JORX-DTV (Channel 6), branded as TBS Television (TBSテレビ, TBS Terebi), is the flagship station of the Japan News Network in the Kantō region. It is owned-and-operated by Tokyo Broadcasting System Television, Inc.[a], a subsidiary of TBS Holdings. TBS Television is one of the "five private broadcasters based in Tokyo."

JORX-DTV
CityTokyo
Channels
BrandingTBS Television
Programming
AffiliationsJapan News Network
Ownership
OwnerTokyo Broadcasting System Television, Inc.
BS-TBS
TBS Channel 1
TBS Channel 2
TBS News
History
First air date
April 1, 1955; 69 years ago (1955-04-01)
Former call signs
JOKR-TV (1955-2001)
JORX-TV (2001-2011)
Former channel number(s)
Analog:
6 (VHF) (1955-2011)
Call sign meaning
JOKR-TV: JO Kabushiki gaisha Radio Tokyo (former name of TBS)
JORX-(D)TV: JO Radio Tokyo (X)
Technical information
Licensing authority
MIC
ERP10 kW (68 kW ERP)
Transmitter coordinates35°39′31″N 139°44′44″E / 35.65861°N 139.74556°E / 35.65861; 139.74556
Translator(s)Niijima, Tokyo
Analog: Channel 56

Mito, Ibaraki
Analog: Channel 40
Digital: Channel 15
Utsunomiya, Tochigi
Analog: Channel 55
Digital: Channel 15
Maebashi, Gunma
Analog: Channel 56
Digital: Channel 43
Kiryū, Gunma
Analog: Channel 55
Chichibu, Saitama
Analog: Channel 18
Narita, Chiba
Analog: Channel 55
Tateyama, Chiba
Analog: Channel 56
Yokohama Minato Mirai 21, Kanagawa
Analog: Channel 56
Yokosuka-Kurihama, Kanagawa
Analog: Channel 39
Hiratsuka, Kanagawa
Analog: Channel 37
Digital: Channel 22

Odawara, Kanagawa
Analog: Channel 56
Corporate information
Company
Native name
株式会社TBSテレビ
Kabushiki gaisha TBS terebi
Company typeSubsidiary KK
IndustryMedia
FoundedMarch 21, 2000 (24 years ago) (2000-03-21) in Tokyo, Japan
HeadquartersTBS Broadcasting Center, Akasaka, Minato, Tokyo, Japan
Services
ParentTBS Holdings
Websitewww.tbs.co.jp
Footnotes / references
Data from its Corporate Profile

TBS produced the game show Takeshi's Castle, which is dubbed and rebroadcast internationally. The channel was also home to Ultraman and the Ultra Series franchise starting in 1966—initially a spinoff of Ultra Q, which was co-produced and broadcast in the same year. Most, if not all, of these series were produced by Tsuburaya Productions for the network. In the 2010s, the Ultra Series moved to TV Tokyo. Since the 1990s, TBS has been the home of Sasuke (Ninja Warrior), whose format inspired similar programs outside Japan. Sasuke itself was a spinoff of the legendary TBS game show Kinniku Banzuke, which ran for seven seasons.

On May 24, 2017, TBS and five other major media firms—TV Tokyo, Nikkei, Inc., WOWOW, Dentsu, and Hakuhodo DY Media Partners—officially announced that they would jointly establish a new company in July to offer paid online video services called Paravi. TBS Holdings became the largest shareholder of the new company, Premium Platform Japan, with a 31.5% stake. Yasuhiro Takatsuna, an official from TBS Holdings, was appointed as the new company's president.[1][2][3]

Overview

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Its predecessor, Radio Tokyo Co., Ltd., was established in 1951 as a general broadcaster. On April 1, 1955, it launched as the second privately owned TV station in Japan, following Nippon Television, and simultaneously became the only TV and radio station in Tokyo (spun off in 2001). At that time, Radio Tokyo successfully incorporated many local stations into the Japan News Network (JNN) by promoting the elimination of newspaper influence in forming the news network, thereby establishing a powerful reporting system.

On the other hand, the current TBS Television Co., Ltd. was originally established as TBS Entertainment Co., Ltd., a production company that produced entertainment programs for Tokyo Broadcasting System (the trade name of Radio Tokyo Co., Ltd. at the time). Since the broadcasting license was owned by the parent company, Tokyo Broadcasting, TBS Entertainment was not a member of the Japan Commercial Broadcasters Association.

