Trans7
Logo since 2013, with the current "Diamond A" logo that has been used since 2011
TypeTelevision network
CountryIndonesia
Broadcast areaNationwide
HeadquartersTrans Media Building
Jl. Kapten Pierre Tendean No. 12-14A, Mampang Prapatan, South Jakarta, Indonesia
Programming
Language(s)Indonesian
Picture format1080i HDTV 16:9
(downscaled to 576i 16:9 for the SDTV feed)
Ownership
Owner
Key peopleAtiek Nur Wahyuni
Sister channels
History
Founded22 March 2000 (2000-03-22)
Launched25 November 2001 (2001-11-25) (as TV7)
15 December 2006 (2006-12-15) (as Trans7)
FounderH. Sukoyo
Jakob Oetama
Former namesTV7 (2001–2006)
Links
Websitewww.trans7.co.id
Availability
Terrestrial
DigitalCheck local frequencies (in Indonesian language)
Streaming media
IndiHome TVWatch live (IndiHome customers only)
VidioWatch live
Vision+Watch live (Subscription required, Indonesia only)
OfficialWatch live
MIVOWatch live

PT Duta Visual Nusantara Tivi Tujuh, operating as Trans7 or TRANS7 in all capitals (pronounced Trans Tujuh in Indonesian, formerly known as TV7) is an Indonesian free-to-air television network owned by Trans Media, a part of Trans Corp, which in turn a subsidiary of CT Corp. The channel was officially launched as TV7 on 25 November 2001 at 5:00 PM local time. The final transmission and broadcast aired on 15 December 2006 at 19:00 WIB. The network was then sold by Kompas Gramedia Group and the new owners changed the name from TV7 to Trans7.

History

Establishment and early broadcast

The logo of TV7, used from 25 November 2001 until 15 December 2006

Trans7 was established as TV7 based on issuance of a permit by Department of Trade and Industry in Central Jakarta (No. 809/BH.09.05/III/2000). 80% of its share is largely owned by Kompas Gramedia Group. It was initially named Duta Visual Nusantara TV (DVN TV), where the permission was issued on 25 October 1999, based on the Regulation of the Minister of Information (Peraturan Menteri Penerangan, Permenpen) No.797/MP/1999. The network was owned by H. Sukoyo,[1][2] a shrimp pond entrepreneur from East Java, and three other parties which were his Starpage pager business partner. He decided to sell his TV network's establishment permission to Kompas Gramedia. The share purchase of DVN TV was considered as the realization of Kompas Gramdia's intend to be involved in the television industry.

In October 2001, TV7 was planned to start its broadcast, with full broadcast beginning in March 2002. However, on 25 November 2001, TV7 was launched in State Gazette No. 8687 as PT Duta Visual Nusantara Tivi Tujuh (TV7). At the time, the broadcast only covers Greater Jakarta area, with 49 UHF channel, with 5-hour broadcasting time from 17:00-22:00 WIB. The logo itself is the letters "JO", which stands for Jakob Oetama (1931-2020), the co-founder of Kompas Gramedia Group. The logo is also loosely based on the Circle 7 logo that used by the American broadcast network ABC for its several owned-and-operated and affiliated stations. On 7 April 2002, TV7 was officially on-air, with the broadcasting time extended into 22 hours (04:30-02:30 WIB) in 2003. The broadcast coverage was later extended to Surakarta and Surabaya. TV7 has 300 employees as of 2003. The early programming itself were entertainment-based but inclined with local materials and with an explorative theme, such as Jejak Petualang which is still broadcast today.[3] Nevertheless, TV7's program rating was considered not too well, which led to a report that the network was offered to be bought by Surya Citra Media—parent company of SCTV—in July 2003 on the grounds of financial problems, but eventually never happened.[4]

Iraq invasion coverage

In the first quarter of 2003, TV7 aired daily relays of Al Jazeera during the U.S. invasion of Iraq through a news program titled Invasi ke Irak (Invasion to Iraq). In response, rival broadcaster ANTV started relaying Al Arabiya's coverage of the invasion.[5]

