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RTP Açores is a Portuguese
free-to-air Free-to-air (FTA) services are television (TV) and radio services broadcast in unencrypted form, allowing any person with the appropriate receiving equipment to receive the signal and view or listen to the content without requiring a subscri ...
regional television channel owned and operated by state-owned
public broadcaster Public broadcasting (or public service broadcasting) is radio, television, and other electronic media outlets whose primary mission is public service with a commitment to avoiding political and commercial influence. Public broadcasters receive ...
Rádio e Televisão de Portugal (RTP) in the Autonomous Region of the Azores. It began broadcasting on 10 August 1975 from its studios in
Ponta Delgada Ponta Delgada (; ) is the largest municipality (''concelho'') and executive capital of the Autonomous Region of the Azores in Portugal. It is located on São Miguel Island, the largest and most populous in the archipelago. As of 2021, it has 67,2 ...
.


History


Buildup

In 1964, a television coverage project for the Azores appeared, under the hands of RTP engineer João Paz. However, due to supposed lack of money at RTP, the project was halted. In 1975, during the transformative phase of Portugal's transition from Estado Novo regime to
Third Portuguese Republic The Third Portuguese Republic () is a period in the history of Portugal corresponding to the current democratic regime installed after the Carnation Revolution of 25 April 1974, that put an end to the paternal autocratic regime of ''Estado N ...
,
Ramalho Eanes Ramalho is a Portuguese surname. Ramalho may refer to: People *João Ramalho (1493–1580), Portuguese explorer *Ramalho Ortigão (1836–1915), Portuguese writer *Rosa Ramalho (1888–1977), Portuguese ceramist *José Ramalho (rower) (1901–1967) ...
, then president of the administrative council at RTP (and president of Portugal from 1976 to 1986) solicited a dossier already published by João Paz on the future of regional broadcasting, then referred to as RTP-Açores.Catarina Duff Burnay (March 2012), p.132 After studying the process, its implications and conditions, Ramalho Eanes informed António Borges Coutinho that this project would be implemented swiftly. Along with Sousa Gomes and Sidónio Paes, the administrative council saw the public station in the Azores: ''"...as to contribute to the eradication of illiteracy...an instrument for education and culture...an instrument to promote cultural democracy...a vehicle that contributed to a better knowledge for all citizens...a means to appeal to unity and social responsibility for all...and a contribution that ervedpositive collaboration in the transition and institutionalization of democracy"''. Instability at the national/regional levels and the move towards more autonomy and independence meant that RTP's motives were met with anxiety and distrust, the national broadcaster at that time being a tool of the
Armed Forces Movement 230px, A mural dedicated to the MFA, it reads: "Towards freedom. Long live the 25th of April!" The Armed Forces Movement (; MFA) was an organization of lower-ranking officers in the Portuguese Armed Forces. It was responsible for instigating th ...
(MFA). In the streets of Ponta Delgada, for example, local cultural brigades were already trying to mould values and guide the transformation towards democracy. Following the
Carnation Revolution The Carnation Revolution (), code-named Operation Historic Turn (), also known as the 25 April (), was a military coup by military officers that overthrew the Estado Novo government on 25 April 1974 in Portugal. The coup produced major socia ...
, the move towards a decentralized constitution, with an autonomous status for regional authorities, the island of São Miguel in the archipelago of the Azores, was chosen for the broadcasting centre. Local news and entertainment was broadcast from its first studios in a building in the outskirts of the urban area of Ponta Delgada, in the locality of São Gonçalo. The station broadcast on channel 7 from the Pico da Barrosã transmitter and channel 9 from Santa Bárbara. Additional relays at launch time were located at Ajuda (channel 11), Cume (channel 4), Pico (channel 5), Pico Alto (channel 10) and Salto do Cavalo (channel 11). Television was not new to the Azores, as the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service operated a TV station at the Lajes Air Base ( CSL-TV, channel 8) in the NTSC standard since 1954. Its first director was Fernando Balsinha, who entered RTP in 1973. When his stint at RTP Açores ended, he returned to Lisbon, working for its news department, being the foreign relations head at the time of his death in 2003. The station was already delivering test broadcasts days ahead of the 10 August launch.Televisão chegou às ilhas dos Açores há 30 anos
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First broadcast