On April 1 of the same year, Tokyo Broadcasting Co., Ltd. (which changed its trade name to Tokyo Broadcasting System Holdings Co., Ltd. on the same day) underwent a corporate split. The television broadcasting business, including the television broadcasting license and the operation of various facilities such as Akasaka Sacas and Akasaka BLITZ, along with cultural projects such as events, was inherited by the newly established company, which retained the abbreviation TBS. This company transitioned from being a production company to a general broadcaster (currently a private terrestrial core broadcaster) and joined the Japan Commercial Broadcasters Association. Additionally, TBS Radio was entrusted with the maintenance and management of the company's transmitting station in Toda City, Saitama Prefecture.

History

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Early history

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Matsutarō Shōriki, the former owner of Yomiuri Shimbun, first proposed the idea of private broadcasting in Japan in 1951.[4]: 82  In June of the following year, NHK, Yomiuri Shimbun, and Radio Tokyo (the first private radio broadcaster) were among the first to apply for a TV broadcast license.[4]: 83–84  In July of the same year, the Radio Supervision Committee announced the granting of a preliminary license to Nippon Television, while holding off on the applications of NHK (because the National Assembly needed to pass NHK's business plan) and Radio Tokyo (due to its recent establishment).[4]: 85  On January 16 of the following year, Radio Tokyo obtained a TV preparatory license.[4]: 86  After the completion of its TV headquarters, Radio Tokyo was granted an official TV broadcasting license on January 28, 1955.[4]: 88 

At 10 a.m. on April 1, 1955, Radio Tokyo Television (shortened to KRT) officially began broadcasting.[4]: 95  According to a KRT survey conducted from November to December 1955, KRT's average audience rating from 6:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. was 24.4%, slightly ahead of Nippon TV's 24.1% and NHK's 21.9%.[4]: 100  The income of Radio Tokyo's television division increased rapidly after broadcasting began, surpassing that of the radio division in 1957.[4]: 97  In the early days of broadcasting, American TV series such as Adventures of Superman and Lassie played an important role in KRT's program schedule.[4]: 105-106  77 Sunset Strip, which began airing in 1960, also sparked a ratings boom.[4]: 155  In terms of technology, in July 1955, KRT and Toshiba jointly developed Japan's first domestic TV studio camera.[4]: 119  The following year, KRT and Hokkaido Broadcasting jointly participated in the Japanese product exhibition held in Beijing, where they conducted a TV broadcast test in China.[4]: 119-120 

Forming a network

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TBS logo used 1961–1991
 
TBS Holdings headquarters in 1961

At the beginning of 1959, the third and fourth flagship stations in the Tokyo area, Nippon Educational Television (now TV Asahi) and Fuji TV, began broadcasting—NET on February 1 and Fuji TV on March 1.[4]: 153  Around the same time, a large number of people purchased TV sets to watch the wedding of Crown Prince Akihito and Michiko Shoda. By April 3, 1959, the number of TV households in Japan had reached 2 million.[4]: 145  Japan's TV advertising costs also increased from 400 million yen in 1954 to 23.8 billion yen in 1959.[4]: 145  On April 10, 1959, KRT fully broadcast the wedding of Crown Prince (now Emperor Emeritus) Akihito and Empress Michiko, with 17 TV stations simulcasting the KRT broadcast.[4]: 147-149 

In June 1958, KRT signed a news material exchange agreement with CBC, OTV, RKB, and HBC. This agreement sparked KRT's idea of establishing a national network.[4]: 150  Building on the cooperation among various stations during the Crown Prince's wedding, KRT signed a JNN news agreement with 15 TV stations from across Japan on August 1, 1959,[4]: 150-151  creating Japan's first TV network, the Japan News Network (JNN). By the end of that year, the number of JNN-affiliated stations had increased to 18.[4]: 151 

The JNN news agreement stipulated that each station would be responsible for news gathering in its own region and was obligated to provide the news materials it collected to JNN. It also prohibited exchanging news materials with other networks or broadcasting news programs and other content from other networks.[4]: 151  The following year, KRT, CBC, ABC, RKB, and HBC established the "Five Station Alliance" to strengthen cooperation in various fields.[4]: 153 

