Jump to content

Polsat: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Stevebay (talk | contribs)
m adding crucial characteristic of early Polsat
 
(187 intermediate revisions by 93 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Polish commercial television channel}}
{{Infobox TV channel
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2024}}
|name = Polsat
{{Infobox television channel
|logofile = Logo Polsat.svg
|New Logo =POLSAT
| name = Polsat
| logo = Polsat 2021 gradient.svg
|logosize = 200px
| logo_size = 150px
|launch = {{start date and age|1992|12|5|df=y}}
| logo_caption = Logo used since 30 August 2021
|owner = [[Telewizja Polsat]]
| launch_date = {{start date and age|1992|12|5|df=y}}
|slogan = ''Włącz emocje'' (Turn on the emotions)
| owner = [[Telewizja Polsat|Grupa Polsat Plus]]
|country = [[Poland]]
| sister_channels = [[TV4 (Poland)|TV4]]<br />[[TV6 (Poland)|TV6]]<br />[[Polsat Café]]<br />[[Polsat Play]]<br />[[Polsat Doku]]<br />[[Polsat News]]<br />[[Polsat News 2]]<br />[[:pl:Polsat News Polityka|Polsat News Polityka]]<br />[[:pl:Polsat Music|Polsat Music]]<br />[[Polsat Film]]<br />Polsat Film 2<br />[[Polsat Seriale]]
|language = Polish
| country = [[Poland]]
|picture format = [[16:9]] [[576i]] ([[SDTV]])<br>[[1080i]] ([[HDTV]])
| language = Polish
|former names = PolSat (with a capital "S")<small>(1992-1993)</small>
| picture_format = [[1080i]] [[HDTV]]<br />{{small|(downscaled to [[16:9]] [[576i]] for the [[SDTV]] feed)}}
|share = 11.45%
| closed_date =
|share as of = 2016
| replaced_by =
|share source = [[Nielsen Media Research|Nielsen]]<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.wirtualnemedia.pl/artykul/krotszy-czas-ogladania-telewizji-w-2016-roku-polsat-wyprzedzil-tvp1-raport|title=Krótszy czas oglądania telewizji w 2016 roku. Polsat wyprzedził TVP1 (raport)|date=3 January 2017|publisher=wirtualnemedia.pl}}</ref>
| former_names = PolSat (with a capital "S") <small>(1992–1994)</small>
|web = [http://www.polsat.pl www.polsat.pl]
| headquarters = ul. Ostrobramska 77<br />04-175 [[Warsaw]]
|terr serv 1 = [[Television in Poland#Terrestrial|Polish Digital]]
| website ={{url|polsat.pl}}
|terr chan 1 = [[Multiplex (TV)|MUX]] 2→1 (SD)→(HD) (Channel 4)
| terr_serv_1 = [[Television in Poland#Terrestrial|Digital terrestrial television]]
|sat serv 1 = [[Cyfrowy Polsat]]
| terr_chan_1 = Channel 4
|sat chan 1 = Channel 1, Channel 111 (HD)<br>Channel 500 (SD)
|sat serv 2 = [[nc+]]
| terr_serv_2 = [[UPC Poland|UPC]]
|sat chan 2 = Channel 7 (HD)<br>Channel 215 (SD)
| terr_chan_2 = Channel 5
| terr_serv_3 = [[Polsat Box]]
|sat serv 3 = [[Telekomunikacja Polska|Orange TV]]
|sat chan 3 = Channel 4 (SD)<br>Channel 7 (HD)
| terr_chan_3 = Channel 1
|cable serv 1 = [[UPC Poland]]
| terr_serv_4 = [[Orange Polska|Orange]]
|cable chan 1 = Channel 5 (HD)
| terr_chan_4 = Channel 5
|cable serv 2 = Vectra
| terr_serv_5 = Vectra
|cable chan 2 = Channel 106 (SD)<br>Channel 116 (HD)
| terr_chan_5 = Channel 105
}}
}}


[[File:Polsat TV (First independent newscast in Central Europe).jpg|thumb|alt=The journalists at the Polsat TV newsroom began creating, in 1993, the groundbreaking, pioneering independent news service in Central and Eastern Europe following the collapse of communism (on the photo Foreign Desk editors Pawel Maciag and Marta Bark).|xThe journalists at the Polsat TV newsroom began creating, in 1993, the groundbreaking, pioneering independent news service in Central and Eastern Europe following the collapse of communism (on the photo Foreign Desk editors Pawel Maciag and Marta Bark).]]
'''Polsat''' is one of [[Poland]]'s biggest [[television channel]]s, founded on 5 December 1992 and owned by [[Zygmunt Solorz-Żak]]. It was the most watched television channel in Poland in 2016 with a market share of 11.45%.


'''Polsat''' is a Polish [[free-to-air]] [[television channel]] that was launched on 5 December 1992 by [[Zygmunt Solorz-Żak]]. {{As of|2019}}, it is the most watched television channel in Poland with a market share of 11.30%
Polsat belongs to the Polsat Group ([[Warsaw Stock Exchange|WSE]]: [http://www.gpw.pl/zrodla/gpw/zlote/eng/cyfr_polsat.html CPS]), which also owns other channels.

[[File:Polsat_3.jpg|right|thumb|301x301px|Polsat building in Warsaw.]]
Polsat belongs to [[Telewizja Polsat|Grupa Polsat Plus]] ([[Warsaw Stock Exchange|WSE]]: CPS), which also owns other channels.

