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France 2

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
French public television channel
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Television channel
France 2
Logo used since 2018
CountryFrance
Broadcast areaEurope,Middle East,Africa,Americas andAsia-Pacific
Programming
Picture format
Ownership
OwnerFrance Télévisions
Sister channelsFrance 3
France 4
France 5
France Info
History
Launched10 September 1959; 65 years ago (1959-09-10)
Former namesDeuxième chaîne de la RTF (1959–1964)
Deuxième chaîne (couleur) de l'ORTF (1964–1975)
Antenne 2 (1975–1992)
Links
Websitewww.france.tv/france-2
Availability
Terrestrial
TNTChannel 2 (HD)
TNT in Overseas FranceChannel 2 or 3 or 4
DStv (Sub-Saharan Africa)Channel 728

France 2 (French:[fʁɑ̃sdø]) is a French public national television channel. It is part of thestate-ownedFrance Télévisions group, along withFrance 3,France 4,France 5 andFrance Info. France Télévisions also participates inArte andEuronews.

Historically, it was created under the name RTF Télévision 2 in 1959, then became the Second Channel of the ORTF in 1964. The national public second channel was renamed Antenne 2 in 1975 and kept this name until September 1992.

France 2 primarily broadcasts television dramas, films, sports events, game shows, talks shows and news programs, aiming to entertain, educate, and inform. It is available via DTT, satellite, cable, IPTV, and the Web. It is also accessible in some neighboring countries, and parts of its programming are rebroadcast byTV5 Monde. Its identification color within the public television group is red, which is reflected in all its on-air branding.

His headquarters, like the other generalist channels of the France Télévisions group, is located in the 15th arrondissement ofParis, along theSeine.

History

[edit]

Test broadcasts began on 10 September 1959. They were transmitted from the Eiffel Tower on channel 12 to broadcast experimental programmes. The channel was scheduled to start on 2 January 1960 on VHF channels 10 and 12.[1] Originally under the ownership of theRTF. However, broadcasts on neighbouring channels led to constant errors, with reception being ruined in one of the two assigned frequencies.[2] This prompted RTF to reserve the UHF band for the service. The channel went on the air for the first time on 18 April 1964 asRTF Télévision 2. Within a year,ORTF rebranded that channel asLa deuxième chaîne (The Second Channel). Originally, the network was broadcast on 625-line transmitters only in preparation for the discontinuation of819-line black & white transmissions and the introduction of colour. The switch to colour occurred at 14:15CET on 1 October 1967, using theSECAM system.La deuxième chaîne became the first colour television channel in France.TF1 would not commence colour broadcasting on 625-lines until 1 September 1975. Such technology later allowed the network to air programming inNICAM stereo (compatible with SECAM).

The present channel is the direct successor of Antenne 2, established under a 1974 law that mandated the breakup of ORTF into seven distinct organisations. Three television "programme corporations" were established on 6 January 1975 –TF1, Antenne 2 and FR3, nowFrance 3 – alongsideRadio France, the Société française de production, the public broadcasting agencyTélédiffusion de France and theInstitut national de l'audiovisuel (INA). Antenne 2 and the other corporations were constituted as limited companies with the state controlling 100% of their capital. Although the three channels were set up as competitors vying for advertisers, they retained a collective monopoly over television broadcasting in France that was not repealed until 1981. Privately owned channels such asCanal+ andLa Cinq (now superseded byFrance 5) soon became major competitors to the state-owned channels after the state monopoly was lifted.[3] The breakup of ORTF had been intended to stimulate competition between the public channels but failed in this aim; both TF1 and Antenne 2 came to rely on a diet of popular entertainment shows alongside cheap American imports, seeking to maximise ratings and attract advertisers.[4]

TF1 was privatised in 1987, radically affecting the balance of the French television market. The remaining state-owned channels came under severe pressure from their private competitors and lost 30% of their market share between 1987 and 1989.[5] In an effort to save them, a single director-general was appointed to manage both Antenne 2 and FR3 and the two channels merged to form theFrance Télévisions group. They were renamed on 7 September 1992 as France 2 and France 3 respectively.[6]

In 1995, the combined audience share of the two state-owned channels was 41%, with France 2 in particular being heavily dependent on advertising and sponsorship revenues, which comprised 43.8% of its budget by 1996. The focus on ratings led to strong rivalry with TF1, for instance prompting the two channels to broadcast popular shows and news programmes in the same timeslots. TF1 and France 2 compete for the same demographics; dramas (including American imports), game shows and light entertainments form the dominant mix on both channels.[7]