In October 1960, KRT was listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.[4]: 179-180  To reflect the reality that television had replaced radio broadcasting as the company's main business, Radio Tokyo changed its name to Tokyo Broadcasting on November 28, 1960, and the English abbreviation changed from KRT to TBS.[4]: 179 

KRT began trial broadcasting of color TV on February 2, 1959.[4]: 172  On September 10 of the following year, KRT officially launched color TV broadcasts, becoming one of the first eight TV channels in Japan to do so.[4]: 173  At that time, TBS believed that color TV technology was not yet fully developed, and as a result, it was less active in colorizing its programs compared to other Japanese TV stations.[4]: 254  In October 1970, TBS completed its transition to color broadcasting, with its first primetime broadcasts using NTSC-J color for non-news programming.[4]: 256 

Hero of private TV

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In October 1961, in response to the rising challenge from Fuji TV, which was seeing increasing ratings, TBS undertook a major reorganization of its program schedule. American TV dramas and music programs for young audiences were scheduled for 7:00 p.m., American TV series at 8:00 p.m., and TBS's self-produced TV series at 9:00 p.m. This new arrangement significantly boosted TBS’s ratings and prompted other stations to adopt similar schedules, making the one-hour program format a standard in the Japanese TV industry.[4]: 189 

In the early 1960s, Ben Casey was the most successful TV series broadcast by TBS from the United States, achieving an exceptionally high rating of 50.6%,[4]: 88  which remains the highest rating for a foreign TV series broadcast in Japan. However, as TBS’s capability to produce its own programs improved, the network gradually reduced its broadcast of American TV series after the mid-1960s.[4]: 233 

On November 1, 1963, TBS eliminated the afternoon break from Monday to Thursday to provide uninterrupted broadcasting throughout the day.[4]: 189  According to a 1963 survey by Video Research, TBS had an average audience rating of 16.7% during prime time, ranking first among all Tokyo stations. Its average full-day audience rating was 8.3%, lower than NHK's but the highest among private stations.[4]: 191 

On November 23, 1963, TBS, along with Nippon TV and NHK, conducted the first satellite broadcast between Japan and the United States, covering the assassination of John F. Kennedy.[4]: 202 

In the early 1960s, spurred by the 1964 Summer Olympics, TBS experienced rapid growth. By 1965, TBS reported a turnover of 14.702 billion yen and a profit of 1.673 billion yen.[4]: 221  To diversify income beyond advertising, TBS funded the establishment of the Tokyo Electronics Research Institute (now Tokyo Power Technology) in 1963.[4]: 222 

From 1961 to 1964, TBS constructed TBS Hall on the north side of its headquarters and began exploring the real estate business.[4]: 222-223  In the late 1960s, TBS also established TBS Encyclopedia Britannica and TBS School of Computer Science, expanding into cultural and educational industries.[4]: 268-269 

In the early 1970s, TBS opened housing exhibition halls in Musashisakai, Omiya, Machida, Hachioji, and other locations, entering the housing industry.[4]: 316  TBS’s investment in radio and television-related businesses increased from 2.1 billion yen in 1968 to 11.5 billion yen in 1973.[4]: 274-275 

However, following the first oil crisis in 1973, many of TBS's sideline investments encountered operational difficulties. Consequently, TBS focused its resources on broadcasting and television,[4]: 320  selling shares in subsidiaries such as TBS Encyclopedia Britannica.[4]: 402 

Although TBS’s profits declined for two consecutive years in 1974 and 1975 due to the Japanese economic downturn, turnover and profit began to rise rapidly again after 1976. By 1977, the turnover of TBS’s TV department had exceeded 65.5 billion yen.[4]: 354 

On the other hand, due to high labor costs and the high ratings of outsourced TV series, TBS began promoting program outsourcing in the 1970s to reduce costs. As part of this strategy, TBS transferred some employees to a newly established program production subsidiary.[4]: 276-278 

In 1973, the turnover of the TBS TV department exceeded 40 billion yen.[4]: 315  During the mid-1970s, major national newspapers in Japan reorganized their equity holdings in TV stations. The Asahi Shimbun and Yomiuri Shimbun sold their stakes in TBS to the Mainichi Shimbun. By April 1974, the Mainichi Shimbun held a total of 9.97% of TBS shares, becoming the only newspaper shareholder among TBS’s major shareholders.[4]: 324 