Following some adaptations of the spaces, the first broadcast was aired on 10 August 1975, and lasted six hours. The first broadcast began at 3:30 in the afternoon, with a speech by President of the Board of Governors, General Altino Pinto de Magalhães, and lasted until 9:30, at the end of a newscast. This first transmission was marked by several gaffes, firstly by General Pinto (who was thrust into the position of regional leader only months earlier), then in the transmission of the programming, that included '' General à Força''. After this film, Telejournal published local/regional and national news (already two days late) before a caption appearing to round out the schedule, stating ''"Silence...we are going to laugh"''.Catarina Duff Burnay (March 2012), p.133 At the conclusion of this first broadcast, a technical flaw did not permit the playing of the national anthem, resulting in one viewer calling in to berate the studio, stating "...this here is still Portugal"''. One of the programs shown on launch day, the Polish series Chłopi (The Peasants), caused controversy among the viewing audience, ostensibly due to the behavior portrayed. The channel employed a staff of about 20 people, and broadcast Tuesdays to Sundays from 19:00 to 22:00, with the employees taking a day off on Monday. During these early broadcasts, the regional operator produced three hours of daily broadcasts per day for two months. In the successive years, the Azoreans began to trust the local broadcasters, with improvements made to the functioning of the service, including the operation of the ''Estação Terrena de Satélites da Marconi'', which allowed signals from the continent to reach the Azores directly (rather than time-delay broadcasts). But, coverage was not even, as many of the islands were not covered, and many of the programming was still delivered from the continent and the content was censored, due to concerns for "public morality". Satellite connections started in 1977, enabling Azoreans access to real-time programming from the mainland, followed by offices in Horta in January 1978 and Angra do Heroísmo in April 1979. As of 1977, RTP Açores covered 60% of the population.


Modernization

The 1980 Terceira earthquake heavily damaged the local RTP office, losing crucial equipment. A short-term solution was made for the office and it later made a special program for the first anniversary of the quake the following year. Satellite broadcasts from a Marconi satellite earth station started on 16 November 1980. Work for a new relay station at Pico do Bartolomeu went underway in 1984, bringing coverage to the north-eastern area of São Miguel. Even so, television in the Azores was seen a "mirror" on Azorean culture, and a "window" on the other islands of the archipelago. This changed during the administration of Lopes Araújo; in July 1984, after completing a course in Law on the continent, he returned to the Azores, and at the age of 26, assumed an approach to revitalize regional programming and promote RTP Açores internationally. He contracted new professionals (such as producer José Medieros), produced programming directed towards the Azorean population and links to the diaspora in the United States. This included transmitting direct from Ponta Delgada, via satellite, the festivals of Senhor Santo Cristo dos Milagres in 1985, as well as broadcasting the news from the Azores to services in North America, Canada and Bermuda, starting in 1987. 1985 was also marked by the inaugural ''Mostra Atlântica da Televisão'' festival created in Horta, followed by the ''Açor de Ouro'' prize in 1988. The tenth anniversary of RTP Açores was also an occasion for the channel to increase its local output, with such productions like ''Pedras Brancas'', ''Memórias do Vale'' and Domingos Monteiro's documentary ''Açores''. The signal's reached increased to cover the islands of Flores and Corvo in 1988. Programming during this period began to diversify and became more polished, with a concentration on information programming (''Jornal de sábado'', ''Notícias'', ''Sumário''), entertainment (with talk shows like ''Aqui Açores'' and ''Gente Nossa'') and the beginning of the production of fiction programming. Until this time, production of fictional storytelling was not full-developed; Lopes de Araújo considered this ''"the noble stage of production"'', due to the demands on people, technical requirements and financial means, in addition to a level of experience and maturity necessary to realize large productions.Catarina Duff Burnay (March 2012), p.134 To this, in July 1986, the Regional Centre of the Azores produced ''Xailes Negros'' (a mini-series) which attempted break the mould and provide dynamic fiction and story-telling, from scratch, while other productions have moved to adapt pre-existing public literature and works by celebrated Azorean authors. ''Xailes Negros'' also bagged awards. In 1987, for the 500th anniversary of the discovery of the islands, RTP Açores produced ''Balada do Atlântico''. Footage dispatched to stations in the United States, Canada and Bermuda, ''Notícias dos Açores'', attracted between 350,000 and 700,000 viewers of Azorean descent. New current affairs programs were introduced in 1988, as well as test broadcasts to Flores and Corvo, up until then the only areas of Portugal that still had no television. Continuous broadcasts from 12:00 to closedown started in 1989. It was up to the station to broadcast the official acts of Portugal Day 1989 which were held in Ponta Delgada, for the national RTP network. Reports compiled by RTP Açores reporters sent to the United States, Canada and Brazil led to the creation of the documentary ''Os Açorianos no Novo Mundo'', about Azorean immigration to these countries. Also in June 1989, a special edition of ''Fim-de-Semana'' featured inserts from all nine islands. That same year, the new Terceira office opened, nine years after the quake.


