BVN
Country | Netherlands |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Europe and the Americas (via satellite) Worldwide (via internet streaming) |
Programming | |
Picture format | 576i (SDTV, 16:9) |
Ownership | |
Owner | NPO |
History | |
Launched | 1 June 1996 |
Former names | Zomer TV |
Links | |
Website | www.bvn.tv |
Availability | |
Streaming media | |
BVN.tv | "BVNLIVE" |
BVN (Het beste van NPO, "The best of NPO"), is a Dutch free-to-air television channel providing Dutch public television to viewers around the world. It is a service of the public broadcasting company of the Netherlands, Nederlandse Publieke Omroep (NPO).
History
[edit]The channel started without prior announcement on 1 June 1996 as Zomer-TV (Summer-TV), an operation aimed at making Dutch-language programming available to Dutch and Flemish holidaymakers abroad. The channel broadcast by satellite across Europe from 8pm to midnight. The output was sourced from the three terrestrial channels of the NPO, and had as its original productions a weather forecast for Europe, a TV version of the ANWB emergency calls and Studio.NL, which was produced by RNW.[1] Wereldomroep announced its plan earlier in the year after the lack of interest from the omroeps in sustaining a potential BVN service to be delivered over satellite. In its founding speech, the TV service provided by RNW would soon become the only analog satellite service in Dutch, as the ensemble of commercial channels (RTL4, RTL5, SBS6, Veronica) announced its plans to start broadcasting using digital encryption. By not booking a full-time transponder, Zomer-TV timeshared with a horse racing channel and CNE, both British niche channels. It was scheduled that the pilot service would shut down on 1 September that year.[1]
All of its programming originally came from the Netherlands (the abbreviation BVN at first standing for het Beste Van Nederland, "the best of the Netherlands") but this was later adapted, once the Flemish Region of Belgium began contributing both financially and with output from the schedules of its public broadcaster, Vlaamse Radio- en Televisieomroep (VRT), to het Beste van Vlaanderen en Nederland: "the best of Flanders and the Netherlands". As Wereldomroep TV in the pilot project, BRTN/VRT provided some Flemish programming for free, but this was withdrawn before the start of the definitive project as VRT hadn't paid for operational costs. The addition of Flemish programming would put BVN at the same level as similar co-operation projects such as TV5 and Arte.[2]
As of 2000, the channel was still operating at a loss, unable to afford coverage in Canada due to CRTC regulations, it had signed an agreement with an American company to deliver its signal over satellite to North America the previous year, but the sale of the satellite company months later damaged BVN's profits.[3]
Radio Nederland Wereldomroep (RNW) was involved as a founding partner, but left in 2012 upon its shutdown. Editorial control of the channel has since been handed over to NPO.
In March 2007 BVN changed its scheduling from three 8-hour programming blocks to two 12-hour blocks: this provided more room for the inclusion in the schedules of such popular shows as De Wereld Draait Door (BNNVARA).
The Flemish Region announced in April 2021 that it would end funding for BVN programming after June of that year; with VRT's foreign offerings transitioning to digital platforms afterwards. Accordingly, BVN became an exclusively Dutch-funded service on 1 July 2021; satellite distribution to Sub-Saharan Africa via SES-1 ceased on 1 May, with distribution to Asia on AsiaSat 5, Oceania on Optus D2, and North America on Galaxy 19 ending on 1 July, and on MultiChoice's DStv platform in South Africa on 1 November.[4] BVN would later announce that coverage in Sub-Saharan Africa would be restored via the Astra 4A satellite from 25 October.[5]
Access
[edit]There are three main access methods:
- Satellite - A range of satellites carry BVN, often as a free-to-air channel. User need to be within the "footprint" of a satellite that carries the channel, and have a suitable dish and receiver.
- Cable - Cable television providers in many places have BVN as one of the available channels
- Internet - The BVN service is now also available worldwide as a streaming service "BVNLIVE" over the Internet (except from IP addresses in the Netherlands)
Programming
[edit]All programmes are replayed during the second 12-hour block, running from 0100 to 1300 CET daily.
News and current affairs
[edit]BVN broadcasts daily news bulletins from NOS. The main 2000 bulletin from NOS Journaal is broadcast at 2030 CET and features a specially produced international weather forecast (BVN-Weer). A short bulletin is also carried at 1600 CET on weekdays and at 1605 on weekends.
