TV Nova (Czech Republic)
| Country | Czech Republic |
|---|---|
| Programming | |
| Language | Czech |
| Picture format | 16:9/4:3 in 576i (SDTV) 1080i (HDTV) |
| Timeshift service | Nova +1 HD (2017–2022) |
| Ownership | |
| Owner | TV Nova s. r. o. (CME, owned by PPF Group) |
| Sister channels | Nova Cinema Nova Action Nova Fun Nova Krimi Nova Lady Nova Sport 1 Nova Sport 2 Nova Sport 3 Nova Sport 4 Nova Sport 5 Nova Sport 6 Nova International |
| History | |
| Launched | 4 February 1994 |
| Links | |
| Website | Official website |
| Availability | |
| Terrestrial | |
| DVB-T/T2 | MUX 23 (FTA) MUX 24 (FTA) |
| Streaming media | |
| Nova.cz | Watch live (Czech only) |
| Oneplay | Watch live (Czech only) |
TV Nova is a commercial television station in the Czech Republic. It began broadcasting in February 1994 as the first privately held nationwide Czech TV station.[1] Its first CEO was Vladimír Železný. It quickly achieved the largest market share in the country and remained in this position until the early 2010s.[2]
History
TV Nova began broadcasting on February 4, 1994, as the first privately held, nationwide commercial television station in the Czech Republic. It quickly became the market leader, redefining Czech broadcasting with new formats, dynamic journalism, entertainment programming, and innovative marketing. It attracted a massive audience with locally produced shows and became one of the most profitable TV stations in Europe, generating profit within nine months of going on air. During the 1990s, Nova offered a mix of original local productions and popular imported foreign programming, a significant departure from the previous state-run television format. TV Nova invested heavily in locally produced content that resonated with Czech audiences. They even produced a number of comedy shows, featuring actors like Jiří Lábus and Oldřich Kaiser, alongside the creation of its own quiz show.
A major point in Nova's history was the dispute between the license holder, CET 21, and its financial supplier, Central European Media Enterprises (CME). The channel also attracted some notoriety for its late-night nude weather reports ("Počasíčko"),[3] in which a female (and later male) presenter would appear naked to present the weather. The presenter would then put on clothes appropriate to the weather being forecast. The fallout from this conflict led to an international arbitration case (CME/Lauder v. Czech Republic) that resulted in the Czech state being ordered to pay CME $353 million in compensation for failing to protect their investment. Following this, CME eventually gained full ownership of Nova.
In the late 2000s, Nova expanded its services and adopted new technologies, starting with broadcasting in 16:9 in 2007, followed by the launch of a widescreen channel in 2008, and later developing a multi-channel strategy, by launching several niche channels. In response to the rise of global streaming giants, Nova launched its own streaming service, Voyo, in 2011, which has since become a key focus for investment, offering exclusive original content. The company also expanded its HbbTV (hybrid broadcast broadband TV) services.
In 2020, the PPF investment group, owned by Petr Kellner at the time, acquired CME, the parent company of TV Nova, thus bringing the station under domestic ownership. TV Nova has also committed to sustainable production practices, publishing the first Green Filmmaking Manual in the Czech Republic in 2021. Today, the Nova group remains a leading media entity in the Czech Republic, consistently achieving a high market share with its wide range of channels and strong digital presence.
Nova HD
Starting October 2008, TV Nova is broadcast in HD via satellite, cable, and DVB-T. Currently the signal is broadcast in 1080i with a bitrate of 18 Mbit/s.
Sister channels
| Channel Name | Launch Date | Former Names | Theme | Main Colors | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nova Cinema | 1 December 2007 | Movies | blue | |||
| Nova Sport 1 | 4 October 2008 | Nova Sport (2008-2015) | Mainstream sports | black blue |
||
| Nova Action | 14 July 2012 | TV Fanda (2012-2017) | Young men | yellow black |
||
| Nova Fun | 23 December 2012 | TV Smíchov (2012-2017) Nova 2 (2017-2021) |
Comedy and kids programming | violet green |
||
| Nova Krimi | 22 February 2013 | TV Telka (2013-2017) Nova Gold (2016-2025) |
Crime and archive | tan brown |
||
| Nova Sport 2 | 5 September 2015 | Popular sports | black light blue |
|||
| Nova International | 1 February 2016 | slovak version of TV Nova | blue | |||
| Nova Sport 3 | 13 August 2021 | Soccer | black green |
|||
| Nova Sport 4 | black turquoise |
|||||
| Nova Lady | 18 October 2021 | Women | light red | |||
| Nova Sport 5 | 29 February 2024 | motorsport | black red |
|||
| Nova Sport 6 | black pink |
|||||
Programming
Current
- Ulice
- Kriminálka Anděl Mondays 20:00–21:00[4]
- Soukromé pasti ("Private Traps")
- Ordinace v růžové zahradě 2 ("Doctor's office in rose garden 2")
- Pojišťovna štěstí ("Insurance company of luck")
- Comeback
- Nováci Every day from September 1995 to April 1996; sometimes reprised
- Draculův švagr Horror series, which ran short time in 1996
- Robinsonův ostrov Reality series, Czech version of Survivor
Former
- Chcete být milionářem? (2000–2005, 2016–2017) Game show, Czech version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
- DO-RE-MI (1998–2004)
Periodical
| Title | Format | Timeslot |
|---|---|---|
| 112 (based on "COPS") | documentary, crime | Tuesdays 22:05–22:30 |
| Televizní noviny, Sportovní noviny, Počasí ("TV News, Sports News and Weather") | TV news | every day 19:30–20:00 Sunday–Friday 17:00–17:30 |
| Snídaně s Novou ("Breakfast with Nova") | Breakfast TV | weekdays 5:55–9:00 |
| Na vlastní oči ("With Your Own Eyes") | documentary | Wednesdays 22:15–22:55 |
| Za pět minut dvanáct ("Five Minutes to Twelve") | talk show | Sundays 11:55–13:20 |
| Střepiny ("Fractions") | documentary | Sundays 21:15–21:45 |
| Víkend ("Weekend") | Infotainment | Tuesdays 21:00–21:35 |
| Eso ("Ace") | music | not running |
| Rady ptáka Loskutáka ("Hints of the Bird Gracula") | home improvement | Sundays 18:00–18:55 |
| Občanské judo ("Citizen's Judo") | documentary | Sundays 18:55–19:30 |
| Babicovy dobroty ("Babica's Goodies") | cooking show | Saturdays 18:00–18:35 |
| Koření ("Spice") | Infotainment | Saturdays 18:35–19:30 |
| Mr. GS | talk show | Sundays 21:40–22:10 |
Tipy ptáka Loskutáka (Tips of the bird Gracula) is the teleshopping section of Rady ptáka Loskutáka. The Czech Republic has a law regulation that would suggest different names.
Logos
-
TV Nova's first logo, used from 1994-1996.
-
TV Nova's second logo, used from 1996-2004.
-
TV Nova's third logo, used from 2004-2017.
-
TV Nova's fourth logo, used from 2017-2024.
-
TV Nova's current logo, used since 2024.
CME Content Academy
In 2022, TV Nova and Markíza launched the CME Content Academy, in cooperation with the Brno Television Institute. The scholarship program is funded by Central European Media Enterprises, to which both TV Nova and Markíza belong. The academy's two-year course is a professional training course designed to provide participants with a grounding across various film-making disciplines.[5]
The training is based around the production schedules of TV Nova, PRO TV, POP TV, bTV, RTL and Markíza and takes place in Brno, Prague, Zagreb, Ljubljana, Bucharest, Sofia and Bratislava.
See also
References
- ^ Angelika W. Wyka (2010). "Media Privatization and the Spread of Foreign Ownership in East Central Europe" (PDF). NOVA. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 November 2014. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
- ^ Plesl, Jaroslav (31 January 2012). "Železný postavil tiskárnu na peníze, které ho zničily. Nova má zlatá léta za sebou". Hospodářské noviny (in Czech). Retrieved 29 December 2022.
- ^ "Czech TV row goes to court". BBC News. 9 March 2001. Retrieved 25 July 2008.
- ^ "Kriminálka Anděl ("CSI: Anděl")". TV Nova. March 2010. Retrieved 18 March 2010.
- ^ "CME Content Academy". CME Content Academy. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
External links
- (in Czech) Official Site
- (in Czech) TN.cz