In the wake of communism's downfall, Polsat launched in 1993 the first independent television news service in Central and Eastern Europe, revolutionizing the media landscape.

On 27 February 2019, the longest-running graphic design (2006–2019) was changed to a new one, but the station's logo remained virtually unchanged until 2021 when the logo was changed again as part of a major overhaul; however, the sun concept of the logo has remained.

A high-definition simulcast feed of Polsat HD was available from 1 September 2009 until 2021.{{Citation needed|date=November 2024}}


== History ==
== History ==
===1992–1994===
Polsat commenced transmissions on 5 December 1992. The channel broadcast via satellite. To circumvent licensing issues, it legally broadcast from [[Hilversum]] and imported programming had to come by plane.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1993/11/14/weekinreview/the-world-poland-exercises-the-right-to-channel-surf.html|title=Poland exercices the right to channel surf|language=English|access-date=2017-12-05}}</ref> In 1993, the channel got a legal license to operate terrestrially in Poland.
When Polsat was in its planning stages, the network was practically unheard of. Network representative Piotr Nurowski together with its first head of feature films Oskar Sobański, entered the editing team of the ''Film'' magazine on 12 November 1992, with Sobański asking to its staff for a position in the new network. The following day, one of the initial members of the staff sent a package of movies for the channel, to begin planning for the 5 December launch.<ref name=WSS>{{cite web | url=https://www.polsat.pl/news/2022-12-08/wszystkie-odcinki-w-strone-slonca-30-lat-polsatu-wideo/ | title=Wszystkie odcinki "W stronę słońca. 30 lat Polsatu". Wideo! }}</ref> Alongside Zygmunt Solorz, the co-founders were Andrzej Rusko, Józef Birka, Aleksander Myszka, Wiesław Walendziak, Heronim Ruta and the deceased Piotr Nurowski. A part of them still work at Grupą Polsat Plus.<ref name=WSS/>


Polsat began test transmissions on 1 December 1992, and started regular broadcasts on 5 December 1992 at 16:30 [[Central European Time|CET]] via the [[Eutelsat]] II-F3 satellite. The first programme broadcast by Polsat was the Polish animated series {{ill|Wędrówki Pyzy|pl}}. It originally broadcast from a studio in [[Hilversum]], the [[Netherlands]], and imported programming had to come by plane (over 1,000km between the two countries) to prevent licensing issues.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1993/11/14/weekinreview/the-world-poland-exercises-the-right-to-channel-surf.html|title=Poland exercises the right to channel surf|website=[[The New York Times]]|access-date=5 December 2017}}</ref> Its initial broadcasting reach was very small at only 20% of the population, but was considered to be attractive for advertisers, as most of its viewers were found in larger cities, had a significant overrepresentation of under-50s and had higher incomes.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.polsat.com.pl/historia.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000521092407fw_/http://www.polsat.com.pl/historia.html |archive-date=21 May 2000|title=Polsat wita na stronach WWW! |website=Polsat|access-date=30 August 2021|language=pl}}</ref> The owner and main founder of the channel, Zygmunt Solorz-Żak, originally planned that after the regulation of radio and television regulations, the television headquarters would be located in Wrocław, but ultimately they were located in Warsaw.
== Polsat HD ==
The HD version of Polsat started in September 2009, and shares the same schedule with Polsat.


1993 was marked by firsts, the first large-scale talk show on a private television channel (''Na każdy temat'') premiered in October of that year, which was made popular by the introductory phrase "a helicopter has landed at the Polsat skyscraper", even though Polsat wouldn't have an actual skyscraper as its facilities until 2000. The talk show was, as the name suggested, about every topic, including taboo topics for the time. On 5 October 1993, Polsat gained a license from the National Broadcasting Council to broadcast terrestrially, as the channel was concerned about making money on satellite broadcasting alone.<ref name=WSS/>
== Programming ==
Among its shows are a variety of Polish and [[United States|American]] dramas & news.


A group of nine young journalists at the Polsat TV newsroom at Aleja Stanów Zjednoczonych 53 initiated the first independent news program in Central and Eastern Europe during the summer of 1993, airing live every evening as "Informacje." The core team featured journalists such as [[Jarosław Sellin]], Pawel Maciag, Tadeusz Święchowicz, and Adam Pawłowicz. Pawel Maciag became the first-ever United States correspondent for Polsat TV based in New York City in 1999. As an eyewitness, he covered the tragic events of 9/11 from Ground Zero in New York. <ref>{{cite web|title=w sierpniu 1993 r. na antenie Polsatu pojawiły się „Informacje” – pierwszy w dziejach polskiej telewizji niezależny serwis informacyjny |url= https://www.polsatmedia.pl/Aktualnosc_6786/Od-4-Godzin-Dziennie-Do-Najwiekszej-Stacji-Telewizyjnej-W-Polsce-Czyli-25-Lat-Telewizji-Polsat_1609274/index.html |website=Polsat|access-date=1 January 2025 |date=31 January 1994|language=pl}}</ref> <ref>{{cite web|title=September 11 attacks |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/September-11-attacks |website=Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.|access-date=1 January 2025|date=31 December 2024}}</ref>
=== Entertainment ===
* ''[[Idol (Polish TV series)|Idol]]'' - Polish version of [[Pop Idol]] (2002-2005 and since 2017, 5 seasons)
* ''[[Taniec z Gwiazdami|Dancing with the stars. Taniec z gwiazdami]]'' <small>(from season 14th)</small> – Polish version of [[Dancing with the stars]] (since 2014, 8 seasons) <small>Earlier in [[TVN (Poland)|TVN]].</small>
* ''[[Twoja twarz brzmi znajomo]]'' – Polish version of [[Your Face Sounds Familiar]] (since 2014, 10 seasons)
* ''The Brain. Genialny umysł'' - Polish version of [[The Brain (game show)|The Brain]] (since 2017, 2 seasons)
* ''Supermodelka Plus Size'' - Polish version of [[:de:Curvy Supermodel|Curvy Supermodel]] (since 2017, 1 season)
* ''[[Wyspa przetrwania: Fidżi|Wyspa przetrwania]]'' - Polish version of [[Koh-Lanta]] (since 2017, 1 season)
* ''Nasz nowy dom'' (since 2013, 9 seasons)
* ''Top Chef'' – Polish version of [[Top Chef]] (since 2013, 7 seasons)
* ''Hell's Kitchen. Piekielna Kuchnia'' – Polish version of [[Hell's Kitchen (UK TV series)|Hell's Kitchen]] (since 2014, 6 seasons)
* ''My3'' – Polish version of Dutch TV series ''[[Iedereen K3]]'' (since 2017, 3 seasons)


