![]() | |
Country | France |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Worldwide |
Network | TF1,France Télévisions,RTBF,SRG SSR |
Headquarters | Paris, France |
Programming | |
Language(s) | French |
Picture format | 1080i16:9HDTV (SECAM/PAL/NTSC) (downscaled to576i for theSDTV feed) |
Ownership | |
Owner | France Télévisions: 46.42% France Médias Monde: 11.97% Radio télévision suisse (RTS): 10.53% Radio-télévision belge de la Communauté française (RTBF): 10.53% CBC/Radio-Canada (SRC): 6.32% TVMonaco: 5.26% Télé-Québec: 4.21% ARTE France: 3.12% Institut national de l'audiovisuel (INA): 1.65% |
Parent | TV5Monde, S.A. |
Sister channels | TV5 Monde Style,TiVi5 Monde, TV5Monde Info,TV5 Québec Canada,Unis |
History | |
Launched | 2 January 1984; 41 years ago (1984-01-02) |
Former names | TV5(1984–1989, 1993–2006) TV5 Europe(1989–1993) |
Links | |
Website | www |
Availability | |
Terrestrial | |
Analogue television | inKinshasa,Pointe-Noire,Mauritania,Cape Verde,Mauritius andSeychelles |
Digital terrestrial television (Greece) | ERT B only inAthens andThessaloniki |
Virgin Media (UK) | Channel 825 (TV5Monde Europe) |
DStv (Sub-Saharan Africa) | Channel 435 (TV5Monde Afrique) |
StarTimes | Channel 639 (TV5Monde Afrique) |
Zuku TV (Kenya) | Channel 814 (TV5Monde Afrique) (Zuku Fiber only) |
Streaming media | |
Ziggo GO(Netherlands) | ZiggoGO.tv |
Sling TV | Internet Protocol television |
TV5Monde (French pronunciation:[tevesɛ̃kmɔ̃d]), formerly known asTV5, is a Frenchpublic television network, broadcasting several channels ofFrench-language programming. It is an approved participant member of theEuropean Broadcasting Union.[1]
The network is available across Europe onsatellite viaAstra 19.2°E andEutelsatHot Bird (13°E) (bothfree-to-air), online and viaTVPlayer.
TV5 started on 2 January 1984 and was under the management ofSerge Adda until his death in November 2004. The next director from 6 April 2005 wasJean-Jacques Aillagon, a formerFrench Minister for Culture and Communication. The director-general is now Marie-Christine Saragosse.
In January 2006, TV5 underwent a major overhaul, including rebranding as "TV5Monde" to stress its focus as a global network ("Monde" is French for "World"). Also, the changes included a new schedule and a new program line-up. Since 1993, "TV5 Monde" is part of the channel's corporate name. Its Canadian operations are branded "TV5 Québec Canada", but the shorter version TV5 is also used.
TV5 was formed on 2 January 1984, under the guidance ofClaude Cheysson, theFrench Minister for Foreign Affairs, and TV5 PresidentSerge Adda, by five public television channels:TF1,Antenne 2 andFR3 fromFrance, theSwissTélévision Suisse Romande and theBelgianRTBF. The "5" from the name TV5 comes from the five public broadcasters. On 18 December 1985, TV5 was amongst the first four channels carried by cable television in France, inaugurated inCergy-Pontoise.
Following its privatisation in 1987, TF1 retired from the TV5 consortium but continued to supply its programmes to the channel until 1995. On 1 September 1988,TV5 Québec Canada was created, followed by TV5 Afrique in 1991. The following year, TV5 transmitted using digital compression towards Latin America and the Caribbean. Its coverage was expanded in 1996 with the launch of its Asian-Pacific signal with TV5 Asie-Pacifique and the subscription channel TV5 États-Unis in the United States. Two years later, the Middle East feed was launched with TV5 Moyen-Orient in 1998.