However, in 1977, the Mainichi Shimbun sold most of its TBS shares due to a business crisis, causing TBS to become less popular among the core newspaper bureaus.[4]: 324-325 

In 1979, TBS introduced the promotional slogan "TBS for the BEST," marking its peak performance and ratings at the turn of the 1970s and 1980s.[4]: 362  During audience rating surveys in the spring and autumn of 1978, all 24 JNN-affiliated stations achieved top rankings in both prime-time and full-day audience ratings.[4]: 370  From 1977 to 1980, TBS held first place in turnover among all flagship stations for four consecutive years. In 1980, the turnover of the TBS TV department exceeded 95 billion yen.[4]: 401 

TBS also made technological innovations, beginning in 1976 with the gradual introduction of the Electronic News Gathering (ENG) system, which significantly enhanced news interviewing and editing capabilities.[4]: 376-378  In November 1978, TBS began broadcasting stereo programs.[4]: 362 

1980s and 1990s: "Triple Crown ratings"

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Logo used 1994–2020

In 1982, Fuji Television surpassed TBS and claimed the number one position in prime-time ratings among all core stations.[4]: 410  Although TBS maintained the top spot in turnover among core bureaus after 1980, its profit declined for four consecutive years starting in 1980.[4]: 407 

In response to the challenge from Fuji TV, TBS introduced new programs targeting younger audiences but failed to achieve the desired results.[4]: 411  In October 1984, TBS undertook a major reorganization of its program schedule, delaying the end time of the evening news program JNN NewScope from 7:00 p.m. to 7:20 p.m., which helped TBS regain the top spot in prime-time ratings from October 1984 through March 1985.[4]: 412 

Despite this, the turnover of TBS's television department was surpassed by Nippon Television and Fuji Television in 1984. By 1985, Fuji TV had also surpassed TBS in overall turnover.[4]: 449  Meanwhile, in response to the trend towards multi-channel broadcasting, TBS actively pursued new ventures. In 1984, TBS participated in establishing Japan Satellite Broadcasting (now Wowow and U-Next)[4]: 445  and began broadcasting TV information in 1986.[4]: 444 

Compared to Fuji TV, which focuses on younger audiences, TBS targets family audiences and offers greater program diversity.[4]: 466  However, from April to September 1987, TBS's prime-time ratings were surpassed by other Japanese TV stations, dropping to third place among flagship stations.[4]: 467 

To counter TV Asahi's high ratings for News Station at 10:00 p.m. on weekdays, TBS launched JNN News 22 Prime Time in 1987 to directly compete with it.[4]: 467  The program schedule of TBS was significantly adjusted due to this new addition.[4]: 468  However, JNN News 22 Prime Time only aired for a year due to low ratings. Its successor, JNN News Desk '88・'89, also failed to disrupt News Station's dominance during this period.[4]: 471 

After April 1988, TBS's prime-time ratings began to decline, with the decline accelerating after April 1989.[4]: 469  Despite this downturn, which coincided with Japan's bubble economy, TBS's financial performance continued to improve.[4]: 460  In 1987 and 1988, TBS's turnover grew by 12% for two consecutive years.[4]: 494  In 1989, TBS's profit exceeded 11.7 billion yen, and the TV department's turnover surpassed 168.8 billion yen.[4]: 494  Taking advantage of the favorable financing conditions during the bubble economy, TBS decided to build a new headquarters in the late 1980s.[4]: 460 

On the 40th anniversary of its launch, TBS signed a cooperation agreement with Glavkosmos, the foreign trade and aviation authority of the Soviet Union, in March 1989. The agreement aimed to send a TBS employee into space, making them Japan's first astronaut. This initiative was known as the TBS Universe Project.[4]: 499 

A total of 163 employees from the TBS Group applied for selection. After physical examinations, written tests, and evaluations by the Soviet Union, Toyohiro Akiyama and Ryoko Kikuchi emerged as the final candidates. In October 1989, Akiyama and Kikuchi traveled to the astronaut training center near Moscow for their training. After 13 months of training, the Soviet Union announced in November 1990 that Akiyama would be Japan's first astronaut, with Kikuchi as an alternate.[4]: 519 

