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Programadora
In Colombian broadcasting, ''programadoras'' (literally ''programmer'') are companies that produce television programs, especially for the public-commercial Canal Uno (and, until 2003, Canal A/Segunda Cadena). The Colombian television model from 1954 to the late 1990s, known as the ''sistema mixto'' ("mixed system"), relied on ''programadoras'' as the sole producers of programs that aired on the two major channels. Following the introduction of two national private television channels to the country in the late 1990s, the recession of that same time period and a resulting combination of falling ratings and declining advertising revenues, the ''programadoras'' went into a tailspin that led to many closing in bankruptcy or becoming production companies for the private networks. By 2003, only seven ''programadoras'' were left on Canal Uno, later reduced to four. In May 2017, Plural Comunicaciones, a consortium including several former ''programadoras'', took total control of Canal Un ...
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Coestrellas
Coestrellas was a Colombian ''programadora'' founded in 1981 by Fernando González Pacheco and Carlos Benjumea. Its original director was Bernardo Romero Pereiro. It was liquidated in 2003, one of the last casualties of the ''programadoras'' crisis of the early 2000s. History Founding There were five original owners of Coestrellas, each with 20 percent of the company: Benjumea, Pereiro, Fernando González Pacheco, and two businessmen, Gustavo Cárdenas Giraldo (president and legal representative) and Jorge Ospina (who would soon back out to work at his other ''programadoras'', Prego Televisión and TeVecine — some of Ospina's stake was sold to Cárdenas's wife, Claudia Samper, a public relations expert). Early years In the 1981 bidding cycle, Coestrellas received hours of programming each week. ''Sabariedades'' was the main vehicle that kept it afloat, a ninety-minute variety and game show that aired on Saturday afternoons on Cadena Uno and was presented by Pacheco and Benjume ...
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Promec Televisión
Promec Televisión (full name ''Corporación Promotora de Medios de Comunicación Social'') was a Colombian ''programadora''. It operated between 1973 and 1989. History Early years It was founded in October 1972 by several entrepreneurs who included Humberto Arbeláez and Jorge Yarce. It was a non-profit corporation. It began operations in 1973, with its first major success ''Dialogando'', a docu-drama. Though it was new it came out of the ''licitación'' of 1973 with what was then one of Colombian television's prized timeslots: 8pm Thursdays on Primera Cadena. ''Dialogando'' was so successful it would remain on the air until 1989. In the ''licitación'' of 1976 Promec received 3.5 hours of programming a week, including its first venture into foreign programs. Other early programs were ''Las Señoritas Gutiérrez'', a comedy written by María Victoria de Restrepo and whose family would found its own ''programadora'' in 1979. It competed against Caracol's mainstay Sábados Felice ...
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Television In Colombia
Television in Colombia or Colombian television ( es, Televisión de Colombia) is a media of Colombia. It is characterized for broadcasting telenovelas, series, game shows and TV news. Until 1998 it was a state monopoly (though there was a short-lived local private channel from 1966 to 1971, known as Teletigre). There are two privately owned TV networks and three state-owned TV networks with national coverage, as well as six regional TV networks and dozens of local TV stations. There are numerous cable TV companies operating in Colombia under each Colombian department statutes. These cable companies also develop their own channels, in addition to a variety of international channels. Television in Colombia has always relied on technological advancements from developed countries importing almost all the equipment. History Schedule of the first Colombian television broadcast Source: 13 June 1954 from 21:00 *National Anthem - Orquesta Sinfónica de Colombia *Speech by Presiden ...
