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Yle
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2023}}{{Short description|Finnish national public broadcaster}}{{See also|Yle (disambiguation)}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
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History
{{Expand section|date=August 2017}}File:Equipment made in Yleisradio's workshop at the end of the 1930's intended for broadcasting the 1940 Olympics, ca. 1940. (15301312367).jpg|thumb|right|Equipment made in Yleisradio's workshop at the end of the 1930s intended for broadcasting the 1940 Summer Olympics1940 Summer OlympicsFile:Yleisradion Iso Paja.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Yle's headquarters from 1993 to 2016, known as Iso Paja ("the big workshop"), in Pasila, Helsinki. Now occupied by the VR GroupVR GroupSuomen Yleisradio (Finland's General Radio) was founded in Helsinki on 29 May 1926. The first radio programme was transmitted on 9 September that year, generally considered the birthdate of regular broadcasting activities in Finland. Not until 1928 did Yle's broadcasts become available throughout the country. By the beginning of the 1930s, 100,000 households could listen to Yle programmes.In 1957, Yle made its first television broadcast tests, and regular TV programming began the next year under the name Suomen Televisio (Finland's Television), which was later renamed Yle TV1. Television's popularity in the country grew rapidly. In 1964, Yle obtained TES-TV and Tamvisio, which were merged into Yle TV2. In 1969, the Finnish Broadcasting Company began broadcasting television programmes in colour, but due to the high cost of colour technology, colour only became standard in the late 1970s. On 1 May 1977, Tv-uutiset (TV-news) and TV-nytt switched to colour.In the 2000s, Yle established several new radio and television channels. In 2007, there was a digital television switchover. A completely new digital channel, Yle Teema (Yle Theme) was introduced, and the Swedish-language FST (Finlands Svenska Television, Finland's Swedish Television) was moved from its analogue channel to its digital one, YLE FST5 (later renamed Yle Fem). In addition to these four channels (TV1, TV2, Teema, and Fem), a fifth channel, YLE24, was launched in 2001 for 24-hour news programming. This channel was replaced by YLE Extra, a channel attempting to cater to the youth, which was in turn decommissioned in 2007.NEWS,weblink Yle lopettaa yhden tv-kanavan, mtv.fi, 21 March 2018, fi, Until 4 August 2008, the fifth channel was used to broadcast Yle TV1 with Finnish subtitles on programmes in foreign languages (without having to enable the TV's or digital set-top box's subtitle function).Logo history
File:Oy-Suomen-Ab-Logo-1930.png|alt=|Yle's first logo was used from 1926 to 1940File:Yleisradio logo 1940.svg|Yle's second logo used from 1940 to 1965File:Yleisradio logo 1965.svg|Yle's third logo used from 1965 to 1991File:Yleisradion logo 1990.svg|Yle's fourth logo used from May 1990 to 30 September 1999.File:YLE logo.svg|Yle's fifth logo used from 1 October 1999 to 4 March 2012.File:Ylen logo.svg|Yle's sixth and current logo since 5 March 2012.File:Ylen logo (white).svg|Variant of Yle's sixth and current logo since 5 March 2012.WEB, Tuire, Nuolivirta, "Yleisradion logot kautta aikojen",weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130801084401weblink">weblink avoinyle.fi, 4 April 2024,Services
Television
(File:Finnish Broadcasting Company's Kesäkatu office building 1.jpg|thumb|Yleisradio's office building in 1968)(File:Tuo kulttuuri Wikipediaan at Yle archives (15236983299).jpg|thumb|Yle film archives)- Yle TV1: TV1 is Yle's oldest channel and its flagship TV channel. It serves as Yle's main news, current affairs and factual journalism outlet, and also broadcasts documentaries, drama, cultural, and educational programmes. Satirical entertainment, cinema, and shows of British production are also included in its programming. The channel's headquarters are in Helsinki.
- Yle TV2: TV2, founded in 1964, is the main channel for sports programmes and children's and teenagers' broadcasting. The channel also broadcasts drama, entertainment, and factual programmes. Emphasis in current affairs output is on domestic items, regional content and citizen journalism. Children's programming includes Pikku Kakkonen (a children's magazine show modelled on BBC's Blue Peter) and Galaxi, its counterpart for older children, and Sirkuspelle Hermanni. The channel's headquarters are in Tampere.
- Yle Teema & Fem: Yle Teema & Fem (~ Yle Theme & Five) combines the operations of the previously separate Teema and Fem channels. Teema & Fem is Yle's channel for culture, education, and science. It focuses on recordings of performing arts, classical music, art, and history documentaries, films, and theme broadcasts. The channel also broadcasts Swedish-language full-service channel broadcasting news, factual and children's programmes, and entertainment. It also shows many Nordic films and series and Sami-language OÄÄasat. Finnish subtitles are available for most programmes; they can be enabled using the digital set-top box. Outside prime time, Teema & Fem shows selected broadcasts from Sveriges Television, Sweden's equivalent of Yle.