In early 1999, TV5 split its European signal into two, with the launch of TV5 France Belgique Suisse, a signal specific toFrancophone Europe (France, Belgium, Switzerland,Monaco,Luxembourg). TV5 Europe continued to serve the wider continental audience.
A consortium formed by public channelsArte andLa Cinquième entered into the capital of the channel, which brought with it new sources of programming. A new schedule was constructed, centred on news programmes such as news flashes on the hour, two TV5 bulletins and rebroadcasts of its partners' main news programmes (20 Heures from France 2,Soir 3 from France 3,Le Journal from TSR/RTS and13 Heures from RTBF).
A meeting with ministers from TV5 inVevey, Switzerland, gave a mandate to the channel's council of co-operation to reform the structure of the channel in the view of creating a unique worldwide channel. The national governments in charge of the five participants gave an agreement to turn management of TV5 États-Unis and TV5 Amérique Latine over to TV5 Monde, the new name for the channel's head operations in Paris.
From theSeptember 11 attacks in 2001 to the2003 Iraq War, the media coverage put the spotlight on TV5's particular way of broadcasting news bulletins from its member public broadcasters. International conflicts arising from the decision to go to war by the United States and the United Kingdom in which France notably refused to participate had relaunched the debate over whether to create an international news channel from a French perspective, resulting in the 2006 launch ofFrance 24.
With the creation of France 24 placing TV5's own existence in doubt, its new CEO,Jean-Jacques Aillagon decided from 1 January 2006 to rename the channel toTV5Monde to underline its status better as the only internationalFrancophone channel available on-air (France 24 was then available only in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and the United States cities of New York and Washington, DC, in French). Aillagon stepped down from his post on 3 March 2006.
The name TV5Monde applies only to its eight different signals, broadcast from its Paris headquarters. InCanada, such as in French-speakingQuebec, TV5 Quebec Canada is managed fromMontreal, which keeps the original nameTV5, as it is operated by an independent company that is distinct from TV5Monde. As well as being part of the TV5 family, TV5 Quebec Canada has its own management and its schedule is made with the Canadian viewer in mind and to conform to Canadian broadcast regulations, which, sets domestic production quotas and limits foreign investors to a minority stake.
In 2007, a new programme schedule saw the reduction of programming fromFrance Télévisions (France 2, 3 and 5), for example, ti one daily news bulletin from France 2 by abandoning France 3's midday news programme. In 2008, TV5Monde became part of holding company France Monde.
In 2009, TV5Monde split its Asia-Pacific signal into two, one of them being TV5Monde Asie, a feed for territories located between GMT+8 (Hong Kong) and GMT+12 (New Zealand). TV5Monde's Pacific signal is an adaptation of its existing Asian signal that has been adopted to its time zones to serve its viewers better. It currently broadcasts in Oceania and, despite the signal's name, in Japan, South Korea and South East Asia.
On 25 February 2015, the new signal TV5Monde Brésil was launched broadcasting its programming withPortuguese subtitles.[2]
Monaco was announced to be joining the service with its public service broadcaster,TVMonaco (formerly called Monte-Carlo Riviera TV before its launch), from 1 September 2023.[3][4][5]
On the evening of 8 April 2015, TV5Monde was the victim of acyberattack by a hacker group known as "CyberCaliphate", which claimed to have ties to the terrorist organizationIslamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). The hackers breached the broadcaster's internal systems in what Director Yves Bigot described as an "unprecedented" attack, overriding TV5Monde'sbroadcast programming for over three hours, with service only partially restored in the early hours of the following morning.[6] Normal broadcasting services were still disrupted late into 9 April.[6] Various computerised internal administrative and support systems including e-mail were also still shut down or otherwise inaccessible because of the attack.[6][7] The hackers also hijacked TV5Monde'sFacebook andTwitter pages topost the personal information of relatives of French soldiers participating in actions against the organization, along with messages critical of PresidentFrançois Hollande arguing that theJanuary 2015 terrorist attacks were "gifts" for his "unforgivable mistake" of partaking in conflicts that "[serve] no purpose".[6][8]