Since 3:20 CET on 7 April 2008, all France 2 programming has been broadcast in 16:9 widescreen format[8] over the Frenchanalogue anddigital terrestrial television. An HD simulcast feed of France 2 has been broadcasting on satellite providerCanalSat since 1 July 2008 and on digital terrestrial television since 30 October 2008.[9]

In January 2024, the channel began broadcasting in 4K UHD.[10]

Logos

[edit]
  • The logo of ORTF 2 from 1972 until 1975
    The logo of ORTF 2 from 1972 until 1975
  • Logo of Antenne 2 (1977-1986; logo remained in use for startup/closedown montage until 1990)
    Logo of Antenne 2 (1977-1986; logo remained in use for startup/closedown montage until 1990)
  • Logo of France 2 from 7 September 1992 till 31 August 2003
    Logo of France 2 from 7 September 1992 till 31 August 2003
  • Logo of France 2 from 1 September 2003 till 7 April 2008
    Logo of France 2 from 1 September 2003 till 7 April 2008
  • Logo of France 2 from 7 April 2008 till 29 January 2018
    Logo of France 2 from 7 April 2008 till 29 January 2018
  • Above, but with the text "HD" on the right. Reused by NBT until 2024, but recolored to purple.
    Above, but with the text "HD" on the right. Reused byNBT until 2024, but recolored to purple.
  • Logo of France 2 from 29 January 2018
    Logo of France 2 from 29 January 2018
  • On-screen logo of France 2 from 29 January 2018
    On-screen logo of France 2 from 29 January 2018

Leaders of France 2

[edit]
General President-Director
  • Since 7 September 1992, the general President-Director of France 2 has governed over both France 2 andFrance Télévision.
General Directors
  • Georges Vanderchmitt (September 1992 – January 1994)
  • Raphaël Hadas-Lebel (January 1994 – June 1996)
  • Michel Pappalardo (June 1996 – June 1999)
  • Michèle Cotta (June 1999 – June 2002)
  • Christopher Baldelli (June 2002 – September 2005)
  • Philippe Baudillon (September 2005 – December 2007)
  • François Guilbeau (December 2007 – August 2010)
  • Claude-Yves Robin (August 2010 – 2 October 2011)
  • Bertrand Mosca (3 October 2011 – 2 April 2012)
  • Jean Réveillon (since 2 April 2012)[11]
Program Directors
  • Jean-Pierre Cottet (14 June 1996 – 20 July 1998)
  • Patrice Duhamel (20 July 1998 – ?)
  • François Tron (July 2001 – 1 October 2004)
  • Yves Bigot (1 October 2004 – 1 September 2005)
  • Jean-Baptiste Jouy (1 September 2005 – 20 January 2007)
  • Éric Stemmelen (20 January 2007 – 1 July 2009)
  • Alain Vautier (1 July 2009 – 14 September 2011)
  • Perrine Fontaine (2008 – 28 September 2012)[12]
  • Philippe Vilamitjana (2 April 2012 – 21 October 2013)
  • Thierry Thuillier (since 21 October 2013)[13]
Information Directors
  • Jean-Luc Mano (December 1993 – June 1996)
  • Pierre-Henri Arnstam (June 1996 – September 2000)
  • Gérard Leclerc (September 2000 – July 2001)
  • Olivier Mazerolle (July 2001 – March 2004)
  • Arlette Chabot (March 2004 – 19 August 2010)
  • Thierry Thuillier (20 August 2010 – 21 October 2013)[14]
  • Yannick Letranchant (since 21 October 2013)
Writing Directors
  • Éric Monier (2010–2015)
  • Michel Dumoret (since March 2021)
Sports Directors

Programming

[edit]
Main article:List of programs broadcast by France 2

Italian coverage

[edit]

From 1975,Antenne 2 was available in Italy (regions ofTuscany, Lazio,Lower Veneto and parts ofLombardy andLiguria) usingSECAM and since 1983 usingPAL until 2003 when the frequencies were sold to various television networks such asCanale Italia andGruppo Editoriale L'Espresso.

On 11 December 2006, France 2 was again made available across Italy onDigital terrestrial television until 7 June 2007, when it was replaced by all-news French TV networkFrance 24.