- TV Finland: TV Finland is a digital satellite channel showing a selection of Yle's programmes in Sweden.
- Yle Text-TV: () a Teletext channel shows information on news, sports, and TV programmes around the clock. It has theme pages for weather, traffic, work, and leisure.WEB, Yle Teksti-tv,weblink Yle, 10 August 2015,
Radio
File:Hoppakaupan talo Henrik Mattjus (16372171897).jpg|thumb|Yle's former regional studio in TampereTampere- {{ill|Yle Radio 1|fi}}: A radio channel for culture, in-depth current affairs, and other speech-based programming. Classical music (concerts by the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra), jazz, folk, world music, and religious music also feature. Yle Radio 1 was established in June 1990, as part of Yle's restructuring of its radio channels and was known as Radio Ylen Ykkönen until 2003.
- YleX (formerly Radiomafia): A fast-tempo programme-flow channel featuring new music in tune with popular culture, targeted at 17- to 27-year-olds. The percentage of music is 70%. New domestic and foreign pop, rock, and several themed music programmes.
- Yle Radio Suomi: The national and regional news, service, and contact channel, as well as sports and entertainment. Musical fare comprises domestic and foreign hits and adult and nostalgic pop.
- {{ill|Yle Puhe|fi}} (formerly Yle Radio Peili): The news and current affairs channel presenting talk programmes from Yle's other radio and television channels. Classical jazz. Also broadcast on digital television.
- Yle X3M: Swedish-language youth channel for current affairs debate and popular culture, broadcasting news as well. New pop and rock and special music programmes.
- Yle Vega: News, current affairs, and culture in Swedish for all audience groups, also offering culture and regional programmes. Adult pop, jazz, and classical music.
- Yle Sámi Radio: A Sami-language network covering most of Lapland. Produced in co-operation with SVT and NRK.
- Digital services
- {{ill|Yle Klassinen|fi}}: The 24-hour digital supplementary service of classical music is also broadcast on digital television.
- International services
- {{ill|Yle Mondo|fi}}: Broadcasts in English and other languages, mostly compiled from international radio services. Yle Mondo is available on FM in Helsinki and throughout the country via digital TV.
- Former stations:
- {{ill|YleQ|fi}} â Features, political shows, and popular culture programmes for young adults. Broadcasting was analogue in the greater Helsinki area, digital in southern Finland, and via digital television.
- {{ill|Radio Finland|fi}} (worldwide on short and medium wave) â international station, broadcast in Finnish, Swedish, English, German, French, Russian and a news programme in Latin. The short and medium-wave broadcasts were discontinued on December 31, 2006.
- YLE Capital FM â broadcaster combined parts of Yle World and Yle Mondo (in the capital region and parts in Turku, Lahti and Kuopio).
- FSR Mixkanalen or Finland's Swedish Radio (FSR) â an automated station that broadcasts a mixed selection of programming from both Yle Vega and Yle XFM.WEB,weblink FSR:s mixkanal läggs ned,
- {{ill|Radio Aino|fi}} â digital station primarily aimed at young adults, especially women, with domestic and foreign pop and rock music, news and current affairs programming alongside lifestyle talk shows.
Yle tax
Until the end of 2012, Finnish citizens paid Yle a license fee for the use of a television, set at 252 euros per year in 2012. The license fee was per location, which could hold several sets (e.g. in a living room as well as a bedroom). The public broadcasting tax, also known as the Yle tax, replaced the license fee in 2013. The tax ranges from 50 euros to 140 euros per person and per year, depending on income. Minors and persons with low income are exempt from the tax.WEB,weblink New YLE tax law causes mixed feelings, Helsinki Times, 4 July 2012, 29 June 2014,Controversies
{{more citations needed|date=July 2011}}In radio, Yle was a legal monopoly until 1985, when local radio stations were permitted, and maintained a national monopoly until 1995, when national radio networks were allowed.In the past, Yle has been seen in Finland as a "red" or leftist medium. This was true especially in 1965–69, during the term of Director-General Eino S. Repo, who got the position with the backing of the Agrarian League and President Kekkonen (a member of the Agrarian Party), as he was Kekkonen's personal friend. He was accused of favouring leftist student radicalism and young, left-leaning reporters with programmes critical of capitalism that demanded reforms to bring Finland closer to the Soviet Union, and Yle was given the nickname "Reporadio". After Repo resigned, he was demoted to director of radio broadcasting, on the communist-led People's Democratic League mandate.Repo resigned in 1969, but according to Yle,WEB,weblink Elävä arkisto - yle.fi, yle.fi, the "political mandate" remained, as Erkki Raatikainen was named director directly from the Social Democratic Party office. All directors after him until 2010 were Social Democrats. This