- RTL Télé Lëtzebuerg
RTL Télé Lëtzebuerg is the main
television channel inLuxembourg , broadcasting in Luxembourgish.The small television market in Luxembourg led to a unique system in
Europe : Luxembourg remains the only country in the world to run television stations in both thePAL andSECAM formats. Originally, both channels carried the same signal- Tele Luxembourg. Later, the signals were split in the two independent stations RTL-TVI (PAL, system G, on channel 27, the "i" stand for independent), targeting the French-speaking part ofBelgium and RTL Télévision (SECAM, system L, on channel 21), targetingFrance . Both stations initially continued to carry a lot of the same programming, with regards to foreign series and movies, but produced news and game shows for their target audience.As restrictions on operating commercial television stations in Europe were relaxed in the mid-80s, RTL-TVI moved entirely to
Brussels , while the popularity of RTL Télévision was somewhat diminished by the success of M6. RTL Télévision was renamed RTL 9 and, even though its original terrestrial frequency in Luxembourg remains, it is now primarily a cable station for France.In
1984 ,German language RTL Plus (nowRTL Television ) was added on channel E7 (PAL-B).All these stations carried a program in Luxembourgish, called "Hei Elei, Kuck Elei". The main purpose was to show these stations were essentially broadcasters from Luxembourg and not aiming to be commercial stations in
Belgium ,France andGermany . When the stations were licensed in their intended broadcasting regions, this program was dropped.RTL Tele Letzebuerg carries programming from
RTL Shop andSuper RTL in German, and magazine and news in Luxembourgish.The station's only competitor is Tango TV, operated by
Tele2 . All other TV stations in Luxembourg only broadcast on a local level (Nordliicht TV in the north orUelzecht Kanal in the south of the country) or only during certain hours a day (DOK)Viewers in Luxembourg can also tune into
RTL 4 (channel 41),RTL 5 andRTL 7 , which are intended for the Dutch market. Since all these stations have their broadcast licences in Luxembourg, they are available as terrestrial channels. Like television channels in the Netherlands, they show all foreign programming in the original language with subtitles, rather than dubbed.Since the switch to
digital television which was implemented overnight on 1 September 2006, RTL Télé Lëtzebuerg and "den 2ten RTL" share channel 27, M6 is on channel 7, and RTL TVI, Club RTL, Plug TV and the three Dutch channels are on channel 24.External links
* [http://www.rtl.lu/ RTL Télé Lëtzebuerg]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.