Tele 5

Tele 5 is a German free-to-air television channel that broadcasts classic American films and series and Japanese anime.

Tele 5
CountryGermany
Broadcast areaGermany
SloganGute Unterhaltung.
HeadquartersGrünwald, Germany
Programming
Picture format1080i HDTV
(downscaled to 16:9 576i for the SDTV feed)
Ownership
OwnerDiscovery, Inc.
History
Launched11 January 1988 (original)
28 April 2002 (revival)
Replacedmusicbox (1984-1988)
Closed31 December 1992 (original)
Links
Websitewww.tele5.de
Availability
Terrestrial
Digital terrestrial televisionChannel slots vary on each region (HD)
Cable
Kabel DeutschlandChannel 202 (SD)
Channel 223 (HD)
UnitymediaChannel 503 (SD)
Channel 203 (HD)
UPC SwitzerlandChannel 48 (SD)
Satellite
Astra 1H12,480 V, SR 27500, FEC 3/4
Astra 1KR
(Austrian feed)
11,243.75 H, SR 22000 FEC 5/6
Astra 1L
HD (Germany and Austria)
12,574.25 H, SR 22000, FEC 2/3 (DVB-S2)
IPTV
Telekom Entertain (Germany)Channel 16 (HD)
A1 TV (Austria)Channel 48 (SD)
Channel 348 (HD)
Streaming media
tele5.deWatch live

On 3 July 2020 Discovery, Inc. agreed to acquire the channel from Leonine Holding, completing the purchase on 1 September 2020.[1]

History

Logo of Tele5 used until mid-1992, after the channel was bought by Leo Kirch and scheduled for closure. On air, the white parts were transparent and the red parts were solid white

Tele 5 replaced Germany's first music television channel, Musicbox, which existed from 1984 to 1988. Prior to 1988, Silvio Berlusconi bought part of Musicbox and rebranded it as Tele5 on 11 January 1988. Its programming was still produced in the same Munich building as had been those by Musicbox, a music video show named Musicbox remained part of Tele5's regular schedule, and several Musicbox show hosts transferred to Tele5. From 1988 to 1992, Tele5 was part of Berlusconi's Europe-wide network of sister channels, all with the number 5 in their names and a stylized flower in their logo, which included Canale 5 in Italy, Telecinco in Spain (originally also styled as Tele5), and La Cinq in France (which was later replaced by France 5). Tele5 timeshared with RTL Television (then RTLplus) on terrestrial television from 8:00am or 9:00am to 5:00pm and at night.

During the channel's four-year lifespan, its children's programming in particular increasingly took market share from Leo Kirch's German television networks, which prompted Kirch to buy the channel in 1992 and rebrand it DSF (Deutsches Sportfernsehen, German Sport Television) on 1 January 1993.

Bim Bam Bino

"Bim Bam Bino" was the name of a children's show. A mouse called Bino served as "announcer" between the different TV series often consisting of animated shows, including He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, Bobobobs, The Raccoons, Filmation Ghostbusters, Around the World with Willy Fog, The Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin, Alvin and the Chipmunks, The Smurfs, Fantastic Max, Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics, Saber Rider, Queen Millennia, Captain Future, or Anne of Green Gables.

At the time, most other channels had a few weekly or daily series for children. Some channels had "double features". "Bim Bam Bino"T was the first big all-week program block for children and teens on German television. Initially broadcast in the morning hours, the show soon grew to encompass afternoons and eventually even early evenings. At the time the channel went off air, "Bim Bam Bino" made up the biggest part of Tele 5's schedule and ran from about 9am to 6 or 7pm.

Legacy shows

Some shows which had their German premiere on Tele5's first incarnation went on to find a new home. Bim Bam Bino was taken up by kabel eins, while the original Bim Bam Bino crew went on to produce a similar children's programming puppet announcer show Vampy on RTL II. Many cartoon shows previously broadcast on Tele5 as part of Bim Bam Bino initially reappeared on the kabel 1 version of Bim Bam Bino and on RTL II's Vampy.

Bitte lächeln (a format based upon America's Funniest Home Videos) was the only Tele5 show that was briefly taken up by its successor DSF before moving on to RTL II, and later ran under the new title Schwupps - Die Pannenshow on Tm3, and which was hosted by Mike Carl for its entire run across all three channels. By the time Bitte lächeln aka Schwupps had moved to Tm3, a few of the cartoon shows originally on Tele5 were also taken up by Tm3 for its morning slots.

The most successful survivor of the old Tele5 was the game show Ruck Zuck (based on Bruce Forsyth's Hot Streak), which remained in production for over a decade on various channels after the closure of the old Tele5, appearing on RTL II, tm3, and even the new Tele 5 (see below).

Relaunch

In April 2002, Tele München Gruppe relaunched the channel, now centred on movies and TV series. Tele 5's second incarnation originally started with Jochen Kröhne as CEO, who had been program director of Musicbox (1984-1988) as well as of Tele5's original incarnation (1988-1992). Kröhne left the new Tele 5 in 2005 and was replaced as CEO by Kai Blasberg. Jochen Bendel, a host on the original Tele5, appeared on the channel from the beginning, including by hosting new editions of the game show Ruck Zuck, until he left the network in 2005.

Logos

Programming[2]

Shows

Series

Anime

Austrian feed

An Austrian feed of Tele5 started broadcasting on 1 May 2012. It simulcasts the German channel's programming with the addition of local advertisements. It also includes promotion of Austrian channel ATV. The ads marketing is produced a cooperation with ATV, too.[3]

HD feed

Tele 5 HD

Since 19 October 2011 Tele 5 broadcasts in HD on HD+, a satellite television platform owned by SES-Astra. Like most channels in Europe broadcasting in HD, its SD feed is a downscaled version of its main high-definition programming.[4] Tele5 HD is also distributed in Vodafone and Telekom Entertain.

References

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