Current affairs output on weekdays consists of the magazine programme EénVandaag (One Today) at 1830 CET, Nieuwsuur (Newshour, which incorporates an NOS Journaal bulletin). EénVandaag is produced by independent pillar broadcasters (AVROTROS) while Nieuwsuur is co-produced by NOS and the NTR.
On Sundays, BVN carries the political talk show Buitenhof at 1530.
Topical debate and entertainment programmes also feature in the schedule including De wereld draait door (The World Keeps Turning) at 1940 CET and Pauw or Jinek at around 2350 CET. Both programmes are off-air during the Summer and are produced by BNN-VARA subsidiary VARA.
Sport
[edit]NOS produces 15 minutes sports news bulletins called Sportjournaal on weekdays along with Studio Sport, a longer sports news and highlights programme on Saturday nights. The sports magazine show Holland Sport is broadcast periodically on Saturday afternoons. During the football season, Eredivisie highlights are broadcast in NOS's Studio Sport on Saturday nights & Sunday evenings.
Children
[edit]BVN features a daily block of children's programming, consisting of new and archived programming from various pillar broadcasters in the Netherlands, NTR, the NPO children's television stations NPO Z@pp as well NPO Z@ppelin.
Dedicated news and current affairs output for children is also broadcast at weekends, including a weekly current affairs programme Schooltv-weekjournaal, on Saturdays and a news review, NOS Jeugdjournaal Overzicht (NOS Youth Journal Overview), on Sundays.
Features and entertainment
[edit]BVN's daily schedule features entertainment, documentaries and features output.
Programming includes documentary series Spoorloos (Without a Trace) as well as various music specials.
Drama
[edit]BVN broadcasts a number of popular drama series and serials including Klem (Stuck) and Flikken Rotterdam (Rotterdam Cops).
During the summer, BVN transmits movies from the Netherlands on Saturday nights.
Former Flemish programs
[edit]Until VRT left the BVN joint venture in 2021, the channel also presented various Flemish programmes.
The 1pm and 7pm editions of VRT's Het Journaal were transmitted on a short time delay at 1300 and 1905 CET from Sunday to Friday. The 1900 bulletin was broadcast from 1915 on Saturdays. VRT public affairs programs Terzake (To The Point) aired at around midnight CET each evening, and a delayed broadcast of VRT's current affairs magazine De Zevende Dag (The Seventh Day) aired at 1330 CET on Sundays. VRT's sports coverage was featured daily within short sports bulletins on Het Journaal at 1300 and 1900. On Sundays throughout the year, the 1910 Het Journaal bulletin was shortened to 20 minutes to allow for a half-hour round-up entitled Sportweekend to follow at 1930. During the football season, the 1300 bulletin on Sunday featured an extended goals round-up from the Jupiler League (Belgian First Division).
VRT entertainment programmes that aired on BVN included the quiz show Blokken (Blocks) and the long running sitcom Thuis (Home), Flemish movies on Saturday nights, and programmes from the VRT children's television station, Ketnet.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Nieuwe Zomer-TV ingeluid met wuivend graan" (in Dutch). NRC Webpagina. 1996-06-03. Archived from the original on 2014-10-07. Retrieved 2014-11-02.
- ^ "Commissie voor Buitenlandse en Europese Aangelegenheden Vergadering van 15/01/1998". Parlementair dossier. Vlaams Parlement (in Dutch). Vlaams Parlement. Archived from the original on 2010-10-15. Retrieved 2014-11-02.
- ^ Jeroen den Blijker (2000-11-30). "Arguing in broadcasting without viewers" (in Dutch). TROUW. Archived from the original on 2014-11-02. Retrieved 2014-11-02.
- ^ "BVN partially discontinues satellite and proceeds with fully Dutch NPO programming | BVN". www.bvn.tv. Retrieved 2021-08-13.
- ^ "BVN op de Astra 4A satelliet! | BVN". www.bvn.tv. Retrieved 2021-11-11.
External links
[edit]- Television channels in the Netherlands
- Television channels in Flanders
- Defunct television channels in Belgium
- Netherlands Public Broadcasting
- International broadcasters
- Television channels and stations established in 1996
- 1996 establishments in the Netherlands
- 1996 establishments in Belgium
- 2021 disestablishments in Belgium