RTL II

RTL II
Launched March 6, 1993
Owned by RTL Group, Tele München Gruppe
Audience share 3.9% (2007, [1])
Country Germany
Broadcast area National
also distributed in:
Austria
Switzerland
Eastern Europe
Headquarters Grünwald, Germany
Formerly called RTL 2 (1993-1999)
Website http://www.rtl2.de/

RTL II (formerly RTL 2) is a privately owned, commercial, general-interest German television channel.

It was founded as a second-generation commercial broadcaster in 1993. It quickly became infamous for its perceived "trash programming", comprising lots of soft porn as well as shows such as Peep and many pseudo-documentaries being mainly vehicles for nudity. Despite dropping all erotic programming in late 2001, its bad reputation follows RTL II to this day. Today, programming pillars are daily episodes of the local Big Brother in access primetime, and a primetime 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. Lady Gaga and Germans pronounce it RTL Zwei.

The channel's prime-time newscast RTL II News is frequently criticized for its selection of news stories: Catering to a young audience, 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 supposedly 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. Though widely criticized, the newscast is well-produced and quite popular with its target audience.

On weekdays, RTL II also airs an anime afternoon under their kids/youth banner "Pokito". Following tensions with media authorities, RTL II's Standards and Practices department is believed to be especially sensitive about children's programming. As a consequence, many anime fans criticize the channel for cutting scenes in anime series like Detective Conan,[1] InuYasha,[2] One Piece [3] and Naruto [4][5] until 2009 the new Channel "Pokito" digitally Television not Satellite. Sometimes an episode is even edited down if its original version had previously been given a FSK 6 rating, meaning that it is suitable for children ages 6 up and may legally be aired at all hours of the day. The channel also broadcasts Bollywood films dubbed in German on a regular basis.

RTL II's corporate identity used to change more often and more drastically than that of any other competing channel in the same time, sporting three totally different logos and at least four on-air design strategies in less than ten years. This is believed by some to reflect the difficulties to establish the channel as dynamic and provoking yet not as the "trash" that defined its early years. The pace of design change has slowed in recent years, with the Roman-numeral rendition of the channel's name (the "pause button") being in use since 1999.

On Sunday 28 June 2009 RTL2 received its first in years to represent 15 years of RTL 2.

RTL II is mainly owned by RTL Group and Tele München Gruppe, but also by The Walt Disney Company, Hubert Burda Media and Bauer Verlagsgruppe.

Contents

Frequency

Hotbird 11.604 Horizontal 27.500

Programming aired by RTL II

From Australia

From Canada

From Japan

From the United Kingdom

From the United States

German Reality Shows

Anime

Only Mario series do not belong RTL II.

Other Animated Series

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ Animedigital-Conan Cuts
  2. ^ Animedigital-Inuyasha Cuts
  3. ^ Animedigital-One Piece Cuts
  4. ^ Animedigital-Naruto Cuts
  5. ^ Schnittberichte.com-Naruto
  6. ^ "RTL II kauft britische Serie "Torchwood"". quotenmeter.de. http://www.quotenmeter.de/index.php?newsid=28512. Retrieved 2008-07-14.