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List of television stations in Hong Kong
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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There are four active free-to-air television networks and one remaining licensed pay television network in Hong Kong. There is also a number of online subscription television services.
Currently, there are no new applicants for free-to-air or pay-tv licences.
In 2007, free-to-air television broadcasters in Hong Kong were allocated extra frequency bands and bandwidth to provide additional digital broadcasts over and above that needed to provide simultaneous digital and analogue broadcasting of the four original multi frequency free-to-air channels. Digital terrestrial broadcasts began on 31 December 2007. Analogue terrestrial television ended in 2020.[1]
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Free-to-air television
In operation
- Television Broadcasts Limited (TVB; 無綫電視)
- Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK; 港台電視)
- HK Television Entertainment (HKTVE; 香港電視娛樂)
- i-CABLE HOY Limited (HOY; 有線寬頻開電視有限公司)
Former licensees
- Asia Television (ATV; 亞洲電視. Non-renewal announced in 2015. Ceased operation in 2016)
- Commercial Television (CTV; 佳藝電視. Ceased operation in 1978)
Former licence applicants
- New Asia Network (NAN; 新亞電視台), parent company Forever Top (Asia) Limited abandoned the application, following its acquisition of Cable TV Hong Kong and its subsidiary, Fantastic Television, which is a free television provider.[2]
- Phoenix Hong Kong Television (PHKTV, 鳳凰香港電視), parent company Phoenix Television announced its decision to rescind the application on 18 August 2017.[3]
- Hong Kong Television Network (HKTV; 香港電視網絡) – 2nd time applicant. First application was rejected in 2013. Mobile television licence that restricts in-home viewing granted in 2017. Gave up the application in 2018.[4]
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Licensed pay television
In operation
Former licensees
Free-to-air television channels
Summarize
Perspective
Channels currently on-air
Ch № | Name in English | Name in Chinese | Description | Primary Language | Picture Format | Transmission | Launch Date | Licensee |
31 | RTHK TV 31 | 港台電視31 | RTHK's main channel. | Cantonese | 1080i HDTV | Terrestrial and hybrid fibre-coaxial | 13 January 2014 | RTHK[5] |
32 | RTHK TV 32 | 港台電視32 | A live feed of Legislative Council meetings every Wednesday and other important press conferences or events. | |||||
33 | RTHK TV 33 | 港台電視33 | Simulcast of the Hong Kong version of CCTV-1 HD | Putonghua | ||||
34 | RTHK TV 34 | 港台電視34 | Simulcast of content by CGTN Documentary | English | 1 July 2022 | |||
35 | RTHK TV 35 | 港台電視35 | Simulcast of content by CGTN | 1 July 2023 | ||||
76 | HOY International Business Channel | HOY國際財經台 | HOY TV's business news channel | English | 1080i HDTV | Hybrid fibre-coaxial, cable and terrestrial | 30 July 2018[6] | I-CABLE HOY |
77 | HOY TV | HOY TV | HOY TV's general entertainment channel. | Cantonese | 14 May 2017 | |||
78 | HOY Infotainment | HOY 資訊台 | A 24-hour news, financial and infotainment channel. | 21 Nov 2022 | ||||
81 | TVB Jade | 翡翠台 | TVB's main general entertainment channel. | Cantonese | 1080i HDTV | Terrestrial | 19 November 1967 | TVB |
82 | TVB Plus | [7] | A youth-oriented entertainment, financial news and sports channel. | 28 January 2008 | ||||
83 | TVB News Channel | 無綫新聞台 | A 24-hour news channel. | 15 August 2017 | ||||
84 | TVB Pearl | 明珠台 | A general entertainment channel broadcasting mainly in English. | English | 19 November 1967 | |||
85 | Phoenix Hong Kong Channel[8] | 鳳凰衛視 香港台 | To serve Chinese viewers in Hong Kong | Cantonese and Putonghua | [9]28 March 2011 | |||
96 | ViuTVsix | [10] | A general entertainment channel broadcasting mainly in English. | English | 1080i HDTV | IPTV and terrestrial | 31 March 2017 | HKTVE |
99 | ViuTV | [11] | HKTVE's general entertainment channel. | Cantonese | 2 April 2016 (Preview) 6 April 2016 (Actual Launch) |
Defunct channels
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Additional channels
Operative services
Hong Kong uses the same Digital Terrestrial Multimedia Broadcast (DMB-T/H) standard as Macau and Guangdong and, because of signal overspill, viewers in Hong Kong can receive and watch all free to air channels from these areas without much difficulty.
However, because of licensing and intellectual property reasons, except for the four local free-to-air networks and CCTV-1, a subsidiary of China Central Television (CCTV), viewers outside of certain confines [17] are not legally allowed to watch these channels.
Residential subscribers to cable premium and subscription services are free to use these services within certain confines, usually within their own homes, and under the terms and conditions of their service provider. Other contracts deal with the provision of services to non-domestic properties, e.g. premium sport content to bars.
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References and notes
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