TV3+ Norway (formerly V4, Viasat4, ZTV Norway and Viasat Plus) is a television channel broadcasting to Norway owned by the Viaplay Group. The channel was launched on 8. September 2007 replacing ZTV Norway on cable, satellite and terrestrial in preparation for the launch of the digital terrestrial television network in Norway which launched in 2009 and after ZTV was declining in viewers. Viasat 4 took over all of TV3 football segments which have been broadcast there since 1988
Country | United Kingdom |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Norway |
Ownership | |
Owner | Viaplay Group |
Sister channels | TV3, TV6, V Film, V Series, V Sport |
History | |
Launched | 8. September 2007, 18:00 |
Replaced | ZTV |
Former names | Viasat Plus (2000-2001), ZTV Norway (2002-2007), Viasat 4 (2007-2020), V4 (2020-2022) |
Links | |
Website | Official website |
Availability | |
Terrestrial | |
RiksTV | Channel 9 |
The channel opened with the European Championship qualifying match between Moldova and Norway. Its main focus is on entertainment, sports and documentaries, transmitting series such as Most Shocking, Stargate Atlantis, The 4400, Star Trek, The Simpsons, Family Guy, The Riches, UEFA Champions League matches and Futurama, with short news bulletins from P4 on weeknights. Viasat 4 also transmits several comedy series, such as Cheers, Married... with Children and 8 Simple Rules.
TV3+ was originally to be named TV4, but after complaints from Swedish TV4 AB at the Patent Office, the channel was renamed 4 before becoming Viasat 4.[1]
The original intention was that the channel would broadcast free-to-air via RiksTV. The operator of the commercial muxes was, however, intending to broadcast pay television, so the channel would be a part of the encrypted RiksTV package.
In 2010, Viasat 4 showed 16 World Cup matches from South Africa, including the bronze final between Germany and Uruguay. Viasat obtained the rights from NRK.
The name of the channel was changed from Viasat 4 to V4 in June 2020 as part of an overall rebranding of Viasat TV channels, and to TV3+ Norway in August 2022[2] to emphasize its connection with TV3 Norway.
Programming
editReferences
edit- ^ Oddvin Aune (February 8, 2007). "TV4 blir 4". Kampanje. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-06-16.
- ^ NTB (June 15, 2022). "Premier League-satsingen: Viaplay lover stjerner på åpen kanal". Dagsavisen. Archived from the original on 2022-06-16. Retrieved 2022-10-11.