Indonesian society, in general, welcomed TV7's actions, especially with those who disagreed with the Western media's side of the events.[6] Despite rumors that then-president Megawati Soekarnoputri urged TV7 to stop the relay broadcasts of Al Jazeera, PR TV7 at the time, Uni Lubis, denied it. Even, she asserted that the relays were continued and disturbances in the relay could be resolved.[7]

Re-launch as Trans7

The first logo of Trans7, used from 15 December 2006 to 2013. After that, the logo was revised into the current one which shown in the infobox.
The Trans TV Building, the headquarters of Trans TV, now also become the office of Trans7.

On 4 August 2006, CT Corp via Trans Corp authorized to buy a 55% stake in PT Duta Visual Nusantara Tivi Tujuh (as it noted in the book titled Chairul Tanjung si Anak Singkong; lit.: Chairul Tanjung the Cassava Boy). In conjunction with Trans TV's 5th anniversary on 15 December 2006 at 19:00 local time, the channel was rebranded as Trans7, making it the second CT Corp owned television network. With the buyout and relaunch, the network moved its office to Trans TV's offices.

For the first time, Trans7 was the official broadcaster of 2018 FIFA World Cup together with the sister channel Trans TV, also with Telkom Indonesia, K-Vision and MNC Media (MNC Vision only). Trans7 had broadcast 8 group-stage matches as well as shared broadcasting of quarterfinal, semifinal, 3rd place playoff, and final matches from Trans TV, also from UseeTV (now IndiHome TV), K-Vision, and MNC Sports.[8]

Since 2 November 2022, Trans7 was terminated and stop of Analog transmission operation from Jakarta and its surrounding areas and switch over to Digital transmission by TransTV Jakarta operation during Modi countdown to midnight special coverage. since December 2022-July 2023, Trans7 has terminate of all Analog transmission by a mandate from the Ministry of Communications and Informatics about ASO delay since 2022.

Programming

Sports Programming

Trans7 has broadcast the Premier League from 2002–2007, and also broadcast the AFF Championship for 2004 and 2007 editions.[9][10] Trans7 broadcast Serie A from 2007-2009 and returned in 2016–17 season, LaLiga in 2012-13 season as well as International Champions Cup in 2017. In 2018, Trans7 broadcast the 2018 FIFA World Cup alongside sister channel Trans TV, also with IndiHome/UseeTV, K-Vision and MNC Sports. In 2023, Trans7 broadcast the pre-season tournament, Soccer Champions Tour.[11]

Trans7 is the home of MotoGP in Indonesia for 20 years since 2002 and will continues until 2026 after obtaining a broadcast rights extension.[12] Starting from the 2022 season and the opening of Mandalika International Street Circuit, Trans7 will also broadcast the Superbike World Championship.[13]

Trans7 also hosts the Indonesia Open Badminton Championships coverage since 2008 until 2019 (originally until 2020, but the event cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic),[14] after broadcasting the Thomas and Uber Cups for 2008 (simulcast with Trans TV) and 2010 seasons.

Directors and Commissioners

List of Chief Executive Officers

No. Name Early positions End of positions
1 August Parengkuan 2001 2003
2 Lanny Rahardja 2003 2006
3 Wishnutama 2006 2008
4 Atiek Nurwahyuni 2008 present

Current Directors and Commissioners

Name Position
Atiek Nurwahyuni Chief Executive Officer
Ch. Suswati Handayani Chief Financial and Resources
Andi Chairil Edward Chief Production
Chairul Tanjung President Commissioner
Ishadi Soetopo Kartosapoetro Commissioner
Julius Ruslan Commissioner
Michelle Tjokrosaputro Commissioner