France 2 is now only available inAosta Valley due to Italian self-government laws, and in the border zones because of natural spillover.

Climate issues

[edit]

Information about climate change in weather forecasts

[edit]

In February 2023, 2 state TV channels, France 2 andFrance 3 have begun to enter information regardingclimate change in their weather forecasts. This will make the forecasts 1.5–2 minutes longer. The climate related information will rely on experts. The channels will also provide information about climate change and the ways to counter that to their workers. In France, except in case of breaking news they will ask reporters to take the train instead of a plane.[15]

Controversy

[edit]

Lebanese Civil War kidnapping of Antenne 2 news team

[edit]

In March 1986, an Antenne 2 news team waskidnapped inBeirut while reporting on theLebanese Civil War. Philippe Rochot, Georges Hansen, Aurel Cornéa and Jean-Louis Normandin were four of many Western hostages held by terrorists during the conflict. During the opening sequences of Antenne 2 news bulletins, the headlines would be followed by a reminder of the French hostages held in Lebanon, including others such as Michel Seurat and Jean-Paul Kaufman, with names, photos and the length of their captivity. Within a year, most of the news team had been released and returned to France, but the reminders continued until all the hostages had been freed.

Muhammad al-Durrah shooting

[edit]

On 30 September 2000, France 2 aired the famous footage of the shooting ofMuhammad al-Durrah in theGaza Strip. The scene was filmed by a Palestinian journalist,Talal Abu Rahma, who worked for the station.[16] The voiceover, blaming the killing on fire from theIsraeli Defence Forces, was provided by the channel's reporterCharles Enderlin. Subsequently, that account was put in doubt, with others suggesting that the fatal shots could not have come from the IDF position.[17] France 2 later launchedlibel actions against commentators who alleged that the incident was staged. France 2 won a case against one of those critics,Philippe Karsenty who was eventually and definitely fined €7,000 by theCourt of Appeal of Paris in 2013.[18] Karsenty had been convicted in 2006, acquitted on appeal in 2008,[19] a decision that was overturned in 2012 by theCour de cassation.

Gaza War 2009

[edit]

In January 2009, during theGaza War, France 2 was accused of airing misleading footage that was biased againstIsrael.[20] It aired portion of a video that purported to show destruction caused by the Israel Air Force, but was shown to be a different incident from 2005 in which the IDF denied having any involvement.[21][22] After being alerted to the error bybloggers,[23] France 2 acknowledged the error and formally apologized in the magazineLe Figaro, saying that it was an "internal malfunction" caused by their staff having "worked too fast."[20][24][25]

2013 report on weapons smuggling from Serbia to France

[edit]

France 2 has been accused of knowingly producing and airing a news item whose key part it fabricated and staged.

On 7 March 2013, France 2 aired an eight-minute investigative report purporting to expose a weapons smuggling channel from Serbia to France. The report authors, journalists Franck Genauzeau and Régis Mathé, traveled to Serbia in February 2013 where they filmed a story claiming that Serbia is a hub for international weapons smuggling. Among its footage, the report showed two masked men – identified as Serbian weapons smugglers – who talked about their supposed illegal activity while showing off some of the weaponry: in particular two hand guns and oneAK-47 Kalashnikov. They're also shown firing off rounds in the woods.[26]

After the report aired, theSerbian police's criminal department (UKP) conducted a month-long investigation, revealing its findings in May 2013 that parts of the French news story were staged with full knowledge of the two France 2 journalists.[27]

According to the police report, Genauzeau and Mathé arrived in Belgrade where they hired a local media fixer named Aleksandar M. who was employed at a Serbian news agency, giving him the task of finding weapons smugglers willing to go before a camera. Aleksandar M. apparently contacted his cousin Nenad Mirković and told him that the French were willing to pay €800 for weapons smugglers. At this point Mirković decided that he himself will appear on camera and also contacted his friend Žarko Blagojević to do the same. In order to make their act more credible, they then obtained two handguns –Zastava 9mm and 7.56mm – from Blagojević's father-in-law and father respectively. They also decided to get an automatic weapon by buying it from a certain Milorad Novaković, a resident ofUmka. Apparently, the two first offered him €200, but Novaković wanted €350, at which point they went back to two French journalists asking for more money and getting it.