On December 2, 1990, Toyohiro Akiyama flew to the Mir space station aboard the Soyuz spacecraft, becoming the first Japanese person and the first reporter to enter space.[4]: 500  TBS aired a special program every night from December 1 to 10, providing comprehensive live coverage of Akiyama’s space journey.[4]: 521  On December 10, Akiyama returned to Earth safely.[4]: 520 

In October 1989, TBS made major adjustments to its program schedule, achieving a prime-time adaptation rate of 40.4% and an evening-time adaptation rate of 51.8%, which brought the prime-time ratings back to 15.1%.[4]: 501  However, after April 1990, due to a decline in TV drama ratings, TBS's prime-time ratings fell again and were surpassed by other Japanese TV stations.[4]: 502  From October 1991 to March 1992, TBS's prime-time ratings dropped to 12.2%.[4]: 503 

Facing a downturn in ratings due to the final years of the Cold War, TBS President Kazumi Tanaka invited McKinsey & Company in 1990 to conduct a comprehensive corporate identity redesign.[4]: 532  The following year, Dentsu was selected through bidding to refresh TBS's corporate image and launched the "Microcosmos" logo.[4]: 534  TBS also set a goal of achieving a group turnover of 500 billion yen by 2000 and aimed to increase the turnover from non-TV segments to 40% of the group's total turnover. As a result, TBS regained the top spot in ratings in 1993.[4]: 532-533 

However, the overly radical reforms led to dissatisfaction within TBS.[4]: 535  Additionally, the decrease in advertising revenue following the collapse of the bubble economy caused TBS's turnover and profit to decline in 1991.[4]: 535  It was also revealed that TBS had received compensation for investment losses from Nomura Securities.[4]: 536  These issues led to the resignation of Tanaka and Izumi in October 1991,[4]: 536-537  and many of the corporate identity reform measures were abolished the following year.[4]: 539 

The aftermath of the bubble economy further worsened TBS's operating conditions. By 1992, TBS's profit had fallen to only 1.7 billion yen,[4]: 541  and the ratings continued to decline as the company faced significant challenges.

From April to September 1992, TBS's prime-time ratings were only 11.7%, dropping to fifth place in Tokyo.[4]: 544  In October 1992, TBS made a major adjustment with MOVE, broadcasting variety shows from Monday to Thursday, but this did not yield significant results.[4]: 544  However, starting in 1993, with a recovery in TV drama ratings, TBS's prime-time and evening ratings rose to third place from October 1993 to March 1994.[4]: 542 

In October 1994, TBS moved into its new headquarters, the TBS Broadcasting Center.[4]: 541  During the week of the move, TBS achieved a ratings triple crown.[4]: 542  Due to the recovery of the Japanese economy and TBS's improved ratings in the mid-1990s, the turnover of the TBS TV department increased to 192.307 billion yen in 1995.[4]: 583  In 1996, the turnover of the TBS TV division exceeded 200 billion yen for the first time.[4]: 641 

In April 1995, TBS launched its official website.[4]: 594  However, in 1996, a scandal involving TBS video tapes seriously damaged its credibility, leading to the resignation of the company's upper management.[4]: 586  In response to this incident, TBS began broadcasting the self-verification program TBS Review[4]: 609  in 1997.

In response to the multi-channel landscape introduced by satellite TV, TBS launched its 24-hour news channel, TBS NEWS BIRD (now TBS NEWS DIG),[4]: 608  in 1998. On December 1, 2000, TBS's BS satellite TV channel, BS-i (now BS-TBS), officially began broadcasting.[4]: 651-653 

Spin-off of TBS TV, restructuring and media development

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In 2000, TBS established three subsidiaries: TBS Radio and Communications (TBSラジオ&コミュニケーションズ, now TBS Radio), responsible for the radio division; TBS Entertainment (TBSエンタテインメント), responsible for TV program production; and TBS Sports (TBSスポーツ), responsible for sports programs.[4]: 645  Concurrently with these structural reforms, TBS introduced the "Ji~n" logo.[4]: 645 

In 2001, TBS established TBS LIVE (TBSライブ, now known as U-Next Paravi Corner),[4]: 651  which is responsible for producing information programs. That same year, the call sign of TBS TV was changed from JOKR-TV to JORX-TV. On October 1, 2004, TBS merged the three subsidiaries—TBS Entertainment, TBS Sports, and TBS LIVE—into TBS TV, consolidating the wireless TV business into one company (excluding signal broadcasting and personnel brokerage).

