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repair. I believe with the recent analog shut-off in Chile, terr 2 can be junked?
 
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{{Infobox TV channel
{{Short description|Chilean television channel}}
{{About|the Chilean TV channel|articles relating to the term "TV+" or "TV plus"|TV+ (disambiguation){{!}}TV+}}
|name= TV+
{{Infobox television channel
|logofile=TV+ (2018).png
| name = TV+
|logoalt=
| logo = TV+ (2018).png
|logosize=200px
| logo_alt =
|share=no data
| logo_size = 200px
|share as of=May, 2005
| area = National
|share source=[http://foros.fotech.cl/index.php?showtopic=34521]|
| launch_date = October 5, 1957<ref>{{cite web|title=Transmisión online de UCV TV, televisión de Chile|url=http://www.teleaire.com/transmision-online-de-ucv-tv-television-de-chile/|publisher=Tele aire|access-date=30 January 2014}}</ref>
|broadcast area=National
| owner = {{ubl|Media 23 SpA (95%)|[[Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso|PUCV]] (10%)}}
|slogan=Es mas
| country = [[Chile]]
|launch=October 5, 1957<ref>{{cite web|title=Transmisión online de UCV TV, televisión de Chile|url=http://www.teleaire.com/transmision-online-de-ucv-tv-television-de-chile/|publisher=Tele aire|accessdate=30 January 2014}}</ref>
| former_names = UCV Televisión (1957–2018)
|owner= [[Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso|Universidad Católica de Valparaíso]] ([[:de:Päpstliche Katholische Universität von Valparaíso|Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso]])
|country= [[Chile]]
| headquarters = [[Vitacura]], [[Santiago]], [[Chile]]
| website = {{URL|www.tvmas.tv}}
|former names = UCV Televisión (1957-2018)
| terr_serv_1 = Digital terrestrial television
|web=[https://www.tvmas.tv/ www.tvmas.tv]
| terr_chan_1 = {{plainlist|
|terr avail=Available
*'''La Serena-Coquimbo:'''
|terr serv 1=Digital [[ISDB-T]]
**Channel 9.1 (HD)
|terr chan 1=Channel 29 ([[Greater Valparaiso]])
*'''Greater Valparaíso:'''
|terr serv 2=Digital [[ISDB-T]]
|terr chan 2=Channel 29 ([[Greater Santiago]])
**Channel 4.1 (HD)
*'''Greater Santiago:'''
|terr serv 3=Analog ([[VHF]])
**Channel 5.1 (HD)
|terr chan 3=Channel 9 ([[Greater La Serena|Greater Coquimbo]])
*'''Greater Concepción'''
|terr serv 4=Analog ([[VHF]])
|terr chan 4=Channel 4 ([[Greater Valparaiso]])
**Channel 32.1 (HD)
*'''Puerto Montt:'''
|terr serv 5=Analog ([[VHF]])
|terr chan 5=Channel 5 ([[Greater Santiago]])
**Channel 8.1 (HD)}}
|terr serv 6=Analog ([[VHF]])
| terr_serv_2 = VHF
| terr_chan_2 = {{plainlist|
|terr chan 6=Channel 9 ([[Temuco]])
*Channel&nbsp;3&nbsp;(La Ligua, Coyhaique)
|terr serv 7=Analog ([[VHF]])
*Channel&nbsp;4&nbsp;(Quillota, La Calera, Greater Valparaíso, Osorno, Palerna)
|terr chan 7=Channel 7 ([[Villarrica, Chile|Villarrica]])
*Channel&nbsp;5&nbsp;(Santiago, Chillán, Los Ángeles)
|terr serv 8=Analog ([[VHF]])
*Channel&nbsp;7&nbsp;(Pucón, Villarrica)
|terr chan 8=Channel 8 ([[Puerto Montt]])
*Channel&nbsp;8&nbsp;(Puerto Montt, Concepción)
|terr serv 9=Analog ([[VHF]])
*Channel&nbsp;9&nbsp;(La Serena, Coquimbo, Temuco)}}
|terr chan 9=Channel 3 ([[Coyhaique]])
|cable serv 1=VTR TV
|cable chan 1=Canal 10 ([[Tocopilla, Chile|Tocopilla]])
|cable serv 2=VTR TV
|cable chan 2=Canal 8 ([[Calama, Chile|Calama]])
|cable serv 3=VTR TV
|cable chan 3=Canal 14 ([[Copiapó, Chile|Copiapó]])
|cable serv 4=VTR TV
|cable chan 4=Canal 12 ([[Rancagua, Chile|Rancagua]])
|cable serv 5=VTR TV
|cable chan 5=Canal 21 ([[Temuco, Chile|Temuco]])
|cable serv 6=VTR TV
|cable chan 6=Canal 9 ([[Valdivia, Chile|Valdivia]])
|cable serv 7=VTR TV
|cable chan 7=Canal 6 ([[Osorno, Chile|Osorno]])
|cable serv 8=VTR TV
|cable chan 8=Canal 22 ([[Puerto Montt]])
|cable serv 9=VTR TV
|cable chan 9=Canal 3 ([[Coyhaique]])
|online serv 1 = '''ucvtv. cl'''
|online chan 1 = [http://media.digitalproserver.com/v2/live/ucvtv Señal en Vivo]
}}
}}
'''TV+''' (pronounced ''Te Ve Más'' or '''TV Más''') is a [[Chile]]an [[free-to-air]] television channel. which is broadcast from [[Santiago de Chile|Santiago]]. Previously known as the '''Television Corporation of the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso''' or '''UCV Televisión''', it was the oldest television station in the country and the only regional network outside of Santiago that had nationwide coverage. It started broadcasting on an experimental level in the Pontifical University of Valparaíso's buildings in 1957 and was officially launched in August 1959. In 2017, it moved its offices to the Agua Santa district in Viña del Mar.
'''TV+''' (known until 2018 as '''Corporación de Televisión de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso''', '''UCV Television''') is the oldest [[TV channel]] of [[Chile]]. Founded in 1957 (October 5), it currently airs in [[Santiago, Chile|Santiago]] on channel 5. Its [[headquarters]] are in [[Viña del Mar]], [[Chile]]<ref>{{cite web|title=UCV Television Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso - Chile Television|url=http://www.tv-address.com/2011/05/ucv-television-universidad-catolica-de.html|publisher=tv-address|accessdate=30 January 2013}}</ref> where it broadcasts on channel 4 [[VHF]]. Also it owns [[VHF]] stations in La Serena (9), Puerto Montt (8) and Cohaique (3). Additionally it covers all of Chile through its satellite signal ([[Intelsat 1R]]).