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Proyectamos Televisión
Proyectamos Televisión (sometimes styled as Proyectamos TV) was a Colombian ''programadora'' that operated between 1981 and March 2003. History It was founded in Cali, making it distinctive among the ''programadoras''. The majority of television infrastructure in the country was concentrated in the Bogotá area. The original owners were the singer Isadora, the businessman and producer Fernando Parra Duque and Clara María Ochoa. The Isadora era, 1981-91 Proyectamos at the start picked up two hours of weekly programs and used them to broadcast ''El Show de Isadora'', hosted by the singer and aired on Fridays, as well as two foreign telenovelas and an educational program, ''Vamos al Zoológico Ecológico Lógico'', all broadcast on Cadena 2. In the 1983 bidding cycle it ramped up production to 3.5 hours a week. ''El Show de Isadora'' moved to Tuesdays. Many of its other programs were imports. Several changes occurred to their program slate during this time, and in 1985, another ...
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Producciones PUNCH
Producciones PUNCH was a Colombian ''programadora''. It was the first ''programadora'' to be established in 1956, founded by the Peñaranda family. History PUNCH was involved in many firsts in Colombian television, including the following: *They were the first in the country to produce a live remote broadcast. *In 1957, PUNCH became the first ''programadora'' to produce and air a daily newscast (the 15 minute ''El Reporter Esso'', which later became the ''Noticiero Suramericano''). *In 1959, PUNCH debuted the program ''El 0597 está ocupado'', considered to be the first Colombian telenovela. It wasn't just a ''programadora'', however: one of its early businesses was outdoor advertising. It was one of the ''programadoras'' that became part of the association OTI de Colómbia, which produced the Olympic Games and the World Cup. Other members of OTI included RCN TV, RTI Colombia, Caracol TV, Producciones JES and Datos y Mensajes. In the private channel bidding of 1997, it was one of t ...
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Producciones Cinevisión
Producciones Cinevisión was a Colombia, Colombian ''programadora''. It was founded in 1968 and liquidated in 1996, returned in 1999 and was liquidated again in 2008. History Early years Jorge Arenas Lemus founded what was then known as CV-TV in 1968. Its early programming consisted of foreign films and (from 1975) Noticiero Cinevisión. The company's trade name followed suit with the newscast, becoming Cinevisión in 1977. It produced six hours a week of programs after the 1979 bidding cycle, including programs on both Canal Uno, Cadena Uno and Canal A, Cadena Dos. Consolidation and development In the 1981 bidding cycle Cinevisión received five hours of programs, returning to six in 1983. The ''programadora'' soon found itself in hot water with viewers. It had been airing in 1985 the Brazilian telenovela ''Loco amor'', but it was pulled for low ratings in 1986. Viewers began to boycott the various replacements: after a Mexican-Argentinian telenovela was sacked for another Brazil ...
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Inravisión
The Instituto Nacional de Radio y Televisión (Inravisión) was Colombia's national public broadcasting organization between 1964 and 2004. It was created by Decree 3267 of 20 December 1963, which declared that from 1 April 1964 the country's public radio and television broadcasting service would be provided by Inravisión, "a public company with financial, administrative, and legal autonomy". Among Inravisión's functions were to organize contracts with the ''programadoras'', the companies who produced programs and aired them on the national networks; develop and execute the plans and projects adopted by the Colombian Ministry of Communications; and offer official educational, cultural and informational services through the country's radio and television infrastructure. In 1993, it also assumed the duties of screening programs, which ''programadoras'' were required to send 72 hours in advance, for purposes of determining if the programs were suitable for viewing by minors. In ...
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CPT (programadora)
CPT (Compañía Productora de Televisión) was a Colombian ''programadora'' that operated in several incarnations from 1979 to 2003. Producciones Eduardo Lemaitre y Cía. (1979-88) The company started under the name ''Producciones Eduardo Lemaitre y Cía Ltda.'' in 1979. In the ''licitación'' of that year, it received a paltry hours a week of programming. The flagship program of this ''programadora'', which aired in one of Colombian television's best timeslots (Sundays, 8pm, Primera Cadena), was ''Revivamos nuestra historia'' (Let's Revive Our History). Since Lemaitre lived in Cartagena (and since most of the national television infrastructure was and is centered in Bogotá), Promec Televisión produced the programs (but Lemaitre had final approval of the scripts and contents). Promec also marketed the other half-hour a week that this ''programadora'' was allocated (Friday 5pm, Cadena Dos; originally home to the program ''Debates Lemaitre'', it soon was replaced with The Pink ...
