NHK |
NHK (, Nihon Hs Kykai), or the Japan Broadcasting Corporation, is Japan s public broadcaster. Radio Tokyo and Radio Japan are informal English names, referring to NHK s original role as a radio broadcaster. Today it operates two terrestrial television services (NHK General TV and NHK Educational TV), three satellite services (NHK BS-1, NHK BS-2, and NHK Hi-Vision – High-definition television), and three radio networks (NHK Radio 1, NHK Radio 2, and NHK FM). For audiences overseas it also broadcasts NHK World TV, NHK World Premium, and NHK World Radio.
=History=
NHK was founded in 1926, modelled on the BBC radio company. A second radio network was started in 1931 and a shortwave service broadcasting to listeners overseas began in 1935.
In November 1941, The Imperial Japanese Army nationalized all public news agencies and coordinated their efforts through the Information Liaison Confidential Committee, which included representatives from the Army, the Navy, the Foreign Ministry, the Government Information Office, the Cabinet Information Bureau, the Home Ministry (Japan), the Ministry of Greater East Asia (Japan), the Transportation Ministry, the Domei News Agency and the NHK. Thereafter, all published and broadcast news reports became official announcements of the Imperial Army General Headquarters in Tokyo for the duration of World War II.
NHK started television broadcasts in 1953. It aired its first colour television broadcast in 1960. Although the network first introduced commercial broadcasts to Japan, nowadays NHK is paid for by viewer fees. Residents of Japan who own a TV are obliged to pay a fee of about USD 12 per month under the Hōsō Hō (Broadcasting Act). However, the act does not stipulate any punishment for failure of payment.
NHK World TV started broadcasts in 1995. The entire NHK network moved to digital broadcasting in 2000.
= TV Programming =
NHK General TV broadcasts a variety of programming. The following are noteworthy:
See also: Japanese television programs, International broadcasting in Japan, Japanese media
=See also=
*ISDB *STRL
=External links=
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