As part of the official response to the attack, theFrench Minister of Culture and Communications,Fleur Pellerin, called for an emergency meeting of the heads of various major media outlets and groups. The meeting took place on 10 April at an undisclosed location.[7]French Prime MinisterManuel Valls called the attack "an unacceptable insult to freedom of information and expression".[7] A colleague in his cabinet, theInterior MinisterBernard Cazeneuve, attempted to allay public concern by stating that France "had already increased its anti-hacking measures to protect against cyber-attacks" since the aforementioned terrorist attacks on January earlier that year, which had left a total of 20 people dead.[7]
French investigators later discounted the theory that the attack was connected to ISIL but instead suspected theAPT28 orPawn Storm, a hacking group with alleged links to the Russian government.[9][10] Investigators concluded that the attack was a test of the same sorts of cyberweaponry that were used to switch off a power station in Ukraine.[11]
As a result,Airbus Defence and Space implemented the Keelback Net cybersensor.[12]
Most of its content is taken from mainstream networks inthe French-speaking world, notablyFrance Télévisions fromFrance,TVMonaco fromMonaco,RTBF fromBelgium,RTS fromSwitzerland and theRadio-Canada andTVA networks inCanada. In addition to international news, TV5Monde broadcastsLigue 1,Coupe de France final,FranceSix Nations matches, films and music magazines.
The number "5" in the name is the number of founding networks:Télévision Française 1 (TF1),Antenne 2 (France 2),FR 3 (France 3),TSR (RTS Un) andRTBF (La Une). The partnership making up the TV5Monde consortium areFrance Télévisions,Arte France,Institut national de l'audiovisuel,Canadian Broadcasting Corporation,TVMonaco,Télé-Québec,RTBF andRTS. The consortium owns 51% of the service, and the other 49% is owned byFrance Médias Monde, a holding company that manages France's international broadcasting services.[13]
Nine feeds are being transmitted:
(*)TV5MONDE États-Unis has certain programs subtitled in English, particularly some newscasts and most movies. It is unusual to watch a French movie without English language subtitles on TV5MONDE États-Unis.
(**)TV5 Québec Canada is produced inMontreal.
From 1984, for this television network, there are five different logos. The first logo of television network is used from 1984 to 1988, the second logo is used from 1988 to 1990, the third logo is used from 1990 to 1995, the fourth logo is used from 1995 to 2006, and the fifth and current logo is in use from 2006.
From 1991 to 2003, thedigital on-screen graphic was located on the upper right corner of the screen. From 2003 onwards, it has been moved to the upper left corner of the screen and dropped from upper right corner.
TV5MONDE FBSM and TV5MONDE Europe arefree-to-air and can be received by satellite. Additionally:
Neither TV5MONDE nor its supplementary services are free-to-air inNorth America.
TV5 Québec Canada is aFrench Canadian version of TV5MONDE that offers largely the same programming schedule, but programming from Radio-Canada, which is already available across Canada, is replaced with content from the provincial educational networksTélé-Québec andTFO. As with TV5MONDE, TV5 Québec Canada is also a co-operative effort but involving French Canadian networks and producers through l'Association des producteurs de films et de télévision du Québec. The Canadian license also includesUnis, a channel focused on francophone communities outside Quebec.
In the United States,TV5MONDE États-Unis is one of several foreign-language premium channels offered throughInternational Media Distribution. Broadcast is in standard definition only. The channel is offered nationwide onDish Network,AT&T U-verse andVerizon FiOS and offered in most major markets on traditional cable systems such asCharter Spectrum,Cox Communications,Xfinity andBright House Networks. TV5MONDE is offered on cable and satellite as an à la carte selection for $9.99 a month. On most systems, a subscription to another programming tier or a digital cable package may be required. Purportedly because of underfunding, TV5MONDE cannot yet offer accurate advance scheduling or on-time programming, but progress is being made in those fronts.