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Andes Televisión
Andes Televisión was a Colombian ''programadora'' between 1997 and 2003. It was founded by Luis Guillermo Ángel, the former director of Inravisión. History Immediately upon its foundation, Andes received time on Canal A for special features on holidays (''festivos''). Before the bidding cycle of 1997, Ángel sold his stake to Roberto García-Peña, a journalist at '' El Tiempo'' newspaper. Before the closing of the bidding cycle, the family of ex-president Julio César Turbay Ayala had bought the majority of Andes, announcing at the same time that it would withdraw the renewal of the license of the ''programadora'' Noticiero Criptón, whose main production was the newscast by the same name that had aired since 1987. In the bidding cycle of 1997 (for the period 1998-2003), Andes was awarded 9.5 hours a week of programming on Canal A, including the noontime news block. In December 1997, the previous owner of that block, Prego Televisión, sold the rights to its ''Noticiero Naciona ...
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Datos Y Mensajes
Datos y Mensajes was a Colombian ''programadora'' founded in 1979 by Andrés Pastrana and disestablished in the early 2000s. It mainly focused on news programs, including its flagship program ''Noticiero TV Hoy'' (1979-2001). History In 1991, upon the split of ''programadoras'' across Cadena Uno and Canal A, Datos y Mensajes became part of the former group, which had 12 ''programadoras''. It was one of five on that channel with a license to broadcast news. During this time, it was a member of OTI Colombia, a coalition that also included Producciones PUNCH, Producciones JES, Caracol Televisión, RTI Colombia and RCN Televisión and brought the World Cup and Olympic Games to the country. It moved over to Canal A after the 1998 bidding cycle, where in early 2000 and mid-2001, amidst the growing ''programadoras'' crisis (ironically, under Pastrana's presidency), it was one of several companies that partnered to attempt a coherent programming schedule for the channel from 1:00 to 8:00 ...
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En Vivo (programadora)
En Vivo (known as Nuevos Días TV from 1995 until the end of 1997) was a Colombian ''programadora'' that operated between 1995 and 2001. Its main productions were the morning program ''En vivo'' (1995–96), the interview program by the same title (1996–97), and the newscasts ''En vivo 9:30'' (evening) and ''En vivo 6:30'' (morning) that aired on Canal A from 1998-2001. History Rise Nuevos Días/En Vivo stands out as a ''programadora'' that commenced operations in the middle of a concession period, not at the start of a new ''licitación'', beginning broadcasting on Tuesday, March 21, 1995. This is because in the period 1995-96, Inravisión experimented with 24-hour broadcasting for its two commercial channels. This was nowhere near a financial success for any of the involved parties; all four morning news programs (''En vivo'', ''Buenos Días Colombia'' and programs from Caracol and RCN) were losing money. However, further off-cycle events propelled the rise of this company on ...
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TeVecine
TeVecine (styled as T.V. Cine in the early 1990s) is a Colombian ''programadora'' created in 1982, though it did not start operations as a ''programadora'' until 1987. History It was created in 1982 by Jorge Ospina. In 1985, it became the producer of the program ''El Club de los Bulliciosos'' until 1987, when it became a ''programadora'', with ''El Club de los Bulliciosos'' and '' Romeo y Buseta'' as its first programs. In 1992 it took over production of '' El Show de Jimmy'' after Do Re Creativa TV disappeared. After the privatization of Caracol and RCN in 1998, Tevecine had some hours of programming time on Canal Uno Canal 1 ( en, Channel 1; pronounced "Canal Uno") is a Colombian state-owned television channel. It is owned by the Government of Colombia and managed by Plural Comunicaciones, S.A.S, a private company. From 1957 to 2017, the channel was administe ... and at last disappeared in March 2000. In 2003, it underwent restructuring as part of bankruptcy proceedings."Teveci ...
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