China Television Explained

China Television Company, Ltd.
中國電視公司
Type:Television network,
Satellite television and
Cable television
Foundation:3 September 1968
Location:Taipei
Location Country:Republic of China (Taiwan)
Industry:Television Broadcasting
Products:Television content, television programming
Parent:Want Want China Times
Homepage:www.ctv.com.tw

China Television Company, Ltd. (CTV;) (Formerly called Taiwan Daytime TV (TDT) in 1969-1975) is a television broadcasting company based in Taipei, Republic of China (Taiwan). It was established on September 3, 1968, by the then-ruling Nationalist Party (KMT). The party owned the majority stake of the network. Trial broadcast started on October 9, 1969, and the channel formally started broadcasting on October 31 the same year. CTV was the first television channel to broadcast full colour television service to the whole island.

History

China Television was established on September 3, 1968, and began broadcasting in 1969.[1]

On August 9, 1999, the channel was publicly listed on Taiwan Stock Exchange, becoming the first publicly listed broadcasting company on the island.

In 2006, due to effects borne by the media reform law in Taiwan requiring all political parties to divest their control in radio and television companies, 90% of CTV shares were sold to the China Times media group, effectively giving the station leeway to some of its satellite TV concerns, notably the Chung T'ien Television (CTi), one of major cable television programmers in Taiwan. Some CTV shows are now seen on CTi's two channels on cable.

It is currently the largest television channels on the island. Its shows consistently rated 2nd in all major time slots, and is home to Taiwan's most watched early evening newscast, the CTV News Global Report.

Funding allegations

In November 2019, Wang Liqiang, a self-proclaimed spy from the People's Republic of China (PRC) who defected to Australia, claimed, among other allegations, that CTV had received PRC funding in return for airing stories unfavorable of the ROC government on Taiwan.[2]

CTV's parent company, The Want Want China Times Group, denied these allegations. The veracity of his claims has also been disputed by espionage experts, who suggested that his claims were made out of opportunism.[3] [4]

Appearances

Test card

The testcard of CTV is PM5544.

Channels

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 產業價值鏈資訊平台 > 經營理念 . 2023-02-22 . ic.tpex.org.tw.
  2. Web site: Strong. Matthew. Taiwan TV stations reject defector's allegations of China funding. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20191128083957/https://www.taiwannews.com.tw/en/news/3823353. 28 November 2019. 24 November 2019. Taiwan TV stations reject defector's allegations of China funding. 23 November 2019 . Taiwan News.
  3. Web site: Beijing 'spy' a bit player at best. 2019-11-29. www.theaustralian.com.au. en. 2020-01-12.
  4. Web site: Eftimiades . Nicholas . Wang Liqiang: Chinese Defector, Fraud or Both? . Breaking Defense . 6 December 2019 . 11 March 2021.