In late January 1994, talks emerged of a possible buying by News International, owned by Australian-American media tycoon [[Rupert Murdoch]], shortly after the network was awarded the right to broadcast terrestrially nationwide. No final decisions had been taken under the grounds that Murdoch was not a legal member of the consortium. Had Polsat accepted, Murdoch would take up to 33% of the shares. Polsat had said that its bid for the national license were under the grounds that its license was a "purely Polish bid with no foreign links".<ref>{{cite news |title=News International confirms talks to join Polish TV group |url=https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/digitised/article/biztimes19940131-1.2.47.7 |access-date=9 February 2024 |work=The Business Times |date=31 January 1994}}</ref>
=== Information/Talk show/Reporters ===
* ''[[Wydarzenia]]'' (''Events'') – news (since 2004)
* ''Nowy dzień'' (''New Day'') - daily morning news program of [[Polsat News]], also broadcast in Polsat from 6:00 to 9:00 every day (since 2008)
* ''Graffiti'' - morning political talk show of [[Polsat News]] (in Polsat: 1994-2004, 2008 and since 2018)
* ''Interwencja'' (''Intervention'') – reporters magazine (since 2003)
* ''Państwo w państwie'' (''State within a state'') – also in [[Polsat News]] (since 2011)


=== TV series ===
===1994–2000===
In 1994, Polsat won the bid for terrestrial television broadcasting, surpassing local and international competitors, and in the summer of that year, announced that a new schedule was to be introduced that autumn, with the aim of becoming "better, more attractive and perfect", in the words of director of programming Bogusław Chrabota.<ref name=WSS/>
* ''[[Pierwsza miłość]]'' (''First love'') – TV soap; which has been redubbed as ''[[Soupy Norman]]'' in Ireland (since 2004, 13 seasons, 2517 episodes)
* ''[[Friends (Polish TV series)|Przyjaciółki]]'' (''Friends'' [women]) – drama series (since 2012, 10 seasons, 122 episodes)
* ''W rytmie serca'' - drama series (since 2017, 12 episodes)
* ''Ślad'' (''Trace'') - crime drama series; Polish version of Russian series ''[[Trace (TV series)|Sled]]'' (since 2018)
* ''[[Świat według Kiepskich]]'' (''The World According to the Kiepscy'') – sitcom (since 1999, 30 seasons, 528 episodes)
* ''Malanowski i partnerzy'' (''Malanowski & partners'') – docudrama crime series (since 2009, 807 episodes)
* ''Trudne sprawy'' (''Difficult issues'') – docudrama series (since 2011, 631 episodes)
* ''Dlaczego ja?'' (''Why me?'') (since 2010, 677 episodes)
* ''Pamiętniki z wakacji'' (''Holiday diaries'') (2011–2013, 2016, 61 episodes)
* ''Zdrady'' (''Infidelities'') – docudrama series (since 2013, 87 episodes)


Polsat started buying in more content from more profitable international production companies, whereas TVP responded by changing its primetime schedule to be more competitive. On 17 March 1994, [[Gazeta Wyborcza]] said that, thanks to Polsat's influence, was going to air movies in the 8&nbsp;pm timeslot after the main news from 1 April.<ref name=WSS/> It played a pivotal role in the dissemination of [[disco polo]] music thanks to ''Disco Relax'', leading to the skyrocketing popularity of notable artists of the genre.<ref name=WSS/>
=== Sports ===
* ''[[UEFA European Championship qualifying|European Qualifiers]]'' (for the [[UEFA Euro 2016]] and [[2018 FIFA World Cup]]) - matches of the [[Polish national football team]]
* ''[[Polish Cup]] in football'' (only finals)
* ''[[FIVB Volleyball World League]]
* ''[[2017 Men's European Volleyball Championship]]
* ''[[2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship]]
* ''[[Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki]]''


