Nickelodeon Switzerland (SF DRS)

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Infobox radio tower icon
Nickelodeon Switzerland (SF DRS)
Station logo
TV station ( private law )
Program type Specialized program (children)
reception Cable , satellite
Image resolution ( Entry missing )
business September 28, 1998 to September 26, 2003
owner Viacom , SF DRS
List of TV channels

Nickelodeon Switzerland was a program window for children that was broadcast on SF DRS (now SRF ) from 1998 to 2003 . A station called Nick Switzerland has been running since 2009 .

The program was supplemented with remnants of Nickelodeon Germany, which was discontinued in 1998, and its own live shows. The channel ran daily from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with the exception of sporting or political events. Live broadcasts were broadcast between noon and 1 p.m., and their reruns from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Nickelodeon ended on September 26, 2003 at 5 p.m., after five years of broadcasting time, with the program Rambutan . The successor was junior .

program

In the daily 9-hour program of Nickelodeon, primarily the self-produced nicktoons or real film series were broadcast. In addition, live broadcasts such as Rambutan or Live! sent. Scattered throughout the day, young people were able to introduce themselves in short programs such as Sport & Fun . Further short programs were taken over by Nickelodeon Germany .

Live!

“Live!” Was a game show for children that was broadcast live over midday. It took place in a studio of SFDRS and was broadcast from there. In the show "Live!" Different games were played alternately - among others: "Eiertätsch", "Schmalzi", "Film Ab", "Duo", "ABC". Most of the time, prizes worth around 70 - 90 francs were awarded per game. “Live!” Was presented in Swiss German by presenters from Swiss television . There was also a daily quiz program (Kick !, Rambutan) in which school classes could win prizes in the studio.

Sometimes celebrities were invited to the studio for interviews and games. At the end of the special programs, Nickelodeon products were signed by the celebrities so that they can later be given to children as prizes.

Dietmar

The program "Dietmar" was one of the few self-produced live programs. From 4pm to 4.30pm, “Dietmar” (Chris Sulser) informed the children and young people with the latest news from the “stars and starlets”, made jokes and answered the audience's mail in a humorous satirical form.

Moderators at the time

Closing date

The last broadcast before the setting was not, as usual, a repeat of the live broadcast Live! , but a live broadcast Rambutan , in which it was mentioned at the end that the studio would appear in new splendor from next day. The switch to Junior should be as unspectacular and inconspicuous as possible.

In 2003 SFDRS wanted to develop its own brand name JUNIOR and then closed the Nickelodeon program window.

Nickelodeon in the "Maky"

In the monthly “Maky” magazine for children and young people, a few pages were designed for the broadcaster until the Nickelodeon program window in SF was closed. On the 5 to 6 pages were program previews, the program, letters to the editor, profiles of moderators and celebrities, pictures of children, puzzles and a page for questions asked by children and by "Heribert" (butler on the program "Live!") have been answered to see.

Swiss television and SRG SSR idée suisse were responsible for the content .

Bumpers and logos

Nickelodeon logo on the website

The "Nickelodeon" logo, which was in the upper left corner of the screen, was only used for Nickelodeon Switzerland. However, trailer logos and program previews were taken directly from other Nickelodeon offshoots.

The bumpers (small interim videos , which mostly showed the Nickelodeon logo in different variations) were mainly taken over by Nickelodeon Germany. Some bumpers were created by Nickelodeon Studios exclusively for the Swiss program window. Other previews were in principle created by SFDRS itself, as were the Nickelodeon logos on the SFDRS website.

Further development of Nickelodeon in Switzerland

Today's Nickelodeon Switzerland was broadcast on the morning of April 1, 2008 under the name Nick on the MTV Switzerland slot as a program window. From April 1, 2009, an all-day program will be broadcast from 5:00 am to 8:15 pm on the Viva Switzerland slot ; from May 16, 2011, the slot will be shared with Comedy Central Switzerland . Starting October 1, 2014, Nickelodeon Switzerland will broadcast 24 hours a day. For a long time, apart from the Swiss advertising window, this program was identical to that of Nickelodeon Germany . The program is to be supplemented by Swiss in-house productions. In the meantime, they have their own schedule and broadcast series at times other than Nickelodeon Germany.

As part of the international realignment of the Nickelodeon transmitter family by Viacom, Nick was renamed Nickelodeon again. In future, as with MTV, there will only be one worldwide station design, which will run on all stations in 172 countries under the name Nickelodeon .

broadcasts

Live broadcasts

  • Live!
  • Rambutan
  • Dietmar

Short broadcasts

  • Sport & fun
  • Help!
  • On wire

Nicktoons and real film series

See also

Web links