was ended by the appointment of the right-wing National Coalition Party's Lauri Kivinen as director in 2010.During Finlandisation and the leftist radicalization of the 1970s, Yle contributed to Kekkonen's policy of "neutrality" by broadcasting the program Näin naapurissa about the Soviet Union. This program was produced in cooperation with the Soviets and supported Soviet propaganda without criticism.WEB,weblink Näin naapurissa, yle.fi, Jukka Lindfors, 5 September 2008, Kivinen's appointment in 2010 received much criticism, as he was previously head of Nokia Siemens Networks, which had sold monitoring equipment to the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence, allowing them to arrest political dissidents throughout the protests in the fall of 2009.WEB,weblink dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20100309065232weblink">weblink 9 March 2010, Helsingin Sanomat - International Edition - Home, hs.fi, English-language newscaster Kimmo Wilska was fired on 13 August 2010WEB,weblink Kohuankkuri Kimmo Polska, yle.fi, Petra Himberg, 7 April 2011, 17 October 2010,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20101017040839weblink">weblink dead, after pretending to be caught drinking on camera following an alcohol-related news story on Yle News. His stunt was not well received by Yle management, which fired him that day. Wilska received substantial support after his termination.Yle has been criticised for buying many HBO series. It has responded by emphasising the suitability of series to channels with no ad breaks, citing HBO programming's quality and low price, and stating that American programmes constitute only 7% of its programming.WEB, Why public service company wastes money on HBO programs? (in Finnish),weblink Yle, 6 February 2013,Decision to close shortwave
The broadcasts on shortwave from Yle Radio Finland were closed at the end of 2006. Expatriate organisations had been campaigning for continued service, but their efforts did not succeed in maintaining the service or even in slowing the process. The decision also affected a high-powered medium wave on 963 kHz (312m). A smaller medium wave covering the Gulf of Finland region (558 kHz, 538m) remained on air for one more year.Parliamentary question about shortwave
In November 2005, MP Pertti Hemmilä (N) submitted a question in Parliament about the plans of Yle to end its availability on international shortwave bands. In his question, Hemmilä took up the low cost of the world band radio to the consumer travelling or living abroad. In her response, the Minister of Transport and Communications, Susanna Huovinen (S) noted that Yle would now be available via other means, such as satellites and the Internet. She also underlined the fact that Yle is not under government control, but under indirect parliamentary supervision.Recollections of international radio from Finland WEB,weblink On the air waves from Finland, www.ulkomaanmedia.net, 19 April 2008, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20090423150135weblink">weblink 23 April 2009,YLE Gate 2017
The Council for Mass Media in Finland criticized Yleisradio for restricting news reports about Prime Minister Juha Sipilä's investments and business in 2017. The chief editor of Yle threatened that Yle would resign from the Council. PM Sipilä had been angry over Yle's reports on the Talvivaara mine and Ketera Steel (a company owned by relatives of Sipilä). Several reporters were barred from publishing stories about political connections between Sipilä and companies owned by his relatives, and state financing of the Talvivaara mine (Terrafame mine).Mitä Missä Milloin. 2018 Annual News Book. Otava 2017. pages 109 and 341-342List of YLE directors
{{Div col}}- L. M. Viherjuuri, 1926â1927 (acting)
- Yrjö Koskelainen, 1927 (acting)
- Armas Deinert, 1927 (acting)
- Hjalmar Woldemar Walldén (since 1935 Jalmar Voldemar Vakio) 1927â1945
- Hella Wuolijoki, 1945â1949
- Einar Sundström, 1950â1964
- Eino S. Repo, 1965â1969
- Erkki Raatikainen, 1970â1979
- Sakari Kiuru, 1980â1989
- Reino Paasilinna, 1990â1994
- Arne Wessberg, 1994â2005
- Mikael Jungner, 2005â2010
- Lauri Kivinen, 2010â2018
- Merja Ylä-Anttila, 2018âin office
Notable news anchors
- Marjo Rein
- Matti Rönkä
- Tommy Franti
- Jussi-Pekka Rantanen
- Arto Nurmi
- Marjukka Havumäki
- Piia Pasanen
See also
References
{{Reflist}}External links
{{Commons category}}{{Div col|colwidth=25em}}- {{Official websiteweblink}} {{in lang|fi}}
- About Yle in English
- Svenska.yle.fi â Svenska Yle. Official site in Swedish
- Yle News â News in English
- Yle Sápmi â News in Sámi
- Yle Novosti â News in Russian
- Nuntii Latini â News in Latin
- Yle Areena â in Finnish
- Yle Arenan â in Swedish
- Yle Elävä arkisto â the Living Archive in Finnish
- Yle Arkivet â the Archive in Swedish
- content above as imported from Wikipedia
- "Yle" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
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- "Yle" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
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