As the decade continued, Polsat started attracting more and more successes – both national and international. Tadeusz Drozda gained a satirical program of his own ({{lang|pl|Dyżurny satiryk Pracy}}) in 1995, with 350 episodes broadcast in a period of nearly six years. There was also the game show {{lang|pl|Kalambury}}, where two teams guessed phrases and words based on mimics alone. The channel's first homemade TV series premiered in 1995, {{lang|pl|Próby domowe}}, while {{lang|pl|Informacje}} gained a media analysis spin-off called {{lang|pl|Sztuka Informacji}}, renamed ''Boomerang'' in 1998. The channel also premiered ''[[Knight Rider (1982 TV series)|Knight Rider]]'' and ''[[Walker, Texas Ranger]]'', both shows that became national hits. Also in 1995, the channel televised its first [[Miss Polonia]] pageant.<ref name=WSS/>
== Schedule (spring 2019) ==


Polsat started a foundation in 1996 to help people in difficult situations. The channel became among the first in Poland to use virtual studios and started its own membership club ({{lang|pl|Klub Polsatu}}) in September of that year.<ref name=WSS/> From March 1997 it started airing the ''MegaHit'' slot for premiere movies on Mondays, also in the year the game show {{lang|pl|Piramida}}, the crime prevention program {{lang|pl|Telewizyjny Biuro Śledcze}} and {{lang|pl|Przytul mnie}} premiered.<ref name=WSS/>
=== Primetime schedule ===
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;margin-right:0;text-align:center"
! colspan="2" width="8%" |PM
! width="50px" |8:00
! width="50px" |8:15
! width="50px" |8:30
! width="50px" |8:45
! width="50px" |9:00
! width="50px" |9:15
! width="50px" |9:30
! width="50px" |9:45
! width="50px" |10:00
! width="50px" |10:15
! width="50px" |10:30
! width="50px" |10:45
! width="50px" |11:00
! width="50px" |11:15
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="1" |Monday
| colspan="9" rowspan="2" bgcolor="" |'''MEGA HIT''' <small>(movie)</small>
| colspan="4" |''Ślad''
|
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="1" |Tuesday
| colspan="4" |''Ślad''
|
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="1" |Wednesday
| colspan="2" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |''[[Świat według Kiepskich]]''
| colspan="6" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |''[[All Together Now (UK TV series)#International versions|Śpiewajmy razem. All Together Now]]''
| colspan="4" |''Ślad''
| colspan="2" |
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="1" |Thursday
| colspan="4" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |''[[Extreme Makeover: Home Edition#International versions|Nasz nowy dom]]''
| colspan="5" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |''[[Friends (Polish TV series)|Przyjaciółki]]''
| colspan="4" |''Ślad''
|
|-
! colspan="2" |Friday
| colspan="10" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |[[Dancing with the Stars: Taniec z gwiazdami|Dancing with the Stars. Taniec z gwiazdami]]
| colspan="4" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |<small>movie</small>
|-
! colspan="2" |Saturday
| colspan="8" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |<small>movie</small>
| colspan="6" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |''[[Twoja twarz brzmi znajomo]]''
|-
! colspan="2" |Sunday
| colspan="4" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |''W rytmie serca''
| colspan="8" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |''Kabaret na żywo''
| colspan="2" rowspan="1" bgcolor="" |
|-
|}


A contract was signed with executives of [[20th Century Studios|20th Century Fox]] in Los Angeles in June 1998, enabling Polsat to become the first television station in the world to air [[Titanic (1997 film)|''Titanic'']], in a contract worth US$500,000. In September, {{lang|pl|Tok Szok}} moved from [[TVP2]] to Polsat. The channel's first Polish sitcom, ''[[Miodowe Lata]]'', also premiered that year.<ref name=WSS/> 1999 was marked by premieres of two successful local series, ''[[Rodzina zastępcza]]'' and [[The Lousy World]].<ref name=WSS/>
=== Early fringe schedule ===
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;margin-right:0;text-align:center"
! colspan="2" width="8%" |PM
! width="50px" |5:00
! width="50px" |5:15
! width="50px" |5:30
! width="50px" |5:45
! width="50px" |6:00
! width="50px" |6:15
! width="50px" |6:30
! width="50px" |6:50
! width="50px" |7:00
! width="50px" |7:15
! width="50px" |7:30
! width="50px" |7:45
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="1" |Monday
| colspan="4" rowspan="5" |''Gliniarze''
| colspan="3" rowspan="5" |''[[Pierwsza miłość]]''
| colspan="2" rowspan="7" |''[[Wydarzenia]]''
| colspan="1" rowspan="7" |<small>sports news and weather forecast</small>
| colspan="2" rowspan="6" |''[[Świat według Kiepskich]]'' <small>(R)</small>
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="1" |Tuesday
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="1" |Wednesday
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="1" |Thursday
|-
! colspan="2" |Friday
|-
! colspan="2" |Saturday
| colspan="3" rowspan="1" |''Kabaret na żywo'' <small>(R)</small>
| colspan="2" rowspan="1" |''Chłopaki do wzięcia''
| colspan="2" rowspan="1" |''Chłopaki do wzięcia''
|-
! colspan="2" |Sunday
| colspan="3" rowspan="1" |''[[Twoja twarz brzmi znajomo]]'' <small>(R)</small>
| colspan="4" rowspan="1" |''[[Extreme Makeover: Home Edition#International versions|Nasz nowy dom]]'' <small>(R)</small>
| colspan="2" rowspan="1" |''Państwo w państwie''
|-
|}


===2000–2006===
== Previously on Polsat ==
Polsat moved to its current premises, an actual skyscraper built by Wojciech Kluk, in 2000. In May that year, ''[[Muñeca brava]]'' aired on the channel, leading to a successful visit of lead actress [[Natalia Oreiro]] to Warsaw, attracting fans to receive an autograph. In September it premiered an adaptation of the Danish Hugo format and the sitcom {{lang|pl|Adam i Ewa}}, with 187 episodes. On 29 December 2000 it broadcast ''[[Home Alone]]'' for the first time, becoming a cult classic in Poland in the coming years.<ref name=WSS/>


