| |
---|---|
City | Cebu City |
Channels | |
Branding | TV5 Cebu |
Programming | |
Subchannels | See list |
Affiliations |
|
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
DYAN-TV (One Sports) Radyo5 101.9 True FM Cebu | |
History | |
Founded | April 1, 1992 |
Former channel number(s) | 11 (1963–1972) |
ABC Cebu (1992–2008) 5 Cebu (2018–2020) | |
Call sign meaning | DY Edward Tan (former owner, deceased) |
Technical information | |
Licensing authority | NTC |
Power | Analog: 50 kW (10 kW on-operational power output) Digital: 10 kW |
ERP | Analog: 232.8 kW |
Transmitter coordinates | 10°22′04.9″N 123°52′00.5″E / 10.368028°N 123.866806°E 10°17′41″N 123°51′10″E / 10.29472°N 123.85278°E |
Links | |
Website | www |
DYET-TV (channel 21) is a television station in Metro Cebu, Philippines, serving as the Visayas flagship of the TV5 network. It is owned and operated by the network's namesake corporate parent; TV5 also provides certain services to One Sports outlet DYAN-TV (channel 29) under an airtime lease agreement with owner Nation Broadcasting Corporation. The station maintains master control at the TV5 Complex, Capitol Road, Camp Marina, Brgy. Kalunasan, Cebu City, while DYET-TV's analog and digital transmitters are located atop of Mount Busay, Cebu City.
History
- September 11, 1963 – DYMT-TV Channel 11, the first broadcast in the whole Central Visayas was launched by Associated Broadcasting Corporation, becoming the second VHF television station established in Cebu City at the time until 1972 when President of the Philippines Ferdinand Marcos declared Martial Law and it was forced to shut-down.
- April 1, 1992 – the station was opened as the Associated Broadcasting Company (a month after the reopening of DWET-TV channel 5 in Metro Manila)[1] with the callsign of the provincial station, DYET-TV as well as its frequency from VHF Channel 11 to UHF Channel 21, which becoming the first ever UHF TV station in Cebu City, Philippines and started regular commercial telecast. Its studios were at the 12th floor of the Sundowner Centrepoint Hotel along Plaridel St. cor. Osmeña Blvd. Broadcasting with a 5,000 watts power capacity, the station covers Metro Cebu, Northeastern Cebu (including Compostela), Southeastern Cebu up to Carcar, Northern & Central Bohol and part of Western Leyte. Elmer Rivera Karaan was the experienced broadcast journalist of ABC 21 Cebu during the hourly news update.
- December 9, 1994 – ABC TV stations acquired a new franchise to operate on December 9, 1994, under Republic Act 7831 signed by President Fidel V. Ramos. In the same year, the station went on nationwide satellite broadcasting. In a surge of phenomenal growth, ABC Cebu earned its reputation as "The Fastest Growing Network" under new network executive Tina Monzon-Palma who served as Chief Operating Officer.
- 1996 – ABC Cebu transferred to their new studio and transmitter complex at Brgy. Kalunasan, Cebu City.
- October 2003 – ABC was acquired by a group led by businessman Antonio "Tonyboy" O. Cojuangco Jr. former Chairman of PLDT and owner of Dream Satellite Broadcasting and Bank of Commerce, among other assets.
- March 2008 – Cojuangco announced that ABC had reached a partnership with MPB Primedia, Inc., a local company backed by Media Prima Berhad in Malaysia as part of a long-time strategy to make the network more competitive. ABC signed off for the last time at around 22:00 PHT on August 8, 2008, with its late night newscast Sentro as the last program on air, and then aired a countdown to its re-launch for much of the next day until 19:00 PHT, when the network officially re-launched under its new name of TV5.[2][3] Its programming lineup aims towards "progressive Pinoys including those young at heart" (market classes C and D). On October 20, 2009, TV5 Cebu, along with its affiliate ABC TV stations was acquired by PLDT's broadcasting division MediaQuest Holdings, Inc. from the consortium led by the Cojuangco group and Malaysia-based broadcaster Media Prima Berhad.
- April 4, 2010 - a month after the two acquisitions was completed as announced by PLDT chairman Manny V. Pangilinan, TV5 Cebu was reformatted, with a new lineup of programming and branding as the "Kapatid" ("sibling") network.
