France 24
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France 24 | |
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Launched | 2006-12-06 |
Owned by | Groupe TF1 and France Télévisions |
Country | ![]() |
Formerly called | Chaîne Française d'Information Internationale (before July 2006) |
Sister channel(s) | TF1: TF1 LCI Eurosport TF6 France Télévisions: |
Website | www.france24.com |
Availability | |
Satellite | |
Atlantic Bird | |
Sky Digital | Channel 517 |
France 24 is a French government-funded global 24-hour satellite and cable TV news channel. France 24 is officially pronounced France Vingt-Quatre ([fʁɑ̃s vɛ̃t'kɑtʁ]), on both the French- and English-language channel. France 24 started broadcasting on 6 December 2006 at 20:29 in Paris (GMT+1).
Before July 2006, the project was known as Chaîne Française d'Information Internationale (CFII) or –in English– French International News Network.
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[edit] Corporate structure
It is run by a partnership between Groupe TF1 and France Télévisions (including France 2 and France 3), with some programmes sourced from Agence France-Presse, Radio France Internationale, TV5MONDE, Arte, EuroNews, and La Chaîne Parlementaire. It is funded by France with an annual budget of approximately €80 million, and is based in Issy-les-Moulineaux, Paris.
[edit] Channel reception
France 24 is available by satellite to most of Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, as well as by cable and antenna to New York and Washington, D.C.. Both the French and the French/English channels are available live on the France 24 website, broadcast en direct (live) in Windows Media format. A test version of the Arabic channel can also be found on the website.
On 1 April 2007, the Irish terrestrial channel TG4 began carrying retransmissions of France 24 overnight. Previously, it had retransmitted Euronews.
[edit] Programming
France 24 is broadcast on two channels, one in French, the other predominantly in English with 4 to 6 hours of French per day.[1] Arabic and Spanish programming will be added in the course of 2007. Along with 170 journalists of its own, France 24 can call on the resources of the two main French broadcasters (Groupe TF1 and France Télévisions) as well as partners such as AFP. The CEO of France 24 is Alain de Pouzilhac, and its journalist staff includes former ITN presenter Mark Owen and former TF1 newsreader Mélissa Theuriau.
[edit] Long-term goals
France 24 intends to give a different view of the news than the Anglophone BBC World and CNN International, which grew in importance with the Iraq war. France 24 wants to put more emphasis on debate, dialogue and the role of cultural difference. It will also be competing with the recently launched Al Jazeera English and Russia Today news channels. The future Arabic and Spanish programming will compete with Al Jazeera's Arabic channel and South America's teleSUR.
The French government has allocated around €100 million for the project. The European Commission gave the green light to France 24 in June, saying it did not breach European Union state aid rules.
[edit] The Talk of Paris Show
France 24 propose the first entirely interactive broadcast every friday : The Talk of Paris. Everyone can ask his question to a worldwide personality thanks to a partnership with Dailymotion.
- Record your webcam video to the personality of the Week – The Talk of Paris interactive show
[edit] See also
- International broadcasting
- Al Jazeera English
- BBC World
- CCTV-9
- CNN International
- Deutsche Welle
- EuroNews
- Russia Today
[edit] References
- ^ France 2, "La chaîne tricolore France 24 prend l'antenne, 5.12.2006"
[edit] External links
- Official Site
- France 24 - The Talk of Paris Interactive Show
- France 24 pre-launch promo trailer
[edit] Launch coverage
- France launches world TV channel, BBC News
- France launches global news channel, Al Jazeera English
- Channel provides market with Gallic spin, CNN
Based in UK and USA: BBC World • CNN International • CNBC • CNBC World
Based in Continental Europe: France 24 • DW-TV • EuroNews • TV5MONDE • Russia Today
Based in Asia: Al Jazeera English • CCTV-9 • CCTV-4 • CNBC Asia
Categories: Articles to be expanded since January 2007 | All articles to be expanded | French television networks | Publicly funded broadcasters | International broadcasting | 24-hour television news channels | Foreign television channels broadcasting in the United Kingdom | Television channels and stations established in 2006