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RTL II

RTL II
RTL-II-Logo ab Sommer 2009.svg
Launched 6 March 1993
Owned by RTL Group S.A., Heinrich Bauer Verlag KG, Tele München Fernseh GmbH & Co. Medienbeteiligung KG, Burda GmbH
Picture format 16:9 576i (SDTV)
1080i (HDTV)
Audience share 3.7% (2015, dwdl.de)
Country Germany
Broadcast area National
also distributed in:
Austria
Switzerland
Southeast Europe
Eastern Europe
Headquarters Grünwald, Germany
Formerly called RTL 2 (1993-1999)
Website rtl2.de
Availability
Terrestrial
DVB-T Various; region dependent
Satellite
Astra 1L (19.2°E) 12187.50 Horizontal 89 (DVB-S)
12226.50 Horizontal 91 (RTL II Austria; DVB-S)
Astra 1M (19.2°E) 10832.25 Horizontal 57 (RTL II HD; encrypted DVB-S2)
Hot Bird 13A (13°E) 11054.00 Horizontal 127 (RTL II Switzerland; DVB-S)
Cable
Kabel Deutschland
(Germany)
Yes (part of basic package)
A1 TV
(Austria)
Channel 12 (all packages)
Naxoo
(Switzerland)
Channel 168
UPC Cablecom
(Switzerland)
Channel 12
IPTV
Hansenet Yes
T-Online Yes
Telekom Austria Yes

RTL II is a commercial, privately owned, general-interest German television channel. In 2014 the channel had a market share of 3,9% among viewers aged over three.

RTL II started broadcasting on 6 March 1993 at 6:09 a.m. with the movie Ein reizender Fratz.

The channel is operated by RTL2 Fernsehen GmbH & Co. KG., which was founded in 1992 and employs approximately 210 people. Since June 2014 its Managing Director has been Andreas Bartl. The company was originally headquartered in Cologne, but is now run in the municipality of Grünwald, to the south of Munich; only its news department is still based in Cologne, in order to share the production facilities of RTL news. The company is jointly owned by: RTL Group S.A. (35.9%),Heinrich Bauer Verlag KG (31.5%), Tele München Fernseh GmbH & Co. Medienbeteiligung KG (31.5%, of which the and The Walt Disney Company hold 50% each). and Burda GmbH (1.1%)

Programming pillars are daily episodes of the local Big Brother in access prime-time, and a prime-time lineup consisting mostly of "docu-soaps", movies and licensed series such as 24 and Stargate SG-1. Recent efforts to move further towards quality programming with science magazines and documentaries have met with an indifferent audience response.

The channel's prime-time newscast RTL II News is frequently criticized for its selection of news stories, which are seen to cater to a young audience; for example, it has been known to put a CD release or the launch of a new gaming console in the second headline slot directly after the day's top event. This unconventional approach has brought RTL II's broadcasting licence into jeopardy at least once, as a German commercial broadcaster has to feature minimum amounts of serious informational and cultural programming to be allowed a full channel licence. In addition to its own newscast formats (RTL II News, RTL II Spezial. Das Magazin and Das Nachrichtenjournal), the channel commissions independent producers to create its own productions, which it airs in the afternoons.


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Wikipedia

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