On April 1, 2009, TBS adopted the broadcasting holding company system, becoming the second core broadcaster in Japan to do so. The TV broadcasting license was inherited by TBS TV, and the original TBS corporate entity was renamed "Tokyo Broadcasting Holdings" (now TBS Holdings), becoming a broadcasting holding company that simply holds shares in the group's subsidiaries.

In October 2005, the internet company Rakuten acquired a 19.09% stake in TBS for approximately 88 billion yen, becoming TBS's largest shareholder. Lotte Group proposed establishing a joint stockholding company with TBS for business integration, but TBS rejected this proposal, leading to serious confrontation between the two companies. On November 30 of the same year, Lotte and TBS reached a settlement through financial institutions and agreed to begin business cooperation. However, on February 28, 2007, then TBS President Hiroshi Inoue announced that TBS had terminated its partnership with Lotte and released a new defensive merger plan.

After TBS adopted the broadcasting holding company system, Lotte decided to require TBS to buy back all the shares it held in TBS, as it could no longer control the management rights. In 2010, the Tokyo District Court ruled that TBS should purchase the shares from Rakuten at a price of 1,294 yen per share.

On December 1, 2003, TBS began broadcasting digital TV signals. In the early 2000s, TBS's full-day ratings were surpassed by TV Asahi, and among core stations, TBS was only ahead of TV Tokyo, which had long been trailing. The ratings gap between TBS and TV Asahi in the evening time slot also narrowed significantly. In response, TBS undertook a major overhaul of its news and information programs broadcast from Monday to Friday in March 2005. Strip news programs, except for NEWS23 and Hanamaru Market, were replaced with new programs, which significantly improved TBS’s daytime ratings.

In March 2009, TBS made another major adjustment to its program schedule, with an adaptation rate exceeding 70%. However, this change ended in failure, and by April 9, 2009, TBS had no programs with ratings exceeding 10%. Despite this, in 2009, the TBS TV series Benevolent Heroic Doctor achieved high audience ratings, becoming the highest-rated series among flagship stations for the year.

On July 24, 2011, TBS ceased analog TV broadcasts. In 2013, the TBS drama Hanzawa Naoki reached an audience rating of 42.2%, becoming one of the most successful dramas in Sunday Theater history and setting a record for the highest ratings of Japanese TV dramas in the era, surpassing foreign TV dramas. Benefiting from the increased ratings of its dramas, TBS's overall ratings also rebounded in recent years. By 2018, TBS’s average prime-time rating was 10%, ranking third among core stations.

In 2000, the turnover of the TBS TV division reached 234.203 billion yen, and the group profit hit 30.076 billion yen, both reaching record highs.[4]: 656  Faced with slow growth in TV advertising revenue, TBS actively pursued diversification of income sources after the 2000s. TBS partnered with Mitsui Fudosan for large-scale redevelopment in the Akasaka area.[4]: 657  The urban redevelopment project, Akasaka Sacas, opened in 2008 and includes facilities such as the 39-story Akasaka Biz Tower. This real estate venture became a significant source of income for TBS.

However, due to sluggish ratings during this period, the real estate business, often referred to as "Akasaka Real Estate" by outsiders, became the main source of profit for TBS. Besides real estate, TBS’s investment income from companies like Tokyo Power Technology also contributed significantly to its revenue. In 2019, TBS TV accounted for about 59% of the TBS Group's overall turnover, but its profit accounted for only about 20%, indicating that the profitability of TBS TV was lower than the group average. This trend persisted.

TBS has actively invested in the Internet field in recent years. In 2015, TBS and four other core broadcasters jointly launched the Internet TV service TVer, allowing viewers to watch some TBS programs online for free. In 2018, TBS, TV Tokyo, Nihon Keizai Shimbun, and WOWOW started offering the premium Internet TV service Paravi (now known as U-Next). In September 2021, TBS announced plans to simultaneously broadcast TV programs online before April 2022. Starting April 11, 2022, TBS began officially broadcasting evening programs on TVer.

In February 2023, TBS Holdings and TV Tokyo announced their merger with U-Next, six years after the launch of Paravi. The merger was approved in July 2023. On the 70th anniversary of TBS's launch, it was announced that a new late-night programming block called "DraMonday☆Night" would be introduced, featuring Profiler: Murder Mysteries, based on a French police procedural drama that aired on TF1.

