- Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation
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For other uses, see NRK (disambiguation).
Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK) Type Publicly funded, public-service broadcaster Industry Broadcasting Founded 1924 / 1933 Headquarters Oslo, Norway Key people Hans Tore Bjerkaas Products TV, radio, online services Employees 3 481 (2004)[1] Website www.nrk.no The Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (Norwegian: Norsk rikskringkasting AS), which is usually known as NRK, is the Norwegian government-owned radio and television public broadcasting company, and the largest media organisation in Norway. It is a founding member of the European Broadcasting Union.
Contents
Financing
It is primarily financed through a combination of a mandatory annual license fee for each person who is in possession of a TV (94 per cent), and a number of commercial activities such as programme and DVD sales, spin-off products and certain types of sponsorship.
History
Regular radio broadcasts started in Norway in 1925 by the privately owned company Kringkastningselskapet, the predecessor to NRK which was founded in 1933. Based on a model similar to the BBC, and located in Oslo, it was a replacement for privately operated radio stations in the larger cities. NRK initially set out to get coverage over the entire country, and had a monopoly on broadcasting in Norway until the monopoly was gradually dissolved from 1975 onwards.
During the World War II German occupation Norwegian transmitters were used for broadcasting German war propaganda to Northern Europe (particularly Scotland and the northern half of Ireland where the sea path ensured a good signal) and Scandinavia.
NRK was also partly financed by commercials on radio up until the German occupation.
NRK was one of 23 founding broadcasting organisations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950. In 1954 NRK started broadcasting television shows on a trial basis, with regular broadcasts starting in 1960.
NRK was the last of the major European public broadcasters to introduce a second radio station,[citation needed] officially started as late as 1984. In 1993 NRK launched a third radio station, the youth-oriented P3. A 24-hour station for classical music, Alltid Klassisk, introduced in 1995, was the first of its kind to be broadcast digitally using DAB. The 24-hour news station Alltid Nyheter was then introduced in 1997, followed by a radio station for teenagers, mP3, in 2000, which mostly plays dance music continually.
In 1996, a second television channel, NRK2, was launched. The original television channel is now known as NRK1. September 3, 2007 NRK launched its third channel; The youth channel NRK3. Later that year, on December 1 NRK launched its fourth television channel, NRK Super, which is aimed at children. NRK3 and NRK Super shares the same channel, with NRK Super broadcasting from 0700 - 1900 and NRK3 from 1900 - 0700.
In 2004, a new radio station for traditional music, NRK Alltid folkemusikk was launched on DAB and internet radio.
The international radio transmissions from NRK, Utenlandssendingen, began transmissions on the shortwave bands in 1948. Initially broadcasting in Norwegian, English language programs were later added. The service was discontinued January 1, 2002. All NRK broadcasting activities on shortwave ceased on January 1, 2004. NRK's mediumwave transmitter at Kvitsøy on 1314 kHz used to be widely heard internationally and was one of the most commonly-heard trans-Atlantic DX signals in eastern North America. The frequency carried a mixture of NRK's radio channels P1 and P2, and was called Europakanalen. However, these mediumwave transmissions were discontinued on July 1, 2006.
All of the radio stations are now available on the internet. Several of the television programmes are also available on the internet.
NRK still holds the strongest position in number of viewers, though the competition from TV 2 is getting tougher.
NRK claims to have the longest running radio show, Lørdagsbarnetimen (lit. The Saturday Children's Hour), running since December 20, 1924.
In recent years, the network has shown itself to be the leading producer of original comedy shows in Norway, with such notable successes as Lillelørdag, Åpen Post, Uti Vår Hage and Team Antonsen, centered on a core of the comedians Harald Eia and Bård Tufte Johansen.
NRK has 12 regional offices spread around the country. All offices have their own broadcasts in both television and radio as well their own news sites on the internet. They also contribute daily with news coverage for the national news programmes. The two headquarters of NRK are located at Marienlyst in Oslo and Tyholt in Trondheim.
Organisation
An initiative for major organisational change was taken by the CEO in 2008 in order to create a more agile NRK, while still adhering to the principles of the broadcaster-producer model introduced in January 2001.[citation needed] By January 2009 the number of programme-producing divisions had been reduced from five to three, separated more along geographical than functional lines, and at the same time simplifying trading in the internal market.[citation needed] The programme producing divisions are:
- Marienlyst covering all facilities in Oslo
- Distrikt, encompassing all regional offices and with their headquarters in Trondheim
- Sami, the producer of Sámi programmes situated in Karasjok
Since March 19, 2007, Hans-Tore Bjerkaas has been Director-General of the NRK.[2] Previous directors have been Olav Midttun (1934–1947, except during the Nazi occupation), Kaare Fostervoll (1948–1962), Hans Jacob Ustvedt (1962–1971), Torolf Elster (1972–1981), Bjartmar Gjerde (1981–1988), Einar Førde (1989–2001) and John G. Bernander (2001–2007).[3]
The chairman of the board is William Nygaard and the current head (2006) of the news department is Gro Holm. Currently (2006) NRK employs between 3000 and 3500 people.
