Telelatino

Telelatino
Launched October 2, 1984
Owned by Telelatino Network Inc.
Corus Entertainment (50.5%)
Italo Rosati (16.5%)
Romeo Di Battista (16.5%)
Joseph Vitale (16.5%)
Picture format 1080i (HDTV)
(2012-present)
480i (SDTV)
(1984-present)
Country Canada
Broadcast area National
Headquarters Toronto, Ontario
Timeshift service Telelatino West
Website Telelatino
Availability
Satellite
Bell TV Channel 700 (East) (SD)
Shaw Direct Channel 367 / 800 (East) (SD)
Cable
Cogeco Channel 1114 (East) (SD)
Channel 1115 (HD)
Rogers Cable Channel 782 (East) (SD)
Channel 783 (West) (SD)
Channel 35 (HD)
Shaw Cable Channel 65 (East) (SD)
Vidéotron Channel 250 (East) (SD)
IPTV
Bell Fibe TV Channel 700 (East) (HD)
MTS Channel 165 (East) (SD)
Optik TV Channel 2659 (East) (SD)
SaskTel Channel 141 (East) (SD)
VMedia Channel 35 (East) (SD)

Telelatino, also referred to as TLN, is a Canadian Category A Specialty channel broadcasting general interest programming from Canada and around the world, primarily in Italian and Spanish. It also broadcasts English programming up to 25 percent of the time.

TLN began broadcasting in October 1984 and is a privately held company owned by Telelatino Network Inc., a consortium majority owned by Corus Entertainment along with three prominent Italian Canadian families. Telelatino headquarters are in Toronto, Ontario, but the company also operates an office in Montreal, Quebec.

Telelatino is available in nearly five million Canadian homes and is carried by all major cable systems and satellite platforms. It is Canada's most watched ethnic specialty channel. TLN operates two time shifted feeds: East (Eastern Time) and West (Pacific Time), the latter is available via Bell Fibe TV and Rogers Cable in Ontario and New Brunswick.

The network broadcasts via the Anik F1-T25 at 107.3 degrees west, on the L-Band channel at 1221.75 MHz.[1]

Programming

current alternate logo; former primary until 2015

Telelatino's Spanish language foreign programming comes primarily from two broadcasters: Univision and CNN en Español. The Italian language programming is derived primarily from Canale 5, a channel owned by Mediaset- Italy's leading commercial broadcaster. TLN also airs some programming from SKY TG24, a news network in Italy and Video Italia, an Italian music service. English language programming on TLN primarily features characters and stars with an Italian or Hispanic background. Such programming includes The Sopranos, Everybody Loves Raymond, George Lopez and Lopez Tonight.

Telelatino broadcasts a substantial amount of soccer programming, airing Italian Serie A matches every year since 1984 and UEFA Champions League matches involving Italian and Spanish teams from 2002-2009. In 2009, TLN secured the rights to the UEFA Europa League through 2012 becoming the exclusive Canadian broadcaster of this tournament.[2] TLN has also broadcast the last three editions of the Copa América, FIFA World Cup, and UEFA European Football Championship. It was announced in 2006 that TLN has partnered with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) to air matches from various FIFA tournaments, including the 2010 and 2014 FIFA World Cups, as the CBC was recently awarded the broadcast rights to various FIFA tournaments.[3] Additionally, the TLN networks also hold the exclusive Canadian rights to Mexican Primera Division soccer, including games broadcast over the Univision networks in the U.S. In late 2015, TLN began showing games played by the Canadian national team for both 2018 World Cup qualification cycle and 2016 Olympic Qualifying tournament.

TLN is also known to air Spanish-language erotica. Current programming includes Latin Lover from 2:30 am to 3:00 am on Saturdays and Sundays, and Cuentos Prohibidos (Bliss dubbed in Spanish) otherwise from 2:30am to 4:30am Tuesdays to Sundays.

Controversy with RAI

From its inception up until mid-2003, TLN's Italian programming was derived primarily from RAI, Italy's state owned broadcaster, which made a commitment in 1984 to supply programming to Canada through TLN for as long as TLN was licensed in Canada. A dispute arose in 2003 when Massimo Magliaro, a former spokesperson for the leader of Italy's post-fascist Italian Social Movement leader Giorgio Almirante, having been politically appointed as head of RAI's international channel, decided to repudiate RAI's supply obligations as well as its 2001 agreement to launch a 24-hour RAI Canada channel, in favour of challenging Canada's regulatory regime by aggressively attacking Telelatino's quality and service and indicating that it wanted to deliver RAI programming through its own international channel on its own terms without restriction and not through TLN or through any Canadian programming partner. Interestingly, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) followed a much more respectful and cooperative path by launching BBC Canada as a Canadian licensed digital channel with Canadian programming commitments, responsibilities, and majority-ownership.

In 2003, RAI pulled its content from TLN and petitioned the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to allow it to broadcast RAI International in Canada.[4] This effort was backed by Rogers Communications, who sponsored RAI's application to get on the CRTC's approved list. The Committee for Italians Living Abroad in Montreal (COM.IT.ES.), an arm of the Italian foreign ministry, led the campaign to have RAI admitted. The Italian Canadian community itself, however, was divided. Italian law provides the Italian diaspora votes in Italian elections and permanent seats in the Parliament of Italy, and many hopeful participants in such Italian elections in Canada led the campaign to urge the Canadian authorities to admit RAI International as a foreign service. After initially being rejected by the CRTC in 2004 in strong terms, much political wrangling by RAI and certain Italian Canadians ensued, and RAI International was eventually approved by the CRTC in the spring of 2005 and began broadcasting in June 2005.

Other Services

TLN HD

tln's HD logo since 2015

On June 5, 2012, TLN launched TLN HD, a high definition feed simulcasting TLN East. Unlike the standard definition feed that has both an East and West coast feed, TLN HD has only one national feed operating from the Eastern Time Zone. It is currently available on Cogeco, Rogers Cable and Bell Fibe TV.

Univision Canada

Main article: Univision Canada

On October 23, 2007, TLN launched TLN en Español, a Category B Spanish language general entertainment channel.[5] It was subsequently re-branded as Univision Canada on May 5, 2014.

References

  1. Corporate Info
  2. http://tlntv.com/pressReleases/2009/UEFA%20EUROPA%20LEAGUE_FINAL.pdf
  3. TLN Television partners up with CBC/Radio-Canada to broadcast all major FIFA international tournaments through 2014
  4. Italian Channel battles for carriage
  5. TLN Telelatino Launches TLN en Espanol, Broadcaster Magazine, 2007-10-19
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.