One plus
One plus | |
---|---|
TV station ( public service ) | |
Program type | Division program (service) |
reception | DVB-C , DVB-S , DVB-S2 , DVB-T , IPTV |
Image resolution |
576i ( SDTV ) 720p ( HDTV ) |
business |
August 29, 1997 (as EinsMuXx ) April 23, 2005 (as EinsPlus ) to September 30, 2016 |
Seat | Stuttgart , Germany |
Broadcaster | Südwestrundfunk |
Intendant | Peter Boudgoust |
Program director | Alexander von Harling |
List of TV channels | |
Website |
EinsPlus was a digital TV station of the ARD , which was broadcast as part of the bouquet ARD Digital . EinsPlus has long focused on broadcasting advice, service and knowledge programs. Until it was discontinued, EinsPlus also largely offered programs for young people and young people, consisting of magazines, concerts, information, shows, comedy, series and films. The management of EinsPlus within the ARD was the Südwestrundfunk .
On October 17, 2014, it was decided at the Prime Minister's Conference in Potsdam that the station, as well as ZDFkultur , will be discontinued. Instead there is funk , a non-linear digital content network from ARD and ZDF, which is aimed at the young target group. On September 30, 2016 at midnight, broadcasting ceased.
history
The digital transmitter started on August 29, 1997 together with EinsExtra and EinsFestival at the international radio exhibition in Berlin under the name EinsMuXx. EinsMuXx broadcast the first one with a time delay . So the programs were broadcast before or after the broadcast on Das Erste. The station's motto was “More of the first”.
In 2000, ARD thought about revising the EinsMuXx digital channel. Two working groups worked on new concepts for the station. One concept was to convert the station into a youth channel, an alternative was to convert it into a music channel.
Between August 14th and 29th, 2004 EinsMuXx was replaced by the Athens 1 ARD / ZDF special channel on the occasion of the Olympic Summer Games in Athens .
After the ARD introduced a new image, on April 23, 2005, all three digital channels were visually revised and EinsMuXx was renamed EinsPlus at the same time, but initially retained its broadcast schedule.
On October 29, 2005 the concept of the station was revised. With the motto "More for life", EinsPlus became a service and advice channel. The previously red logo was given the new color green. The program was well structured and divided into four-hour thematic blocks. Each block got its own color. The topics were: life (orange), travel (light orange), cooking (yellow), nature (green), health (light blue) and knowledge (blue). On Sundays, the regular broadcast schedule was interrupted by three additional thematic blocks: Sunday tour (dark green), focus (red) and consumer magazines (purple). The four-hour thematic blocks were broadcast four hours apart every day. For example, on Monday at 8:00 a.m. and on Tuesday at 12:00 p.m. A sloping bar with changing colors was displayed below the channel logo (the corner logo ), from which the topic of the topic block currently being broadcast could be recognized.
At the beginning of 2009, the broadcast schedule was revised again and the previous broadcast times of the topic blocks were dispensed with. One led u. a. introduces prime-time magazines and documentaries, and new afternoon programming of programs on education and science. At the same time, EinsPlus started its first self-produced and moderated programs on February 13, 2009. This included the three magazines in.puncto , Leben! and delicious to the power of 3 . On March 7, 2010 EinsPlus started the science program Wissenswerk .
After that, new programs were repeatedly tested on EinsPlus. At the end of 2011, EinsPlus also began to include entertainment programs in its program, including films that were not previously featured in the program (e.g. home video ) or the guessing program, things from the roof .
After a program restructuring on April 30, 2012, new formats in prime time are intended to appeal to 14 to 30-year-old viewers in particular. The broadcaster brought Sarah Kuttner ( excursion with Kuttner ) and Grimme Prize winner Philipp Walulis ( Walulis watches television ) on board. Other new formats are the music program BEATZZ , the knowledge show Braintuning , the computer game magazine RELOAD and the talk and report format Klub Konkret . The youth program is identified by a logo that resembles a stencil painting with gradual colors.
On November 27, 2012, Südwestrundfunk expressed its wish to merge EinsPlus with a digital program from ZDF. The new station created in this merger is to be produced jointly by ARD and ZDF and primarily aimed at a young audience. The ZDF was cautious and pointed out that a decision by politics would be inevitable. However, the ZDF had already made a similar statement in advance and closed bsw. A setting of ZDFkultur in favor of a joint ARD-ZDF youth channel does not preclude.
In 2013 the EinsPlus logo was revised and the word "Eins" was added. In September 2013, the program for young viewers was expanded to 16 hours a day. The station's website is also to be renewed and EinsPlus has the new motto “TV for you!” From December 5, 2013 to September 30, 2016, EinsPlus broadcast in parallel in HD and standard definition.
Station logos
program
The main component of the program was the so-called rubrics, in which individual programs of the ARD stations are taken over and rearranged. In addition, the programs broadcast on weekdays included the ARD buffet (repetition from the first at 12:15 p.m.), the future magazine nano ( 3sat takeover from the previous day) and the program Planet Wissen .
At 7:30 p.m., different magazine or report formats from third parties such as B. Zapp , Druckfrisch , Schlaglicht, ARD-Ratgeber , MDR Garten , Im Grünen or Rucksack are broadcast.
The only news broadcast was the 5:00 p.m. daily news from Das Erste .
Since April 30, 2012 at 8:15 pm, programs have been broadcast that are aimed primarily at 14 to 30-year-old viewers.
Programs such as B. Treasures of the world , Willi wants to know - Good question, next question! or Tele-Gym .
In-house productions
In addition to the program taken over from ARD, the talk show live! and since February 13, 2009 the weekly trend and service magazine in.puncto has been broadcast as an independent EinsPlus program. In April 2010 the knowledge comedy format "It's about my life - the broadcast with the Krause" started. The live broadcasts of the concerts of the New Pop Festival in September 2009 and Rock am Ring (in cooperation with MTV ) in June 2010 were produced by Südwestrundfunk for broadcast on EinsPlus, in 2011 SWR and EinsPlus were the only picture producers of Rock am Ring. Since 2013, the quiz show Wer's brings, wins has also been broadcast.
reception
EinsPlus was distributed via ARD Digital via DVB-S , DVB-C and in Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria and Rhineland-Palatinate also via DVB-T . EinsPlus was also broadcast on IPTV and Zattoo . Some of the programs were also made available for recall on the YouTube platform . In Rhineland-Palatinate and Baden-Württemberg, the DVB-T program slot from EinsPlus was taken over by the One program one day before it was discontinued .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Entry in the KEK database ( Memento of the original dated February 22, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Alexander Krei: EinsPlus has to give way to the new online youth channel. DWDL.de of October 17, 2014 (see also DWDL comment: Finally young: Many opportunities and a new zombie? )
- ↑ Focus Online: New concept for EinsMuXx
- ↑ swr.de: Jung - wild - digital: EinsPlus from April 30th with young primetime
- ↑ digitalfernsehen.de: ARD wants to create a new youth channel - EinsPlus should disappear
- ↑ DWDL.de: 16 hours a day - EinsPlus wants to further expand its youth offering
- ↑ What are the broadcast frequencies (transponder data) of the ARD's HD programs since April 30th? In: ard-digital.de. Archived from the original on May 4, 2012 ; Retrieved December 18, 2013 .