In March 2001, the network premiered {{lang|pl|Dwa światy}} (Two Worlds), among the first Polish reality shows. Polsat moved to its current facility in 2002, at a skyscraper with a heliport on top, a dream from {{lang|pl|Na każdy temat}} that came into fruition. ''Idol'', the local adaptation of ''Pop Idol'', premiered in March. The channel started its own music festival in Sopot ({{lang|pl|TOPtrendy}}) in 2003.<ref name=WSS/>
=== Entertainment ===
* ''Idź na całość –'' Polish version of ''[[Let's Make a Deal]]'' (1997–2001)
* ''[[Jak oni śpiewają]] –'' Polish version of ''[[Soapstar Superstar]]'' (2007–2009, 6 seasons)
* ''Fabryka gwiazd'', the Polish version of ''[[Star Academy]]'' (2008, 1 season)
* ''[[Gwiezdny cyrk]]'' – Polish version of [[Celebrity Circus (U.S. TV series)|Celebrity Circus]] (2008, 1 season)
* ''Moment prawdy –'' Polish version of ''[[The Moment of Truth (American game show)|The Moment of Truth]]'' (2009–2010, 2 seasons)
* ''Światowe Rekordy Guinnessa'' (2009–2011)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://biurorekordow.pl/swiatowe-rekordy-guinnessa-2011-polsat-sezon-3-odcinek-1/|title=Biuro Rekordów|language=Polish|access-date=2015-10-08}}</ref>
* ''Stand up. Zabij mnie śmiechem'' (2010, 1 season)
* ''Chciwość czyli Żądza Pieniądza'' (2001, 1 season) – Polish version of [[Greed (game show)|Greed]]
* ''[[Must Be the Music (Polish TV series)|Must Be the Music. Tylko muzyka]]'' – Polish version of [[Must Be the Music]] (2011 — 2016, 11 seasons)
* ''[[Got to Dance|Got to Dance. Tylko taniec]]'' – Polish version of [[Got to Dance]] (2012–2014, 4 seasons)
* ''SuperDzieciak'' – Polish version of Super Kids (2015, 1 season)
* ''Życiowa szansa'' – Polish version of ''[[It's Your Chance of a Lifetime]]'' (2000–2002)
* ''[[Rosyjska ruletka]] –'' Polish version of ''[[Russian Roulette (game show)|Russian Roulette]]'' (2002–2004)
* ''[[Awantura o kasę]]'' (2002–2005)
* ''[[Grasz czy nie grasz]] –'' Polish version of ''[[Deal or no deal]]'' (2005–2007)
* ''[[Gra W Ciemno|Gra w ciemno]]'' (2005–2007)
* ''[[Quizmania]]'', a Polish version of the English Participation TV show


On October 11, 2004, {{lang|pl|Informacje}} was replaced by the current {{lang|pl|Wydarzenia}}. In December, the network started airing {{lang|pl|Mikołajkowy Blok Reklamowy}} (Santa Claus's Commercial Break), similar to TVP1's {{lang|pl|Reklama Dzieciom}}, at Christmas. The proceeds of the advertisements seen in the break are handed over to treatment and rehabilitation of children.<ref name=WSS/>
=== Information ===
* ''Informacje'' (1993–2004)


=== Political talk shows ===
===2006-2021===
On February 27, 2006, Polsat introduced a new identity developed by German company Velvet. The network held the first of its annual New Year's specials with its celebrities at the end of 2006, in Kraków, surpassing TVP2's equivalent, which was held that year in Wrocław. The main channel started airing Formula 1 races in 2007 at a time where Robert Kubica was competing. That same year, Polsat bought its own HD broadcasting van and started converting its channels to high definition, starting with Polsat Sport; the main channel did so at the time of [[UEFA Euro 2008]], coinciding with the launch of [[Polsat News]] and the simultaneous relaunch of {{lang|pl|Wydarzenia}}. In 2009, the Polish version of ''The Moment of Truth'' premiered.<ref name=WSS/>
* ''[[Tomasz Lis|Co z tą Polską?]]'' (2004–2007)

* ''Polityczne graffiti''
One of the 96 people killed in the [[Smolensk air disaster]] was Piotr Nurowski, who had worked with Polsat since the beginning and helped establish relations with Eutelsat in 1992. Polsat was responsible for the production of the presidential funeral, which was pooled between it, TVP and TVN. On Christmas Day 2010, Polsat aired Home Alone due to viewer requests, after excluding it from the planned Christmas schedule. The airing alone attracted 4 million viewers<ref name=WSS/>
* ''Dorota Gawryluk – konfrontacje''

Polsat rebranded again on February 27, 2019, replacing its longest-serving look after thirteen years on air.<ref name=WSS/>

===2021-present===
At the end of 2022, information emerged that Edward Misczak had entered Grupa Polsat Plus. On January 16, 2023, he became its director of programming, replacing Nina Terentiew.

