Nauru Television (NTV), established on 31 May 1991, is the government-owned, non-commercial sole television company in the Nauru. It is operated by the Nauru Broadcasting Service and overseen by the Nauru Media Bureau.
Original plans to levy a fee per household were dropped, and NTV is funded by the government.
By the early 2000s, NTV exclusively broadcast content provided by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, due to the country's dire economic situation and NTV's lack of a functioning camera. Its capacities were subsequently expanded with the assistance of AusAID. "Nauru makes media network from scratch", The Australian, 15 February 2010 In 2002, UNESCO reported that NTV's "only locally produced programme is a popular daily half-hour news bulletin produced by NTV personnel in the S-VHS format. Local news items are shot utilising three field cameras which double as studio fixtures for post production."
NTV broadcasts both in Nauruan language and in English language. "Nauru", L'aménagement linguistique dans le monde, Trésor de la langue française au Québec, Université Laval
Television broadcasting in Nauru was inaugurated on 31 May 1991, with regular transmissions beginning the following day, 1 June 1991. Covering the majority of the island, the initial duration of broadcasts was approximately five hours per day.
NTV operated as a subscription service in its early years, charging AU$500, AU$80-100 for the installation of an antenna and AU$50 for a monthly reception fee. In 1993, NTV it had 219 subscribers, with the aim of selling 500 decoders to achieve self-sufficiency.
Initially, Television New Zealand were contracted to provide both technical facilities and basic operational training to local employees. Transmitted via satellite or through the regular transportation of videotapes from New Zealand, content consisted of American and New Zealand television programmes. This arrangement continued until 1995 when costs dictated a shift to alternative sources of programme content, specifically that bought in from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
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History
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