Television Stations
Stations are listed with RTL's current share ownership percentage in brackets.
- Belgium
- RTL TVI (66%)
- Club RTL (66%)
- Plug TV (66%)
- Croatia
- RTL Televizija (100%)
- RTL 2 (100%)
- France
- Fun TV (100%)
- M6 (48.8%)
- M6 Boutique La Chaîne (100%)
- M6 Music Hits (100%)
- M6 Music Rock (100%)
- M6 Music Black (100%)
- Paris Première (100%)
- RTL9 (35%)
- Série Club (50%)
- Téva (51%)
- TF6 (50%)
- W9 (100%)
- Germany
- RTL Television (100%)
- VOX (99.7%)
- RTL II (35.9%)
- Super RTL (50%)
- n-tv (100%)
- Passion (50%, pay-TV)
- RTL Crime (100%, pay-TV)
- RTL Living (100%, pay-TV)
- RTL Nitro (100%)
- Hungary
- RTL Klub (100%)
- RTL 2
- Luxembourg
- RTL Télé Lëtzebuerg (100%)
- Den 2. RTL (100%)
- Netherlands (RTL Nederland, formerly known as Holland Media Groep or HMG and until 1995 RTL 4 SA)
- RTL 4 (100%) (started in 1989 as RTL Veronique, renamed in 1990 as RTL 4)
- RTL 5 (100%)
- RTL 7 (formerly known as Yorin) (100%)
- RTL 8 (formerly known as Talpa, Tien) (100%)
- RTL Lounge (100%) (digital channel)
- RTL Crime (100%) (digital channel)
- RTL Telekids (100%) (digital channel)
- RTL 24 (100%) (TV on your mobile)
- Spain
- Antena 3
- Antena.Nova
- Antena.Neox
- Antena.Nitro
Read more about this topic: RTL Group
Famous quotes containing the words television and/or stations:
“In full view of his television audience, he preached a new religionor a new form of Christianitybased on faith in financial miracles and in a Heaven here on earth with a water slide and luxury hotels. It was a religion of celebrity and showmanship and fun, which made a mockery of all puritanical standards and all canons of good taste. Its standard was excess, and its doctrines were tolerance and freedom from accountability.”
—New Yorker (April 23, 1990)
“A reader who quarrels with postulates, who dislikes Hamlet because he does not believe that there are ghosts or that people speak in pentameters, clearly has no business in literature. He cannot distinguish fiction from fact, and belongs in the same category as the people who send cheques to radio stations for the relief of suffering heroines in soap operas.”
—Northrop Frye (b. 1912)