==Branding==
The name Polsat was thought up by Polish satirist Tadeusz Drozda, at a time when the channel broadcast from the Netherlands by satellite. The first logo, made up of an S formed by two arches, and to the left the word '''Polsat''' divided in two separate syllables (with the second below the first) was designed by Jacek Błach, and the music for the ident was composed by [[Grzegorz Ciechowski]]. In 1994, after achieving its terrestrial license, the channel rebranded and adopted a sun as its logo. In an interview given to Super Express in 2011, Zygmunt Solorz-Żak was believed to be "superstitious", with the sun being created by a friend – the golden Aztec sun – to assure the success of the channel.<ref>{{cite web|title=Zygmunt Solorz-Żak: Rekin biznesu o wrażliwym sercu. Jak Najbogatszy Polak dorobił się fortuny?|trans-title=Zygmunt Solorz-Żak: a business shark with a sensible heart. How did the wealthiest Pole gain fortune?|url=https://www.se.pl/wiadomosci/polska/zygmunt-solorz-zak-rekin-biznesu-o-wrazliwym-sercu-jak-najbogatszy-polak-dorobil-sie-fortuny-aa-8wKA-16nL-Z8wH.html|website=[[Super Express (newspaper)|Super Express]]|access-date=10 May 2021|language=pl}}</ref>

=== Logo history ===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|[[File:Polsat1992.svg|100px]]
|[[File:Polsat1994.svg|100px]]
|[[File:Polsat2003.svg|100px]]
|[[File:Logo Polsat.svg|100px]]
|[[File:Polsat 2021 gradient.svg|100px]]
|-
|1992–1994
|1994–2003
|2003–2006 (3 versions)
|2006–2021
|2021–present
|}


=== TV series ===
== Programming and schedule ==
; Programming
* ''Niania w wielkim mieście'' (2017)
{{See also|List of programmes broadcast by Polsat}}
* ''Skazane'' (2015)
; Schedule
* ''Na krawędzi'' (2013)
{{See also|List of Polsat primetime schedules}}
* ''Na krawędzi 2'' (2014)
* ''Czułość i kłamstwa'' (1999–2000)
* ''Adam i Ewa'' (2000–2001)
* ''Zostać Miss'' (2001–2003)
* ''Psie serce'' (2002)
* ''Samo życie'' (2002–2010)
* ''Pensjonat pod Różą'' (2004–2006)
* ''Tango z aniołem'' (2005)
* ''Kochaj mnie, kochaj'' (2006)
* ''Będziesz moja'' (2006)
* ''[[Tylko miłość]]'' (2007–2009)
* ''Szpilki na Giewoncie'' (2010–2012)
* ''Linia życia'' (2011)
* ''Hotel 52'' (2010–2013)
* ''To nie koniec świata!'' (2013–2014)
* ''Fala zbrodni'' (2003–2008)
* ''Prawo miasta'' (2007)
* ''[[Ekipa (TV series)|Ekipa]]'' (2007)
* ''13 Posterunek'' (1997–1998)
* ''Graczykowie'' (1999–2002)
* ''Miodowe lata'' – licensed from ''[[The Honeymooners]]'' (1998–2003)
* ''Całkiem nowe lata miodowe'' – licensed from ''[[The Honeymooners]]'' (2004)
* ''[[Rodzina zastępcza]]'' (1999–2009)
* ''Szpital na perypetiach'' (2001–2003)
* ''Daleko od noszy'' (2003–2009)
* ''Daleko od noszy 2'' (2010–2011)
* ''Daleko od noszy – szpital futpolowy'' (2011)
* ''Daleko od noszy - reanimacja'' (2017)
* ''Mamuśki'' (2007)
* ''I kto tu rządzi?'' – licensed from ''[[Who's the Boss?]]'' (2007–2008)
* ''Synowie'' (2009)
* Synowie, czyli po moim trupie! (2009)
* ''Ludzie Chudego'' – licensed from ''[[Los hombres de Paco]]'' (2010–2011)


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|30em}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
*{{Official website|polsat.pl/}} {{pl icon}}
*{{Official website|polsat.pl/}} {{in lang|pl}}
*[http://www.tvpolsat.info/readarticle.php?article_id=14 Cyfrowy Polsat channel list]
*[http://www.tvpolsat.info/readarticle.php?article_id=14 Cyfrowy Polsat channel list]
*[[:pl:Lista programów Polsatu|List of Polsat's programs]]
*[[:pl:Lista programów Polsatu|List of Polsat's programs]]
Line 258: Line 115:
{{Polsat}}
{{Polsat}}
{{Television in Poland}}
{{Television in Poland}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Polsat]]
[[Category:Polsat|Polsat]]
[[Category:Television channels in Poland]]
[[Category:Television channels in Poland]]
[[Category:Television channels and stations established in 1992]]
[[Category:Television channels and stations established in 1992]]
[[Category:1992 establishments in Poland]]
[[Category:1992 establishments in Poland]]
[[Category:Polish-language television stations]]
[[Category:Polish-language television stations]]
[[Category:Media in Warsaw]]
[[Category:Mass media in Warsaw]]

Latest revision as of 03:20, 2 January 2025

Polsat
Logo used since 30 August 2021
CountryPoland
Headquartersul. Ostrobramska 77
04-175 Warsaw
Programming
Language(s)Polish
Picture format1080i HDTV
(downscaled to 16:9 576i for the SDTV feed)
Ownership
OwnerGrupa Polsat Plus
Sister channelsTV4
TV6
Polsat Café
Polsat Play
Polsat Doku
Polsat News
Polsat News 2
Polsat News Polityka
Polsat Music
Polsat Film
Polsat Film 2
Polsat Seriale
History
Launched5 December 1992; 32 years ago (1992-12-05)
Former namesPolSat (with a capital "S") (1992–1994)
Links
Websitepolsat.pl
Availability
Terrestrial
Digital terrestrial televisionChannel 4
UPCChannel 5
Polsat BoxChannel 1
OrangeChannel 5
VectraChannel 105
The journalists at the Polsat TV newsroom began creating, in 1993, the groundbreaking, pioneering independent news service in Central and Eastern Europe following the collapse of communism (on the photo Foreign Desk editors Pawel Maciag and Marta Bark).
xThe journalists at the Polsat TV newsroom began creating, in 1993, the groundbreaking, pioneering independent news service in Central and Eastern Europe following the collapse of communism (on the photo Foreign Desk editors Pawel Maciag and Marta Bark).