In addition, TV5MONDE États-Unis offers a French-language children's channel,TiVi5MONDE, which offers a selection of children's and young adult programming in French. The channel is currently available on Dish Network, as part of the TV5MONDE subscription. Daily blocks of TiVi5MONDE programming is also seen on the main TV5MONDE channel.[14]
TV5MONDE launchedTV5MONDE Cinema on Demand, avideo on demand service available to Xfinity subscribers in July 2013 that features a selection of francophone films.[15]
In Mexico and most countries ofCentral America and theCaribbean, TV5MONDE Amérique Latine & Caraïbes is availableSKY México, a satellite television platform, on Channel 277.
In Brazil is transmitted with subtitles in Portuguese on their schedule. Negotiations are currently being held to launch the first original channel productions in the country. TV5MONDE Brésil is available on SKY Brasil on channel 108, Claro TV on channels 204 and 704, Net on channel 141 as well as Vivo TV.
TV5MONDE Amérique Latine & Caraïbes is not free-to-air in South America. The channel is available on main pay-TV operators in most Hispanic countries, with programming subtitled in Spanish.
InFrench Guiana, a French overseas territory in northern South America, the channel is free and broadcast with programming entirely in French.
The channel is free to air from the AsiaSat 3S satellite, covering most of Asia and Australia.Triangle TV inAuckland,Nepal (Everest) andWellington rebroadcasts some news programmes. InNepal (Everest), TiVi5 Monde is broadcast byDish Home on Channel no D-864. InSingapore, theStarHub TV service added the channel on 7 April 1997[16] and broadcasts it on Channel 152 for its digital service customers. TV5Monde Asie is available in television providers inBangladesh.[17] In Australia, multilingual broadcasterSBS broadcasts network news bulletin64' Le Monde en français every day as part ofWorldWatch programming.
In India,Zee Network provides the channel for itsDish Network DTH services subscribers. Also, many others likeHathway cable TV and local cable TV operators offer TV5Monde free of cost. The channel is also available in Japan on theFuji Television platform (as TV5MONDE Pacifique though Japan is a part of the Asia) and onTelevision New Zealand in New Zealand.
InSouth Korea, ISP provider Qrix offers TV5 on its premium HD cable package.
TV5Monde is also available in three former French colonies and Now French Speaking Countries Popularity in Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos) with English and Vietnamese subtitles via PPCTV and Selected Pay TV Providers in Cambodia, VTVCab and Major Pay TV Providers in Vietnam and Laosat TV in Laos.
In most of the region, TV5MONDE Inde & PakistanZee Network provides the channel for itsDish Network DTH services subscribers. Also, many others likeHathway cable TV and local.
TV5Monde Afrique is widely available across the region.
In Mauritius,MBC 15 simulcasts TV5 Monde and MBC 17 simulcasts TiVi5 Monde.
In most of the region, TV5MONDE Maghreb-Orient is available onNilesat 101 andBadr 4 under the frequencies of 11900.00 V 27500 3/4 and 12073.00 H 27500 3/4, respectively. InLebanon, it is also available on Cablevision, a cable television platform serving the country, and via Tele Liban's French terrestrial channel, Tele Liban Le Neuf.
High-definition (HD) broadcasting of TV5MONDE FBSM started on 1 July 2015 via satellite in theCanalSat mux as an upscaled HD feed. In March 2017, the HD feed was changed from upscaled into native HD (1440x1080).
TV5MONDE Maghreb-Orient has been broadcast in HD since 10 March 2014 via Badr-4.
TV5MONDE Asie has been broadcast in HD in Taiwan since September 2014 and Singapore via StarHub TV since October 2015.
Unit 54777 also is thought by Western intelligence to work with other psy-ops and cyber units, such as the CyberCaliphate, a hacking outfit passing itself off as supporters of the Islamic State but really part of the same GRU unit that would penetrate the Democrats' networks in 2016 [...] In April 2015, the CyberCaliphate, again claiming to be Islamic State supporters, took France's TV5Monde off the air for 18 hours.