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Omrop Fryslân

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Omrop Fryslân
Logo of Omrop Fryslân
CountryNetherlands
Broadcast areaFriesland
HeadquartersOmrop Fryslân
Zuiderkruisweg 2
Postbus 7600
Leeuwarden
Programming
Language(s)West Frisian
Picture format16:9 576i (SDTV)
History
Launched1988
Links
Websiteomropfryslan.nl
Availability
Streaming media
Fryslân LiveWatch Live Listen to Radio
Ziggo GO (Netherlands)ZiggoGO.TV
Omrop Fryslân
  • Leeuwarden (Ljouwert)
Broadcast areaFrisia (Fryslân)
Programming
Language(s)Frisian
History
First air date
February 1979
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteomropfryslan.nl

Omrop Fryslân is a broadcaster on the Netherlands Public Broadcasting (NPO) which serves the Frisian community. Because West Frisian is an official language of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the NPO is also responsible for broadcasts in the West Frisian language.

Omrop Fryslân is also the regional public broadcaster for the province Friesland, and they have their own radio station and TV channel broadcasting primarily for the province itself.[1]

Radio

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In 1946, the RON (Radio Omroep Noord)—later RONO (Radio Omroep Noord en Oost)—started broadcasting[2] for the north and east of the Netherlands. In 1978, RONO was split in Radio Noord, Radio Oost and Radio Fryslân. Since 1988, Omrop Fryslân is a broadcaster in its own right.

Omrop Fryslân can be received on analogue terrestrial radio on 92.2 MHz FM. It is also available on cable (both analogue and digital), Digitenne (DVB-T) and the internet.

Regional television

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Since 1994, Omrop Fryslân has had its own regional TV channel.[2] The regional news bulletin called Fryslân Hjoed (meaning Friesland Today) is broadcast daily at 18.00, and repeated every hour, with the last rebroadcast the next morning at 8.00.

Omrop Fryslân TV can be received free-to-air on DVB-T (Digitenne). It is also available on cable (both analogue and digital), satellite and the internet.

National television

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Because West Frisian is an official language in the Netherlands, Omrop Fryslân also has airtime on national public television for 36 hours a year. Out of these 36 hours, 15 hours are assigned for school television in West Frisian. The rest of the airtime is mainly used for documentaries, which are broadcast on Saturday mornings and Sunday afternoons on NPO 2.

References

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  1. ^ From Theory to Practice. Council of Europe. 2002. p. 58. ISBN 9789287150448.
  2. ^ a b Dijkstra, Jelske; et al. (2019). "Language change caught in the act". In Villena-Ponsoda, Juan-Andrés; Díaz-Montesinos, Francisco; Ávila-Muñoz, Antonio-Manuel; Vida-Castro, Matilde (eds.). Language Variation - European Perspectives VII. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 85–102. ISBN 9789027262073.
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