On 21 November 2018 at 5:00pm, the channel was rebranded as "TV+" and premiered a new graphical package.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2018-11-20 |title=UCV Televisión cambia de nombre y presenta nuevo logo: ahora es TV+ |url=https://www.biobiochile.cl/noticias/espectaculos-y-tv/tv/2018/11/20/ucv-television-cambia-de-nombre-y-presenta-nuevo-logo-ahora-es-tv.shtml |access-date=2022-04-08 |website=Radio Bio Bio |language=es}}</ref> In late-November, the digital-terrestrial-television subchannel UCV 3 (controlled by the PUCV) would be rebranded as UCV Televisión, broadcasting from its original studios in Viña del Mar.
==Programming==
:''Mainly Listed Within 《[[:Es:UCV Televisión#Programas]]》 & 《[[:Fr:UCV Télévision#Programmes]]》''
:''See also [[:Pt:UCV TV#Programas]] & [[:It:UCV TV#Principali prorammi]]''
===Current Originated Programming===
;* UCV TV noticias
;* Llama y gana
;* En portada
;* Me late
;* Vidas
;* Tocshow
;* Que Pachó
;* De Aquì No Sale
;* País Cultural
;* Esto en noticia
;* Falabella TV


In recent years, the television station's audience share started to plummet. In 2016, the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso started to search a business partner to revamp the network. On 29 December, the university announced that it sold the channel to the TV enterprise «TV+ SpA», composed of PUCV Multimedios SpA, a media company owned by the university with 10% of the network's share, and Media 23 SpA — a joint venture between GCO Entretención, Disney's official licensed commercial partner in the country, and Contempora, owned by Jesús Diez González, a Chilean businessman owner of the "TurBus" transportation business and manager of the agricultural distributor Covepal— which holds the remaining 90% of the station's share.
===Defunct Originated Programming===


==Broadcasting==
== History ==
On 5 October 1957, the first television broadcast in Chile was outcarried by a group of researchers from the Electronics Faculty of the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso. The broadcast event was the inauguration of a new campus dedicated to laboratories and classrooms. The event was attended by the then-President of Chile, Carlos Ibáñez del Campo, government ministers and other authorities of the State during his administration.
Although the station belongs to the ''[[Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso]]'', its income is totally derived from sponsors and advertising.