Coached by Genauzeau and Mathé, the footage featuring masked Blagojević and Mirković was shot at a house owned by Blagojević's friend in Umka. Afterwards, they went into the nearby woods in Duboko near Umka where they fired off a few rounds for the cameras. They then returned the two handguns to Blagojević's father and father in law before selling the Kalashnikov for €100. According to the Serbian police report, Aleksandar M. was paid €300 by the French journalists while Mirković and Blagojević split the €800 between themselves.

Serbian foreign ministerIvan Mrkić reacted to the police report by "seeking explanations from France as the ministry looks to make sure the untruths from the report are clarified".[28]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Les essais de la deuxième chaîne de télévision ont commencé" [Trials of the second TV channel have begun].Le Monde (in French). 19 September 1959. Retrieved11 June 2024.
  2. ^HebdomadaireRadio-Cinéma-Télévision (ancestor ofTélérama), 1957 to 1959
  3. ^Rigourd, Serge. "France", inWestern Broadcasting at the Dawn of the 21st Century, pp. 255, 270. Eds. Haenens, Leen; Saeys, Frieda. Walter de Gruyter, 2001.ISBN 3-11-017386-7
  4. ^Looseley, David.Popular Music in Contemporary France: Authenticity, Politics, Debate, p. 122. Berg Publishers, 2003.ISBN 1-85973-636-X
  5. ^Rollet, Brigitte. "Television in France", inTelevision in Europe, pp. 39–40. Eds. Coleman, James A.; Rollet, Brigitte. Intellect Books, 1997.ISBN 1-871516-92-7
  6. ^Hart, Jeffrey A.Technology, Television, and Competition: The Politics of Digital TV, p. 46. Cambridge University Press, 2004.ISBN 0-521-82624-1
  7. ^Scriven, Michael; Lecomte, Monia.Television Broadcasting in Contemporary France and Britain, p. 46, 51. Berghahn Books, 1999.ISBN 1-57181-754-9
  8. ^"France 2 goes 16:9 widescreen".Broadband TV News. 4 March 2008.
  9. ^"France 2 HD launches on CanalSat".Broadband TV News. 19 June 2008.
  10. ^"France 2 is now broadcasting in 4K UHD".informitv. 24 January 2024. Retrieved25 August 2024.
  11. ^« Jean Réveillon, directeur de France 2 »,Le Figaro, 2 avril 2012.
  12. ^« La directrice des programmes de France 2 écartée »,Le Figaro, 28 septembre 2012.
  13. ^"Officiel: Thierry Thuillier, directeur de l'info, devient le nouveau patron de France 2".jeanmarcmorandini.com (in French). Retrieved24 October 2013.
  14. ^Direction commune des rédactions de France 2 et France 3 national.
  15. ^Hird, Alison (14 March 2023)."French TV transforms weather forecasts to include climate change context". RFI. Retrieved17 March 2023.
  16. ^"The Rory Peck Trust: Awards 2001". Archived fromthe original on 17 March 2008.
  17. ^Fallows, James (1 June 2003)."Who Shot Mohammed al-Dura?".The Atlantic.
  18. ^"Media analyst convicted over France-2 Palestinian boy footage", Associated Press, 26 June 2013.
  19. ^French court cancels libel in Intifada video case Reuters.
  20. ^ab"Critics Say French TV Network Broadcast Fabricated Footage in Gaza, Again".Fox News. 12 January 2009.
  21. ^Clidi, Charlotte (7 January 2009)."France 2 victime d'une intox palestinienne?". Nouvel Obs. Archived fromthe original on 30 January 2009.
  22. ^"France 2 Uses Fake Gaza Video".Israel National News. 7 January 2009.
  23. ^O'Neill, Brendan (12 January 2009)."Gaza propaganda war escalates on the internet".The First Post. Archived fromthe original on 22 January 2009.
  24. ^"Gaza – France 2 : "une erreur bête" (Arlette Chabot)". Archived fromthe original on 25 January 2009. Retrieved28 January 2009.
  25. ^"French network apologizes for Gaza report". 7 January 2009.
  26. ^Sur la piste des trafiquants de kalachnikovs, de la Serbie à la France;France 2, 8 March 2013
  27. ^Nameštena reportaža: Francuska nacionalna televizija izmislila da je Srbija centar šverca oružja;Blic, 26 May 2013
  28. ^French national TV fabricates story about weapons smuggling;B92, 27 May 2013

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