Polsat is a Polish free-to-air television channel that was launched on 5 December 1992 by Zygmunt Solorz-Żak. As of 2019, it is the most watched television channel in Poland with a market share of 11.30%

Polsat belongs to Grupa Polsat Plus (WSE: CPS), which also owns other channels.

In the wake of communism's downfall, Polsat launched in 1993 the first independent television news service in Central and Eastern Europe, revolutionizing the media landscape.

On 27 February 2019, the longest-running graphic design (2006–2019) was changed to a new one, but the station's logo remained virtually unchanged until 2021 when the logo was changed again as part of a major overhaul; however, the sun concept of the logo has remained.

A high-definition simulcast feed of Polsat HD was available from 1 September 2009 until 2021.[citation needed]

History

[edit]

1992–1994

[edit]

When Polsat was in its planning stages, the network was practically unheard of. Network representative Piotr Nurowski together with its first head of feature films Oskar Sobański, entered the editing team of the Film magazine on 12 November 1992, with Sobański asking to its staff for a position in the new network. The following day, one of the initial members of the staff sent a package of movies for the channel, to begin planning for the 5 December launch.[1] Alongside Zygmunt Solorz, the co-founders were Andrzej Rusko, Józef Birka, Aleksander Myszka, Wiesław Walendziak, Heronim Ruta and the deceased Piotr Nurowski. A part of them still work at Grupą Polsat Plus.[1]

Polsat began test transmissions on 1 December 1992, and started regular broadcasts on 5 December 1992 at 16:30 CET via the Eutelsat II-F3 satellite. The first programme broadcast by Polsat was the Polish animated series Wędrówki Pyzy [pl]. It originally broadcast from a studio in Hilversum, the Netherlands, and imported programming had to come by plane (over 1,000km between the two countries) to prevent licensing issues.[2] Its initial broadcasting reach was very small at only 20% of the population, but was considered to be attractive for advertisers, as most of its viewers were found in larger cities, had a significant overrepresentation of under-50s and had higher incomes.[3] The owner and main founder of the channel, Zygmunt Solorz-Żak, originally planned that after the regulation of radio and television regulations, the television headquarters would be located in Wrocław, but ultimately they were located in Warsaw.

1993 was marked by firsts, the first large-scale talk show on a private television channel (Na każdy temat) premiered in October of that year, which was made popular by the introductory phrase "a helicopter has landed at the Polsat skyscraper", even though Polsat wouldn't have an actual skyscraper as its facilities until 2000. The talk show was, as the name suggested, about every topic, including taboo topics for the time. On 5 October 1993, Polsat gained a license from the National Broadcasting Council to broadcast terrestrially, as the channel was concerned about making money on satellite broadcasting alone.[1]

A group of nine young journalists at the Polsat TV newsroom at Aleja Stanów Zjednoczonych 53 initiated the first independent news program in Central and Eastern Europe during the summer of 1993, airing live every evening as "Informacje." The core team featured journalists such as Jarosław Sellin, Pawel Maciag, Tadeusz Święchowicz, and Adam Pawłowicz. Pawel Maciag became the first-ever United States correspondent for Polsat TV based in New York City in 1999. As an eyewitness, he covered the tragic events of 9/11 from Ground Zero in New York. [4] [5]

In late January 1994, talks emerged of a possible buying by News International, owned by Australian-American media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, shortly after the network was awarded the right to broadcast terrestrially nationwide. No final decisions had been taken under the grounds that Murdoch was not a legal member of the consortium. Had Polsat accepted, Murdoch would take up to 33% of the shares. Polsat had said that its bid for the national license were under the grounds that its license was a "purely Polish bid with no foreign links".[6]

1994–2000

[edit]

In 1994, Polsat won the bid for terrestrial television broadcasting, surpassing local and international competitors, and in the summer of that year, announced that a new schedule was to be introduced that autumn, with the aim of becoming "better, more attractive and perfect", in the words of director of programming Bogusław Chrabota.[1]

Polsat started buying in more content from more profitable international production companies, whereas TVP responded by changing its primetime schedule to be more competitive. On 17 March 1994, Gazeta Wyborcza said that, thanks to Polsat's influence, was going to air movies in the 8 pm timeslot after the main news from 1 April.[1] It played a pivotal role in the dissemination of disco polo music thanks to Disco Relax, leading to the skyrocketing popularity of notable artists of the genre.[1]

As the decade continued, Polsat started attracting more and more successes – both national and international. Tadeusz Drozda gained a satirical program of his own (Dyżurny satiryk Pracy) in 1995, with 350 episodes broadcast in a period of nearly six years. There was also the game show Kalambury, where two teams guessed phrases and words based on mimics alone. The channel's first homemade TV series premiered in 1995, Próby domowe, while Informacje gained a media analysis spin-off called Sztuka Informacji, renamed Boomerang in 1998. The channel also premiered Knight Rider and Walker, Texas Ranger, both shows that became national hits. Also in 1995, the channel televised its first Miss Polonia pageant.[1]