Presenters

Current

Former

  • Syahlevi Latief
  • Rikha Indriaswari
  • Isyana Bagoes Oka
  • Nina Melinda (now at Kompas TV)
  • Rizal Yusacc
  • Herdina Suherdi (now at TVRI)
  • Trie Ambarwati
  • Andrie Djarot (deceased)
  • Zweta Manggarani
  • Shara Virrisya
  • Rahma Hayuningdyah (now at NET.)
  • Maria Sabta
  • Herjuno Syaputra (now at GTV and Sindonews TV)
  • Alfian Rahardjo (now at CNN Indonesia)
  • Miladia Rahma
  • Rully Kurniawan
  • Hadijah Aljufri
  • Angky Prita
  • Mira Khairunnisa
  • Fiantika Ambadar
  • Anggita Suryo
  • Lely Hermawan
  • Sabrina Luiss
  • Ratna Mariana
  • Cindy Agustina
  • Medina Kamil
  • Putri Raemawasti
  • Rieda Anindita
  • Melisa Gandasari
  • Dian Ayu Lestari
  • Annisa Pohan
  • Rio Indrawan
  • Ira Nova
  • Monica Noeva
  • Putri Windasari (now at tvOne)
  • Yasmine Naomi
  • Dilla Hantika
  • Rory Asyari
  • Kamidia Radisti
  • Hayomi Rinjani
  • Roland Lagonda
  • Taufik Imansyah (deceased)
  • Bram Herlambang (now at CNN Indonesia)
  • Benny Dermawan (now at CNN Indonesia)

See also

References

  1. "Lima TV Swasta Baru, Berebut Iklan dan Kavling di Udara". forum.detik.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2023-12-30.
  2. Membuka Kejadian Menonjol Media Massa Indonesia Sejak Era Reformasi Sampai 2000 (in Indonesian). Tempo Publishing. 2019. pp. 38–39. ISBN 978-623-262-539-6.
  3. Fachruddin, Andi (January 2019). Journalism Today (in Indonesian). Kencana. ISBN 978-602-422-919-1.
  4. Sudibyo, Agus (2004). Ekonomi Politik Media Penyiaran (in Indonesian). Lkis Pelangi Aksara. p. 62. ISBN 978-979-3381-51-0.
  5. Wartawan AS Tewas, Arnett Dikontrak "Al-Arabiya", pelita.or.id (in Indonesian).
  6. Pamor TV7 Ikut Terangkat Berkat Kepopuleran Al Jazeera, Suara Merdeka Online (in Indonesian).
  7. TV7 Bantah Mega Desak Relai Aljazeera Dihentikan, cbn.net.id (in Indonesian).
  8. Idaman, Putra Permata Tegar (15 December 2017). "Transmedia Jadi Pemegang Hak Siar Piala Dunia 2018". CNN Indonesia (in Indonesian). Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  9. Harnoko, Rizqi Arie (30 January 2022). "Sejarah Stasiun TV FTA Indonesia Pemegang Hak Siar Liga Inggris dari Masa ke Masa". kabarbesuki.pikiran-rakyat.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 18 December 2023.
  10. Kompasiana.com (2014-10-23). "Pengacakan Siaran Timnas Indonesia Sudah Ada Sejak Zaman Piala Tiger". KOMPASIANA (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2023-12-18.
  11. INSERTLIVE. "Siap-siap, Soccer Champions Tour 2023 Tayang di Trans7". hot-gossip (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2023-12-18.
  12. "Trans7 to broadcast MotoGP™ in Indonesia until 2026". www.motogp.com. Dorna Sports. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  13. "Trans7 Siarkan WSBK dan MotoGP, Manjakan Pencinta Balap". olahraga (in Indonesian). Jakarta: CNN Indonesia. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
  14. Harnoko, Rizqi Arie. "MNC Group Dapat Hak Siar Eksklusif Indonesia Masters dan Indonesia Open 2021 - Kabar Besuki - Halaman 2". kabarbesuki.pikiran-rakyat.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 10 May 2022.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.