Broadcasting

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Analog

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JORX-TV (former callsign: JOKR-TV) - TBS Television (TBS Terebijōn TBSテレビジョン (former Japanese name: 東京放送 Tōkyō Hōsō))

Islands in Tokyo
  • Niijima - Channel 56
Ibaraki Prefecture
  • Mito - Channel 40
Tochigi Prefecture
  • Utsunomiya - Channel 55
Gunma Prefecture
  • Maebashi - Channel 56
  • Kiryu - Channel 55
Saitama Prefecture
  • Chichibu - Channel 18
Chiba Prefecture
  • Chiba City - Channel 55
  • Urayasu - Channel 56
Kanagawa Prefecture
  • Yokohama-minato - Channel 56
  • Yokosuka-Kurihama - Channel 39
  • Hiratsuka - Channel 37
  • Odawara - Channel 56

Digital

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JORX-DTV - TBS Digital Television (TBS Dejitaru Terebijōn TBSデジタルテレビジョン)

  • Remote Controller ID 6
  • Tokyo Skytree - Channel 22
  • Mito - Channel 15
  • Utsunomiya - Channel 15
  • Maebashi - Channel 36
  • Hiratsuka - Channel 22

Networks

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TBS programming is also broadcast on Japan News Network (JNN) affiliate stations nationwide.

Coverage

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Current

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Broadcasting rights

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Football (soccer)

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Volleyball

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Golf

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Multi-sport events

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Announcers

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Programs

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Below is a selection of the many programs broadcast by the network.

Sporting competitions

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Variety and music

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Dramas and TV series

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  • Sunday Theater (日曜劇場, since 1956)
  • DraMonday☆Night (ドラマンデー☆ナイト, since 2024)
  • Tuesday Drama (火曜ドラマ, since 2014)
  • Drama Stream (ドラマストリーム, since 2022)
  • Dramaism (ドラマイズム, since 2016)
  • Friday Prime Drama (金曜ドラマ, since 1972)

Information and news programs

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  • The Time, (THE TIME,, morning news, since 2021)
  • Hiruobi (ひるおび, daytime news, since 2009)
  • N-Studio (Nスタ, afternoon and evening news, since 1958)
  • News23 (news23, late-night news, since 1959)
  • TBS NEWS DIG (TBS NEWS DIG, 24-hour news channel, since 1999)
  • Mino Monta no Asa Zuba! [ja] (みのもんたの朝ズバッ!!)[20]
  • The World Heritage (THE 世界遺産)[21]

Special TV shows

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Anime programming

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See also

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  • Hobankyo – organization based in Japan that enforces TBS copyright issues.
  • TBS video controversy – alleged cause of the Sakamoto family murder incident

Notes

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  1. ^ Japanese: 株式会社TBSテレビ, Hepburn: Kabushiki gaisha TBS Terebi

References

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  1. ^ JIJI (24 May 2017). "Six media firms, led by TBS, to start joint online video service". Japan Times. Archived from the original on June 4, 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  2. ^ Mark Schilling (24 May 2017). "Japan's TBS and Nikkei Head Video Platform Launch". Variety. Archived from the original on May 29, 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  3. ^ "Six Japanese media companies to start joint online video service". Archived from the original on October 7, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx TBS50年史 [Tokyo Broadcasting's 50 Years] (in Japanese). Tōkyō Broadcasting System. 2002. OCLC 835030477.
  5. ^ "Hit Game Show Pulled From TV — But It's Still Streaming for Free". Pop Culture. May 13, 2023. Archived from the original on May 26, 2024. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  6. ^ "Formato de Ninja Warrior se dirige a América Latina". TV Latina (in Spanish). 19 May 2024. Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved 25 May 2024.
  7. ^ "Kunoichi Highlight". TBS Kunoichi official page (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved 26 May 2024.
  8. ^ "Kunoichi". Japan Sauce. 3 June 2018. Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved 26 May 2024.
  9. ^ Dator, James (April 15, 2024). "Japan's wild new TV show is real life 'Tony Hawk Pro Skater'". SBNATION. Archived from the original on April 15, 2024.
  10. ^ "『金スマ』突如番組名変更 TBS「笑顔があふれる番組に…」". Oricon (in Japanese). 12 February 2016. Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved 26 May 2024.
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