Notable television programmes
- Dagsrevyen
- Dagsnytt Atten
- Urix
- Nytt på nytt
- Melodi Grand Prix (The Norwegian national selection for Eurovision Song Contest)
- The Eurovision Song Contest 1986, Eurovision Song Contest 1996, Eurovision Song Contest 2010 Grand Finals and the Eurovision Song Contest 2010 Semi-Finals
Channels
Radio
- NRK P1
- NRK P2
- NRK P3
- NRK mP3 a, b
- NRK Klassisk a, b
- NRK Alltid nyheter a, b
- NRK Folkemusikk b
- NRK Jazz b
- NRK Stortinget b
- NRK Sport b
- NRK Super b
- NRK Gull b
- NRK Båtvær d
- NRK Sámi Radio a, b, c
- NRK P1 Oslofjord b
- NRK 5.1 e
- NRK P3 Urørt e
a Available on FM in only some parts of the country
b DAB, DVB-T and internet radioc In cooperation with Swedish SVT and Finnish YLE,
d DAB only
e Internet radio onlyTelevision
High-definition
NRK has an HD OB van, producing high-definition video.[4] The first Norwegian series filmed in HD is "En Udødelig Mann" (An Immortal Man) about the young Henrik Ibsen. The action "miniseries" (6 parts) called "Kodenavn Hunter" is also HD. Promo videos are freely downloadable from their site, and the full-length last episode is available.[5]
NRK uses H.264 as the compression codec for the digital terrestrial network.[citation needed]
NRK has also started to offer HD content via BitTorrent. This is currently a very limited offer due to rights restrictions, but it's growing steadily.[6]
In preparation for the Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver, NRK announced that they would launch a high-definition channel, and their first native HD broadcast would be from Vancouver. NRK1 HD is a simulcast of NRK1.[7]
NRK.no
nrk.no is the brand name and home for the NRKs online service. The NRK has had an online presence supporting its TV and radio programmes and web only initiatives since 1996. The development of nrk.no commenced in 1995. Nrk.no is the second most visited Norwegian website, only surpassed by the website of the country's leading tabloid, Verdens Gang.[citation needed]
See also
- List of Norwegian language radio stations
- List of Norwegian television channels
- List of programs broadcast by Norsk rikskringkasting
- yr.no
References
- ^ Medienorge/Inst. for informasjon- og medievitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
- ^ Kringkastinggjef, 28 April 2009. Retrieved 2010-01-20.
- ^ Kringkastingsjefene, 22 April 2009. Retrieved 2010-01-20.
- ^ "Skandinavias mest avanserte". Nordic Media Festival. http://www.mediedager.no/pub/pub_news.php?aID=294. Retrieved 2007-08-15.[dead link]
- ^ NRK.no
- ^ "NRKBeta - Bittorrent (Norwegian)". Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation. http://nrkbeta.no/bittorrent/. Retrieved 2009-04-24.
- ^ "NRK1 i HD fra 12. February 2010 (Norwegian)". Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation. http://nrkbeta.no/2010/01/14/hd-i-nrk/. Retrieved 2010-02-09.
External links
The Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation Television NRK1 · NRK2 · NRK3 · NRK Super · NRK1 Tegnspråk
Radio NRK P1 · NRK P2 · NRK P3 · NRK mP3 · NRK Alltid Nyheter · NRK Båtvær · NRK Folkemusikk · NRK Gull · NRK Jazz · NRK Klassisk · NRK P1 Oslofjord · NRK Sápmi · NRK Sport · NRK Stortinget · NRK Super · NRK 5.1
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Non-European membersAssociate members Associate membersFormer associate memberApproved participating
membersPast active membersPending EBU membership
applicationsMembers Associate members KNR • Sjónvarp Føroya • UR
Government enterprises of Norway Argentum • BaneService • Electronic Chart Centre • Entra Eiendom • Flytoget • Gassco • Kings Bay • Mesta • Norsk Rikskringkasting • Norsk Tipping • Norwegian State Railways • Petoro • Posten • Secora • SIVA • Statkraft • Statnett • Store Norske • Uninett • VinmonopoletSee also: Category:Government-owned companies in Norway • List of Norwegian government enterprisesCoordinates: 59°56′6.21″N 10°43′6.79″E / 59.9350583°N 10.7185528°E
Categories:- Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation
- Government-owned companies in Norway
- Norwegian television networks
- Publicly funded broadcasters
- Television companies of Norway
- 1933 establishments in Norway
- Commercial-free television networks
- Media companies of Norway
- European Broadcasting Union members
- Multilingual broadcasters
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