This event was considered to be the first true scheduled television broadcast as the television network also aired a newscast following the event. The TV station was officially launched on 22 August 1959 on VHF channel 8 of Valparaíso. Its first aired television show was ''El hombre ante el universo'' (''The man in the face of the universe''), a cultural programme. From 1957 to 1960, UCV TV used to broadcast from 4:00pm to 10:00pm local time. However, from 1968 to 1970, the station increased its airtime, ranging from 3:00pm to 12:00am midnight. In 1969, the network moved its frequency to VHF channel 4 of Valparaíso.
It airs news (four live broadcasts a day), TV comedies ([[Journeyman]], [[My Name is Earl]], [[Bones (TV series)|Bones]], [[Scrubs (TV series)|Scrubs]], [[American Dad!]], [[Saving Grace (TV series)|Saving Grace]]), drama: ([[24 (TV series)|24]], [[Lost (TV series)|Lost]]), and [[World Wrestling Entertainment]] flagship show [[WWE Raw]], [[documentaries]], [[infomercials]] and some low budget entertainment [[TV shows]]. Recently it entered into an alliance with [[Canal 13 (Chile)|Canal 13]], re-airing some of ''Canal 13'''s produced [[children's programming]] like ''[[:es:Villa Dulce|Villa Dulce]]'' and others.


In 1971, UCV TV built a relay transmitter in La Serena, which was the first city outside the Valparaíso Region that could receive UCV TV. Three years later, in 1974, the network built another relay transmitter in the capital, Santiago. In 1975, UCV purchased portable camcorders that made it easier for the network to record footage in the streets as most television stations at the time were still using cinema-centred camera equipment - it beat the competition in the process. In 1978, UCV TV started colour broadcasts along with Santiago's channel 13, the Television Corporation of the Catholic University of Chile (UCTV for short) and could adapt itself to these new changes in just three months. In that same year, it broadcast the first Teletón event as the "Red UCV Televisión", that could be identified by the channel numbers 4, 5 and 8, which represented the frequencies in which the network was broadcasting in Valparaíso, Santiago and La Serena, respectively. The affiliate in La Serena, known as "Canal 8 UCV Televisión", not only aired UCV TV programmes, but also imported programming from Santiago's channel 13.
It is best known for children's programming [[El Mundo del Profesor Rossa]] 1981-1984, [[:es:Pipiripao|Pipirapao]] 1983-2008, Enetenetu, Pequelandia and others), music video programs (re-airing old Midnight Special shows from 1974-1978, OK 1992-1996, El Galpón 2000-2002), and sports commentary (Show de Goles 1975-2000).


An affiliate started in Puerto Montt in 1990, initially on channel 7 before moving to channel 8 in 1998, by then it became a relay broadcaster. That same year, to give way to La Red, UCV switched frequencies to Channel 5.
For many years UCV Television had a second signal in La Serena called [[Canal 8 UCV TV]], now operating on channel 9.

== High-definition feed ==
The channel launched its own HD feed on 25 June 2010, back when it was still named UCV Televisión (the feed was distributed as UCV TV HD) with the broadcast of the football match between Chile and Spain during the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa, in association with TVN. It was launched on the digital terrestrial television platform on virtual channel 29.1 in Greater Valparaíso and virtual channel 5.1 in Greater Santiago. It broadcasts at 1920x1080 interlaced lines at 60 fields per second.


On November 21, 2018 UCV TV will change its name to TV+.<ref>{{cite web|title=UCV TV se renueva y cambia su nombre e imagen a TV+|url=https://www.radioagricultura.cl/entretencion/2018/11/20/ucv-tv-se-renueva-y-cambia-su-nombre-e-imagen-a-tv.html|publisher=Radio Agricultura|accessdate=20 November 2018}}</ref>
<!--
==See also==
==See also==
* [[List of Chilean television channels]]
*[[Catholic television]]
*[[:Category:Catholic television channels|Catholic television channels]]
-->
*[[:Category:Catholic television networks|Catholic television networks]]


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://www.tvmas.tv/ Official site]
* [https://www.tvmas.tv/ Official site]


{{Chile-tv-station-stub}}
<!--{{UCV Television programming}}-->
<!--{{UCV Television programming}}-->
{{Nationwide Chilean television channels}}
{{Nationwide Chilean television channels}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:TV Mas}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:TV Mas}}
[[Category:UCV Television| ]]
[[Category:TV+ (Chile)| ]]
[[Category:Media in Santiago]]
[[Category:Mass media in Santiago]]
[[Category:Chilean television networks]]
[[Category:Television networks in Chile]]
[[Category:Television stations in Chile]]
[[Category:Television stations in Chile]]
[[Category:Spanish-language television stations]]
[[Category:Spanish-language television stations]]
[[Category:Television channels and stations established in 1957]]
[[Category:Television channels and stations established in 1957]]
[[Category:Companies based in Santiago]]

