Zhejiang Radio and Television Group
Company type | free-to-air, Satellite television, radio |
---|---|
Industry | Media and Entertainment |
Founded | June 2001 |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | China and abroad |
Owner | Government of Zhejiang |
Website | Official Site |
Zhejiang Media Group formerly known as Zhejiang Radio and Television Group (ZRTG) (Chinese: 浙江广播电视集团; pinyin: Zhèjiāng Guǎngbò Diànshì jítuán), is China's fourth-biggest television network after China Central Television (CCTV), Hunan Broadcasting System (HBS), and Jiangsu Broadcasting Corporation (JSBC). The television network is owned by the Zhejiang provincial government. The network is based in Hangzhou in Zhejiang.
History
Before the establishment of Zhejiang Radio and Television Group the local television stations first aired in Hangzhou and northern Zhejiang in the 1960s. ZRTG was established in 8 November 2001 to compete with other major Television networks and expanded its network through nationwide satellite television on 1994.
Television Channels
- Zhejiang Television (Satellite television)
- Qianjiang Channel
- Zhejiang Economic Channel
- Zhejiang Education Technology Channel
- Joy Television (Zhejiang Drama and Television Entertainment Channel)
- Channel 6
- Zhejiang Public and News Channel
- Zhejiang Children Channel
- Channel Tunnel
- Zhejiang International Channel
- Best One home shopping channel
- The age of Digital
Radio stations
- The voice of Zhejiang(FM88 FM101.6 AM810)
- Economic radio(FM95)
- Traffic radio(FM 93)
- Music radio(FM96.8)
- Livelihood FM 99.6
- Hostess Radio(FM104.5 AM603)
- City Radio(FM 107)
- News Radio (FM98.8 AM1530)
Production
ZRTG have broadcast notable programming such as The Voice of China,[1] often referred to as the Chinese version of the Dutch's reality talent show The Voice of Holland.
- The Voice of China
- Chinese Dream Show
- Splash!
- Do You Remember
- Fall in Love
- My Oscar
- Break Away
- Mr. Zhou Live Show
- Star Know My Heart
References
- ^ Coonan, Clifford (21 November 2013). "China State Broadcaster Mum About Ad Haul as Web Giants Eat Into Revenue". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 12 December 2013.