The 90s

RTP Açores was developed further in 1990, with the improvement of working conditions and an average schedule lasting close to fourteen hours a day. Morning programming started on weekends, as well as more active contribution from Faial and Terceira. In 1998, RTP1's terrestrial relay network was being implemented in the archipelago.


The 2000s

At the turn of the millennium, RTP Açores had its audience share decrease, due to the arrival of RTP1 to terrestrial transmitters and the increased penetration of cable in urban areas. A restructuring plan, first drafted in 1999, was expected to be approved by Lisbon, but as of January 2000, it was pending approval. Its excess of news (such as the national ''Telejornal'' followed by ''Telejornal Açores'') gave the channel the nickname of "CNN de bairro" ("a neighborhood CNN"). Its news reports were heavily criticized, bordering on absurd, and concerns that the channel would lose its autonomy were on the rise. An anniversary book was released on 10 August 2005, written by station journalist Emanuel Carreiro. A special ceremony was scheduled for 12 November. Its heads of news quit RTP Açores in November 2007 due to divergences with director Pedro Bicudo, the reasons were largely political.


The 2010s

A fire destroyed its long-vacated old facilities in Ponta Delgada on February 11, 2011. A 2011 survey said that while SIC and TVI were the most viewed channels of the Azores, locals still preferred RTP1 and RTP Açores, especially for the news. On June 4, 2012, due to budget constraints, RTP Açores reduced its schedule to six hours a day (17:30 to 23:30). This led to a massive deconstruction of the schedule it had before. The cut in airtime to just seven hours was strongly criticized by locals, who, per a sample of 800 Azoreans per a telephone survey conducted by Norma Açores, gave high approval to the channel and its programming. The channel launched nationwide on cable and satellite providers on 7 May 2015 on MEO, NOS and Vodafone, and on the remaining providers the following day during the Feast of the Lord Holy Christ of the Miracles. The plans stated that RTP Açores was going to launch on these providers until August 2015, coinciding with the channel's fortieth anniversary. On 30 August 2016, RTP Açores invested 2,5 million euros in its first virtual studio, at a former school located in Praia da Vitória,
Terceira Terceira () is a volcanic island in the Azores archipelago, about a third of the way across the North Atlantic Ocean at a similar latitude to Portugal's capital Lisbon, with the island group forming an insular part of Portugal. It is one of the ...
.


Programs

Before the 2012 cuts, RTP Açores had a varied schedule, consisting of a mix of original local programs, programs produced for the mainland's RTP channels and a handful of imports first seen on the mainland networks. The main program is ''Telejornal Açores'', which also includes a standalone weather bulletin. ''Jornal da Tarde'' was relayed live from RTP1 in the past. Other programs included ''Bom Dia Açores'' (which ended in the 2012 reforms), ''Açores & Negócios'', ''Atlântida Açores'' (a Madeira version also exists; both are also aired on RTP Internacional), ''Lançamento'' (sports), ''Acores.RTP.pt'' (connecting the diaspora through the internet), ''Troféu'' (sports news), ''Sabores das Ilhas'' (cooking), ''Açores VIP'' (produced by Amuleto), ''Máquinas'' (produced by Promoverde) and ''Teledesporto'' (weekly sports news program). The channel had a children's slot airing imported series previously broadcast on RTP2. In March 2012, the channel aired ''Baby Looney Tunes'', ''Blinky Bill'', ''Contraptus'', ''The Garfield Show'' and ''Shaun the Sheep''.


References

;Notes ;Sources *


External links


RTP/RDP Açores - Official website

RTP Açores Live Stream on RTP Play
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rtp Acores Mass media in the Azores Publicly funded broadcasters Mass media in Portugal Television channels and stations established in 1975 Television stations in Portugal Portuguese-language television stations 1975 establishments in Portugal Rádio e Televisão de Portugal Mass media in Ponta Delgada