Latest revision as of 07:15, 28 April 2024

TV+
CountryChile
Broadcast areaNational
HeadquartersVitacura, Santiago, Chile
Ownership
Owner
  • Media 23 SpA (95%)
  • PUCV (10%)
History
LaunchedOctober 5, 1957[1]
Former namesUCV Televisión (1957–2018)
Links
Websitewww.tvmas.tv
Availability
Terrestrial
Digital terrestrial television
  • La Serena-Coquimbo:
    • Channel 9.1 (HD)
  • Greater Valparaíso:
    • Channel 4.1 (HD)
  • Greater Santiago:
    • Channel 5.1 (HD)
  • Greater Concepción
    • Channel 32.1 (HD)
  • Puerto Montt:
    • Channel 8.1 (HD)
VHF
  • Channel 3 (La Ligua, Coyhaique)
  • Channel 4 (Quillota, La Calera, Greater Valparaíso, Osorno, Palerna)
  • Channel 5 (Santiago, Chillán, Los Ángeles)
  • Channel 7 (Pucón, Villarrica)
  • Channel 8 (Puerto Montt, Concepción)
  • Channel 9 (La Serena, Coquimbo, Temuco)

TV+ (pronounced Te Ve Más or TV Más) is a Chilean free-to-air television channel. which is broadcast from Santiago. Previously known as the Television Corporation of the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso or UCV Televisión, it was the oldest television station in the country and the only regional network outside of Santiago that had nationwide coverage. It started broadcasting on an experimental level in the Pontifical University of Valparaíso's buildings in 1957 and was officially launched in August 1959. In 2017, it moved its offices to the Agua Santa district in Viña del Mar.

On 21 November 2018 at 5:00pm, the channel was rebranded as "TV+" and premiered a new graphical package.[2] In late-November, the digital-terrestrial-television subchannel UCV 3 (controlled by the PUCV) would be rebranded as UCV Televisión, broadcasting from its original studios in Viña del Mar.

In recent years, the television station's audience share started to plummet. In 2016, the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso started to search a business partner to revamp the network. On 29 December, the university announced that it sold the channel to the TV enterprise «TV+ SpA», composed of PUCV Multimedios SpA, a media company owned by the university with 10% of the network's share, and Media 23 SpA — a joint venture between GCO Entretención, Disney's official licensed commercial partner in the country, and Contempora, owned by Jesús Diez González, a Chilean businessman owner of the "TurBus" transportation business and manager of the agricultural distributor Covepal— which holds the remaining 90% of the station's share.

History[edit]

On 5 October 1957, the first television broadcast in Chile was outcarried by a group of researchers from the Electronics Faculty of the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso. The broadcast event was the inauguration of a new campus dedicated to laboratories and classrooms. The event was attended by the then-President of Chile, Carlos Ibáñez del Campo, government ministers and other authorities of the State during his administration.

This event was considered to be the first true scheduled television broadcast as the television network also aired a newscast following the event. The TV station was officially launched on 22 August 1959 on VHF channel 8 of Valparaíso. Its first aired television show was El hombre ante el universo (The man in the face of the universe), a cultural programme. From 1957 to 1960, UCV TV used to broadcast from 4:00pm to 10:00pm local time. However, from 1968 to 1970, the station increased its airtime, ranging from 3:00pm to 12:00am midnight. In 1969, the network moved its frequency to VHF channel 4 of Valparaíso.

In 1971, UCV TV built a relay transmitter in La Serena, which was the first city outside the Valparaíso Region that could receive UCV TV. Three years later, in 1974, the network built another relay transmitter in the capital, Santiago. In 1975, UCV purchased portable camcorders that made it easier for the network to record footage in the streets as most television stations at the time were still using cinema-centred camera equipment - it beat the competition in the process. In 1978, UCV TV started colour broadcasts along with Santiago's channel 13, the Television Corporation of the Catholic University of Chile (UCTV for short) and could adapt itself to these new changes in just three months. In that same year, it broadcast the first Teletón event as the "Red UCV Televisión", that could be identified by the channel numbers 4, 5 and 8, which represented the frequencies in which the network was broadcasting in Valparaíso, Santiago and La Serena, respectively. The affiliate in La Serena, known as "Canal 8 UCV Televisión", not only aired UCV TV programmes, but also imported programming from Santiago's channel 13.

An affiliate started in Puerto Montt in 1990, initially on channel 7 before moving to channel 8 in 1998, by then it became a relay broadcaster. That same year, to give way to La Red, UCV switched frequencies to Channel 5.

High-definition feed[edit]

The channel launched its own HD feed on 25 June 2010, back when it was still named UCV Televisión (the feed was distributed as UCV TV HD) with the broadcast of the football match between Chile and Spain during the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa, in association with TVN. It was launched on the digital terrestrial television platform on virtual channel 29.1 in Greater Valparaíso and virtual channel 5.1 in Greater Santiago. It broadcasts at 1920x1080 interlaced lines at 60 fields per second.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Transmisión online de UCV TV, televisión de Chile". Tele aire. Retrieved 30 January 2014.
  2. ^ "UCV Televisión cambia de nombre y presenta nuevo logo: ahora es TV+". Radio Bio Bio (in Spanish). 2018-11-20. Retrieved 2022-04-08.

External links[edit]