- May 16, 2011 – TV5 Cebu was relaunched with the newly analog transmitter in Mt. Busay, Brgy. Babag 1, Cebu City from its old transmitter tower at ABC/TV5 Complex in Kalunasan that had been used to be transferring in 1996. Following the relaunch, the station operates on the newly-upgraded 232,800-watt stereo TV transmitter (replaced its two-decade old 5-kilowatt transmitter) for clearer and better signal reception to entire Central Visayas region.[4] On July 16 of the same year, the station launched its first regional newscast Aksyon Bisaya with Atty. Ruphil Fernandez Bañoc and Darlene Sino-Cruz as its first anchors.
- April 13, 2013 – TV5 Cebu launching its new programs in Cebu was introduced during the network's mall show in Parkmall, Mandaue City, along with the network's other drama series such as Manok ni San Pedro, Antigo and other network's programs.[5]
- September 8, 2016 – TV5 Network decided to cancelled its production following the newscast was ended, although its 12 reporters and cameramen were remain employed from the news department as part of the cost-cutting measures by the network to sustain its day-by-day operations. In the future, TV5 Cebu is now downgraded as a relay (satellite-selling) station effective September 11.[6]
- February 17, 2018 – in line with the recent changes within the network and in celebration of its 10th anniversary, TV5 Cebu was relaunched as The 5 Network with a new logo and station ID entitled Get It on 5, whereas the TV on the northeastern quadrant of the logo has been dropped, making it more flexible for the other divisions to use it as part of their own identity.
- January 13, 2019 – coinciding with the reformat of AksyonTV to 5 Plus, 5 Cebu introduced a variation of its 2018 logo. It has also since included the websites of the division producing the program airing (e.g. TV5.com.ph for entertainment and blocktimers) as part of their on-screen graphics.
- August 15, 2020 – 5 Cebu reverted to its former name, TV5 (while retaining the variation of its current numerical logo that was introduced in January 2019), as the network announced its partnership with sister company, Cignal TV.
- June 16, 2021 – TV5 Cebu commenced its ISDB-T digital test broadcast on UHF Channel 18.
- February 2022 - TV5 Cebu ceased using its old digital transmitter in San Carlos Heights, Quiot Pardo (which used to be transmitter of Nation Broadcasting Corporation's FM radio station DYFM), and began using its newly constructed tower located in Mt. Busay, Brgy. Babag 2 for a clearer and better signal reception in digital signal. Its new digital transmitter was acquired from ABS-CBN Corporation to use TV5 Cebu's DTT broadcast in Metro Cebu and the provinces of Cebu.
Upcoming programs
- Frontline Central Visayas
- News5 Alerts Central Visayas
Digital television
Digital channels
UHF Channel 18 (497.143 MHz)
Channel | Video | Aspect | Short name | Programming | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
21.01 | 480i | 16:9 | TV5 | TV5 Cebu (Main DYET-TV programming) | Commercial free-to-air broadcast |
21.02 | OnePH | One PH | |||
21.03 | 4:3 | One Sports | One Sports | Commercial free-to-air broadcast | |
21.35 | 240p | 16:9 | One Seg S1 | TV5 Cebu | 1seg broadcast |
Areas of coverage
Primary areas
Secondary areas
- Portion of Bohol
- Portion of Leyte
- Portion of Negros Oriental
See also
References
- ↑ "Number 3 post sustained". Manila Standard. March 3, 1994.
- ↑ "Tony Boy takes a partner". The Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on February 26, 2012. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
- ↑ "ABC-5 changes name to TV5". Philippine Entertainment Portal. Archived from the original on September 3, 2010. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
- ↑ Aces overwhelm hapless Express, score second win | Sports, News, The Philippine Star | philstar.com
- ↑ "The Freeman: TV5 brings fresh new programs to Cebu". philstar.com. Archived from the original on December 1, 2017. Retrieved April 7, 2017.
- ↑ Baquero, Elias O. (September 8, 2016). "Cost cutting leaves TV5 Cebu journalists, workers in limbo". Sun.Star Cebu. Archived from the original on September 9, 2016. Retrieved September 9, 2016.
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