Misplaced Pages

Play4 (TV channel)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Belgian-Flemish commercial television channel See also: VT4 (disambiguation) Television channel
Play4
CountryBelgium
Programming
Language(s)Dutch
Picture format1080i HDTV
Ownership
OwnerPlay Media
Sister channelsPlay5, Play6, Play7, Play Crime
History
Launched1 February 1995; 29 years ago (1995-02-01)
Former namesVIER (2012–2021)
VT4 (1995–2012)
Links
Websitegoplay.be
Availability
Streaming media
Yelo TVWatch Live (HD)
TV OveralWatch Live (HD)

Play4 is a Belgian-Flemish commercial television channel. It is part of Play Media and production company Woestijnvis.

As of 2010, the channel has a market share of more than 7%.

The channel was formerly known as VIER from 17 September 2012 to 27 January 2021. On 28 January 2021, the channel was rebranded to Play4.

Its owner also operates sister stations Play5, Play6 and Play7. Broadcast entertainment, series, cartoons, movies, sports programmings.

History

2012–2017 logo

The channel began broadcasting on 1 February 1995 under the name VT4. The channel initially had no Belgian broadcasting license and was transmitted via London (actually from NTL's transmission station at Brookmans Park in Hertfordshire). There was initially mass refusal from the Flemish authorities, considering that VTM gained an 18-year monopoly for advertising. In reaction, Minister of Culture Hugo Weckx initially banned the broadcast of VT4 on Belgian cable in January 1995, under the grounds that, although the channel was licensed in Europe, it should be under the protection of the Flemish legislation. In the same month, the European Commission filed suit against the Belgian government, by dishonoring the cross-border directive imposed by the Directive. The issue over whether or not cable operators should add VT4 led to numerous other lawsuits, among them one by Turner regarding the carriage of Cartoon Network/TNT and CNN.

VT4, however, was allowed to broadcast after the European Commission responded to VT4's complaint in June 1995. That month, the European Commission warned Belgium that it had to dismantle VTM's commercial monopoly in two months, or face legal action.

The channel launched one day after Ka2. Both channels competed against each other since the beginning and were initially catered to "unserved audiences". But like Ka2, the initial format failed as the Flemish market was not ready for non-mainstream networks, causing the channels to switch to primarily American imports on the cheap. In the summer of 1995, coinciding with the change, the channel hired John McCready (formerly of Television New Zealand) who achieved success in six months. Successes included The Jerry Springer Show (which in the summer of 1998 attracted VT4's largest audience share to date at the time) and erotic programming. During a three-day period comprising 9 to 11 May 1997, the channel aired the world's longest commercial, for Spaas candles, for a period of seven hours and twenty-two minutes, in the channel's overnight downtime period.

Dirk Verhofstadt left VT4 in June 2001.

Since 2004, VT4 broadcasts legally from Zaventem in Belgium. The new facilities enabled playout facilities for more than one channel, which was at the pipeline for SBS. It is available on the cable network in Brussels as well as in Flanders. It's also available throughout Belgium on the IPTV network of Belgacom, who offers triple play everywhere in Belgium where VDSL is available. It carried the 2006 FIFA World Cup, which was complemented by sister channel VIJFtv's female-centric output for the period.

The channel broadcast a one-off dubbed episode of The Simpsons (the series was regularly broadcast in English with Dutch subtitles), Sex, Pies and Idiot Scrapes, the first episode of the twentieth season, under the title De Vlaamse Simpsons (The Flemish Simpsons) as part of the 20th anniversary of the series, on 24 October 2009. For the dub, the same voice actors from the movie reprised their roles.

On 17 September 2012, VT4 was rebranded as Vier.

On 7 June 2019, it was announced that the channel would be eventually rebranded as "Four" as part of the rebranding of the three channels under the "Play" name. The following year, it was decided that the channel would instead rebrand as Play4 on 28 January 2021.

HD broadcast

VT4 HD was launched as a temporary high-definition channel on June 7, 2008, to coincide with the kick-off of UEFA Euro 2008. It was merely a simulcast of VT4's schedule, but the Euro 2008 matches and all related talk shows were broadcast in HD. VT4 HD was available exclusively to Telenet Digital TV subscribers and was shut down on June 29, 2008.

On September 1, 2012, VT4 HD, along with sister channel VijfTV HD, launched as a HD simulcast. The channel was made available to Belgacom TV subscribers. On September 17, the day of the relaunch, both VIER HD and VIJF HD were made available for Telenet Digital TV subscribers.

Programming

(simulcast of channels of USA (ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, The CW, among others) and others).

Video on demand

C-More was the VOD service of SBS Belgium. The name and logo are the result of the C More Entertainment group which delivers pay-TV, C More Entertainment was a part of the SBS Broadcasting Group which was bought by the ProSiebenSat.1 Media group which sold it to TV4 Gruppen. After the rename of the channel the service has been renamed to MEER (MORE). The service was available through Telenet Digital TV & Belgacom TV and was available on its own website MEER.be. MEER closed on 31 December 2014.

On 28 January 2021, SBS Belgium relaunched a VOD platform, GoPlay.

References

  1. "Belgium May Back VT4", Variety, 20 February 1995
  2. "VT4's Monopoly Buster Spurs Suits", Variety, 6 February 1995
  3. "Turner Loses Battle to Stay in Belgium", Screen Digest, January 1995
  4. "Broadcasters Battle for Viewers in Belgian Region", Reuters, 1 February 1995
  5. "Euro Comish Targets Belgian TV Monopoly", Variety, January 1995
  6. Peleman, Anja (2009). "What Is Going On Behind the 'Screens' of the Commercial Broadcasting System?" (PDF). Ghent University. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. 'VT4 is in zes maanden opgestart, VT5 kan nog sneller'
  8. Even geduld
  9. Springer breekt VT4-record
  10. SPAAS
  11. Dirk Verhofstadt houdt het bij VT4 voor bekeken
  12. 'Wij zijn geen kleine muis, maar een kleine tijger'
  13. VT4 plant nieuwe zenders
  14. 'Vrouwenzender' start met voetbal
  15. 'The Simpsons' spreken Vlaams om 20-jarig bestaan te vieren | TVvisie
  16. De Vlaamse Simpsons | Humo
  17. "'VT4' wordt 'VIER' op 17 september". Het Nieuwsblad. 14 June 2012. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  18. Euro 2008 gratis in HD, ZDNet.be, 30 May 2008.
  19. Telenet op Facebook: VIER en VIJF in HD genieten

External links

Belgium Television in Belgium
French language
Dutch language
German language
Defunct
French
Dutch
Categories: