Skai TV

Skai TV
Launched 21 September 1993
1 April 2006 (relaunch)
Owned by Skai Group
Picture format 576i (SDTV) 16:9
1080i (HDTV) 16:9
Audience share 12.6% (23/9/2013 - 29/9/2013, AGB)
Country Greece
Language Greek
Broadcast area Internationally
Headquarters Piraeus, Greece
Website SKAI TV
Availability
Terrestrial
DIGEA Channel 47, 29
Satellite
Nova Channel 111 (SD)
OTE TV Channel 110 (HD)
Streaming media
Skai TV Online Watch live (selected programs only)
Skai TV HD Watch in HD (selected programs only)

Skai TV is a television network based in Piraeus, Greece. It is part of the Skai Group, one of the largest media groups in the country.[1] It was relaunched in its present form on 1 April 2006 in the Athens metropolitan area, and gradually spread its coverage nationwide. Besides analogue terrestrial transmission, it is available on the subscription-based encrypted services of Nova and OTE TV. Skai TV is also a member of Digea, a consortium of private television networks introducing digital terrestrial transmission in Greece.

At launch, Skai TV opted for dubbing all foreign language content into Greek, instead of using subtitles. This is very uncommon in Greece for anything except documentaries (using voiceover dubbing) and children's programmes (using lip-synced dubbing), so after intense criticism the station switched to using subtitles for almost all foreign shows.

History

The first logo of Skai TV, used from 1993-1998

Skai TV was first launched on 21 September 1993 with emphasis in news and sports but on 26 September 1999 was sold and the new owners gradually rebranded it as Alpha TV. The new station had an entirely different programming perspective and opted for a more mainstream profile, soon managing to become one of the top three TV stations in Greece.

Original Skai TV was heavily criticised for its "yellow press" news coverage and low-budget programming. In an incident still remembered by Greek viewers and later investigated by a Channel 4 documentary, the station was unanimously slated for its involvement (and live coverage) of a hostage situation that ended with the death of the victim.[2]

The previous logo of Skai TV, used until August 2009

On 1 April 2006, the company who originally launched Skai TV bought Seven TV, a holder of a Greek National broadcasting licence holder that failed to expand its coverage all over the country or attract a wide audience. The station was renamed to 'Skai TV' allowing the brand to re-emerge on the Greek television scene after 7 years, but this time the owners decided to forgo their previous approach and opted for high-quality foreign shows and valid news coverage.

On September 6, 2007, Skai TV was added to the lineup of NOVA Greece digital platform.

On March 2, 2016, Skai TV started broadcasting in High Definition.

On September 2, 2016, SKAI TV won one of four national television licenses auctioned in Greece after Iannis Alafouzos paid EUR 43.6m in a highly unusual competitive bidding process.[3]

Criticism

Skai TV has been ferociously criticised by Greek socialists for allegedly promoting right-wing, liberal and pro-EU politics in its news reporting and political commentary, and for being essentially the mouthpiece of big business in Greece. It has also been soundly criticised by some Greek conservative commentators for its political documentaries.

Technology

Skai TV has made a pioneering appearance in international airwaves, being the first non-subscription TV station worldwide to use solely digital technology thus being completely tapeless. It uses the SONAPS network broadcast system made by Sony and installed by British company VSC Design. The system is considered by the former as a showcase example of the system. Skai also use Omneon Spectrum servers for Playout together with IBIS automation.

Skai TV is also the first station in Greece to broadcast its full programme in 16:9 format.

Programming

Skai TV airs a diverse programming mix with a focus on entertainment and information. Programming includes comedies, dramas, current affairs shows, documentaries and sports. Foreign programmes originally made up the bulk of Skai TV's schedule but in recent years it has begun producing an increasing amount of original programs which now comprise a third of the schedule. It has programing alliances with popular foreign networks including National Geographic Channel, Discovery Channel and the BBC and a large part of its schedule features recent and past-years documentaries. There is also a Greek dubbed BBC World News news bulletin following the station's own news bulletin and a news-themed morning show. Skai TV also shows some friendly matches of Panathinaikos FC when these friendlies are not on any of the Premium Services (Either OTE TV or Nova Sports).

Greek

Current shows include:

Foreign

Some of the shows currently being aired:

Skai HD

The Skai broadcast in high definition from the OTE TV platform and online. In August 2014, it announced that it will broadcast a new TV channel in high definition terrestrial digital television, which will relay the homonymous station program in high definition picture. The HD channel is expected to broadcast in early 2015, but the channel finally sent out on February 27, 2016 with 1080i resolution at about 6Mbit/s bitrate.

Skai International

In 2013, Skai TV expanded their service into North America, entering into programming supply agreements with local broadcasters. It launched in the United States via a partnership with local Greek broadcaster New Greek TV, which is available on Time Warner Cable in NY.[4] On December 12, 2013, Skai launched in Canada on Bell Fibe TV via a partnership with ethnic broadcaster Ethnic Channels Group.[5]

See also

References

  1. Όμιλος ΣΚΑΪ. Skai Group (in Greek). skai.gr. Retrieved 2009-06-19.
  2. Υπόθεση Ματέι. Eleftherotypia (in Greek). archive.enet.gr. 2008-06-24. Archived from the original on October 2, 2011.
  3. "Marinakis wins Greek TV licence". Retrieved 2016-09-02.
  4. ΣΚΑΪ. "ΣΚΑΪ (www.skai.gr)". Retrieved 2 October 2016.
  5. "Ethnic Channels Group launches a new Greek Channel SKAI TV on Bell Fibe!". Retrieved 2 October 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.