Argentine television network owned by Grupo Televisión Litoral
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Telefe (acronym forTelevisión Federal) is atelevision station located inBuenos Aires,Argentina. The station is owned and operated by Grupo Televisión Litoral through Televisión Federal S.A. Telefe is also one of Argentina's six nationaltelevision networks. Its studios are located inMartínez, Buenos Aires, adjacent to the corporate headquarters;[3] its transmitter is located at theAlas Building.[4]
In areas of Argentina where a Telefe station is not receivable over-the-air, it is available on satellite and select cable systems. Telefe also has regional stations across the country and an international network (Telefe Internacional) which is available in theAmericas,Europe,Asia, andOceania.[5]
The history of Telefe stretches back to 1957, when a group of alumni and lawyers from the Colegio El Salvador led by Fr. Héctor Grandetti, founded the companyDifusión Contemporánea S.A. (Contemporary Broadcasting S.A.). This company, known asDiCon for short, submitted a bid in the licensing of two new television channels inBuenos Aires, one on channel 11 and the other on channel 13. On April 28, 1958, DiCon won the license for channel 11.[6]
Original plans to build the new station in the Colegio El Salvador facilities fell through. Eventually, facilities were secured, and Canal 11 launched from its first headquarters inSan Cristóbal, Buenos Aires. The station finally launched on July 21, 1961, at 8:58 p.m. underTeleonce.[7]
Financial problems forced the station to seek a backer, which would turn out to beABC from theUnited States. ABC and DiCon formed Telerama S.R.L., a group that allowed DiCon to upgrade and expand its studio facilities.[8]
During its first decade, Teleonce aired shows likeMúsica en el Aire,Cosa Juzgada,Tato Siempre en Domingo,El Reporter Esso,Radiolandia en TV,Operación Ja Ja andNo Toca Botón.[9]
Through the 1960s, the family-oriented programming of the channel could not compete successfully againstCanal 9 and did not have great financial backing likeCanal 13. On October 17, 1970, businessman Héctor Ricardo García took over the station and changed the profile of the station, for an audience betting on news and more popular programming, adopting the slogan "El canal de las noticias" ("The News Channel"). Under García, Teleonce would climb to the top of the Argentine television ratings.[9][10]
After the licenses expired on October 8, 1973, changes began as the government took control of the news departments of channels 9, 11 and 13. Jorge Conti was named administrator and took over hosting duties for the newscast and other programs.[11] This was followed on September 26, 1974, with the expropriation of the three networks making Conti the administrator again.[12][13] This continued under the military dictatorship of theNational Reorganization Process, with theArgentine Air Force co-administering the channel with Conti, who remained lead newsreader, and the channel was renamed asCanal Once.[14][15]
In 1979, with the arrival of colour television looming and facilities upgrades needed to allow colour recording and broadcasting, the state bought the Canal Once plant from García, who had continued to own it, thus becoming a 100 percent nationally owned network.
The 1980s started with the introduction of colour telecasts on May 6, 1981, but the decade would become turbulent in the legal system. Twice under the dictatorship, a request for bids was issued. On August 19, 1982, the first one received no offers; the second, on October 25, 1983, would result in Canal Once being handed back to García. WhenRaúl Alfonsín became President of Argentina, among his first acts in office, was to nullify the transfer of Canal Once to García, leaving it in the hands of the state for another six years.
As the 1980s began to close, financial problems and hyperinflation brought Canal Once to its breaking point. The energy crisis that helped bring down Alfonsín's presidency had forced massive cuts in broadcast hours in Buenos Aires; with the ability to broadcast only four, later eight, and ultimately ten, hours a day, and amidst the already rough economic backdrop, Canal Once teetered on the brink of bankruptcy. The closure of the station was being batted around at this time. However, salvation came whenCarlos Menem announced that he would seek bids to privatize two of the state's three remaining Buenos Aires stations, Canal Once and Canal 13.[16] One of the groups participating in this bidding process was Televisión Federal S.A., a group whose stakeholders were headlined byEditorial Atlántida as a group of privately owned television stations from across the country.[17]
Telefe's arrival into the 1990s was signalled with the debut of its iconic RGB circles logo with the station name in white in them.
In December 1989, Arte Radiotelevisivo Argentino S.A. (Artear), a subsidiary ofGrupo Clarín, won the bidding for Canal Once and Canal 13. Artear chose the latter, and Televisión Federal took control of Canal Once as principal owners effective January 15, 1990. After 16 years of state management, the station was back in the hands of the private sector, and after a decade of branding as Canal Once, the new branding ofTelefe, an acronym of the new ownership's name, debuted on March 5 the same year. During the first weeks of the relaunched channel, theTelefe brand mirrored the blue and white of theFlag of Argentina (blue name on a white screen). That logo was later replaced by the three-circles logo used till the present.[18]
In 1999,Telefónica acquired ownership of Telefe and its eight owned-and-operated stations; that same year, Telefe launched an international signal aimed at viewers outside of Argentina. It also retained Telefe overAzul Televisión when it bought the latter in 2002. The Federal Broadcasting Committee (COMFER in Spanish) later forced Telefónica to sell off its involvement in Azul Televisión.[19][20]
With Gustavo Yankelevich (and after 1999, Claudio Villaruel) directing the channel's output, and with the introduction of satellite broadcasts nationwide, Telefe took to an unprecedented 20-year streak atop the Argentina ratings. It logged ratings wins in every year between 1990 and 2009, acquiring the rights toThe Simpsons, Formula 1 racing and the franchise forBig Brother.
In 2010 and 2011, under the direction of Marisa Badía, Telefe lost its number one position in the ratings — which had not happened since just after the privatization of the station — to then-perennial runner-upEl Trece. In 2012, however, another change in management, this time to Gustavo Yankelevich's son Tomás, and shows likeGraduados,Dulce amor andPekín Express helped Telefe return to the top of the rating list.
On November 3, 2016, it was reported thatViacom had won a bid to acquire Telefe.[21] It also made Telefe a sister toChannel 5 in the United Kingdom.
In December 2019, Viacom re-merged withCBS Corporation, formingViacomCBS (later known as Paramount Global) and making Telefe a sister toCBS in the United States,Channel 5 in the United Kingdom, andNetwork 10 in Australia.[22]
Between 2022 and 2024, Paramount sold several of Telefe's owned and operated regional affiliate channels.[23][24][25] In June 2025, it was reported in Argentina that Paramount had intentions to sell the network by the end of that year. Rumored candidates included Alpha Media, Marcos Galperín, Grupo Werthein and former Telefe artistic director Gustavo Yankelevich.[23] Paramount Global remained owners of Telefe in August 2025, when it merged withSkydance Media to createParamount Skydance Corporation.[26][27]
All of the owned-and-operated stations (exceptLRK458 TV) joined Telefe in April 1998, after Editorial Atlántida acquired a majority stake of the former Televisoras Provinciales.[40] LRK458 TV (later known asTelefe Tucumán and now known asElocho TV) was the last to join Telefe in March 2000.[41]