Polsat started a foundation in 1996 to help people in difficult situations. The channel became among the first in Poland to use virtual studios and started its own membership club (Klub Polsatu) in September of that year.[1] From March 1997 it started airing the MegaHit slot for premiere movies on Mondays, also in the year the game show Piramida, the crime prevention program Telewizyjny Biuro Śledcze and Przytul mnie premiered.[1]

A contract was signed with executives of 20th Century Fox in Los Angeles in June 1998, enabling Polsat to become the first television station in the world to air Titanic, in a contract worth US$500,000. In September, Tok Szok moved from TVP2 to Polsat. The channel's first Polish sitcom, Miodowe Lata, also premiered that year.[1] 1999 was marked by premieres of two successful local series, Rodzina zastępcza and The Lousy World.[1]

2000–2006

[edit]

Polsat moved to its current premises, an actual skyscraper built by Wojciech Kluk, in 2000. In May that year, Muñeca brava aired on the channel, leading to a successful visit of lead actress Natalia Oreiro to Warsaw, attracting fans to receive an autograph. In September it premiered an adaptation of the Danish Hugo format and the sitcom Adam i Ewa, with 187 episodes. On 29 December 2000 it broadcast Home Alone for the first time, becoming a cult classic in Poland in the coming years.[1]

In March 2001, the network premiered Dwa światy (Two Worlds), among the first Polish reality shows. Polsat moved to its current facility in 2002, at a skyscraper with a heliport on top, a dream from Na każdy temat that came into fruition. Idol, the local adaptation of Pop Idol, premiered in March. The channel started its own music festival in Sopot (TOPtrendy) in 2003.[1]

On October 11, 2004, Informacje was replaced by the current Wydarzenia. In December, the network started airing Mikołajkowy Blok Reklamowy (Santa Claus's Commercial Break), similar to TVP1's Reklama Dzieciom, at Christmas. The proceeds of the advertisements seen in the break are handed over to treatment and rehabilitation of children.[1]

2006-2021

[edit]

On February 27, 2006, Polsat introduced a new identity developed by German company Velvet. The network held the first of its annual New Year's specials with its celebrities at the end of 2006, in Kraków, surpassing TVP2's equivalent, which was held that year in Wrocław. The main channel started airing Formula 1 races in 2007 at a time where Robert Kubica was competing. That same year, Polsat bought its own HD broadcasting van and started converting its channels to high definition, starting with Polsat Sport; the main channel did so at the time of UEFA Euro 2008, coinciding with the launch of Polsat News and the simultaneous relaunch of Wydarzenia. In 2009, the Polish version of The Moment of Truth premiered.[1]

One of the 96 people killed in the Smolensk air disaster was Piotr Nurowski, who had worked with Polsat since the beginning and helped establish relations with Eutelsat in 1992. Polsat was responsible for the production of the presidential funeral, which was pooled between it, TVP and TVN. On Christmas Day 2010, Polsat aired Home Alone due to viewer requests, after excluding it from the planned Christmas schedule. The airing alone attracted 4 million viewers[1]

Polsat rebranded again on February 27, 2019, replacing its longest-serving look after thirteen years on air.[1]

2021-present

[edit]

At the end of 2022, information emerged that Edward Misczak had entered Grupa Polsat Plus. On January 16, 2023, he became its director of programming, replacing Nina Terentiew.

Branding

[edit]

The name Polsat was thought up by Polish satirist Tadeusz Drozda, at a time when the channel broadcast from the Netherlands by satellite. The first logo, made up of an S formed by two arches, and to the left the word Polsat divided in two separate syllables (with the second below the first) was designed by Jacek Błach, and the music for the ident was composed by Grzegorz Ciechowski. In 1994, after achieving its terrestrial license, the channel rebranded and adopted a sun as its logo. In an interview given to Super Express in 2011, Zygmunt Solorz-Żak was believed to be "superstitious", with the sun being created by a friend – the golden Aztec sun – to assure the success of the channel.[7]

Logo history

[edit]
1992–1994 1994–2003 2003–2006 (3 versions) 2006–2021 2021–present

Programming and schedule

[edit]
Programming
Schedule

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Wszystkie odcinki "W stronę słońca. 30 lat Polsatu". Wideo!".
  2. ^ "Poland exercises the right to channel surf". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  3. ^ "Polsat wita na stronach WWW!". Polsat (in Polish). Archived from the original on 21 May 2000. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  4. ^ "w sierpniu 1993 r. na antenie Polsatu pojawiły się „Informacje" – pierwszy w dziejach polskiej telewizji niezależny serwis informacyjny". Polsat (in Polish). 31 January 1994. Retrieved 1 January 2025.
  5. ^ "September 11 attacks". Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. 31 December 2024. Retrieved 1 January 2025.
  6. ^ "News International confirms talks to join Polish TV group". The Business Times. 31 January 1994. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
  7. ^ "Zygmunt Solorz-Żak: Rekin biznesu o wrażliwym sercu. Jak Najbogatszy Polak dorobił się fortuny?" [Zygmunt Solorz-Żak: a business shark with a sensible heart. How did the wealthiest Pole gain fortune?]. Super Express (in Polish). Retrieved 10 May 2021.
[edit]