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RTL (from Radio Télévision Luxembourg), formerly RTL plus and RTL Television, is a German-language free-to-air television channel owned by RTL Deutschland, headquartered in Cologne. Founded as an offshoot of the German-language radio programme Radio Luxemburg , RTL is considered a full-service broadcaster under the Medienstaatsvertrag ...
KiKA Der Kinderkanal — public, non-commercial children's TV, with support of ARD and ZDF Arte — public Franco -German culture channel from ARD, ZDF and France Télévisions 3sat — cultural network from the ARD, ZDF, ORF (Austrian Broadcasting), and SRG (Swiss Broadcasting).
DW-TV: Federal Republic of Germany: ProSiebenSat.1 Welt: ProSiebenSat.1 Media: in the U.S. and Canada, programming from the German television channels ProSieben, Sat.1, Kabel 1 and N24: RTL International: RTL Group: External broadcasting service of RTL Television (2016-2017) Dolphin TV: German Television Channel based in Florida (discontinued ...
RTL Deutschland (previously Mediengruppe RTL Deutschland) is a German media company based in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia. [2] It was founded in 2007 as a holding company for the German television, broadcasting and content production businesses of the RTL Group , which is majority-owned by Bertelsmann .
German streamer RTL Plus (formerly TV Now), which was launched alongside the RTL Group’s robust financial results on Thursday, has revealed several content partnerships. With an annual content ...
Sky Atlantic (Germany) Sky Cinema (German TV channel) Sky Comedy (German TV channel) Sky Deutschland; Sky Krimi; Sky One (Germany) Sky Sport (Germany) Sonnenklar.TV; Sport1 (Germany) Sportdigital; SR Fernsehen; Stingray Classica; Suboro TV; Südwestrundfunk; Super RTL; SWR Fernsehen; Syfy (German TV channel)
The Lionesses return to Wembley to face Germany for the first time since their Euro 2022 final victory
The leading pay TV provider was Sky Deutschland (see below). The biggest teleshopping providers in Germany are QVC and HSE24. With 18.1 million TV households satellite is the dominant TV infrastructure in Germany, followed by cable (17.9 million TV households) and terrestrial (3.8 million TV households). [7]