Clarke, Stewart (23 September 2013). "MTG buys Nice Entertainment Group for €84.4m". TBI Vision. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
External links
- Official website (in English)