GO
Luxembourg does not have BBC/C4 equivalents. It's the only country I know of in the world that has not had a history of any public broadcasting to the degree that its European neighbours had. Even weirder is that many of the FTA channels airing there are clearly intended for the Netherlands, where the same channels require a paid subscription to watch and given that the Netherlands does not even border Luxembourg.
The Dutch RTLs are all (well I assume they still are) licensed from Luxembourg. RTL became big by broadcasting commercial channels from Luxembourg to neighbouring countries whose laws prevented them from launching commercial channels, hence why RTLs exist in Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands.
Luxembourg's so small and the local language is only spoken by a limited number of people so the single Luxembourgish RTL is all they need when supplemented by neighbouring channels. I vaguely remember a channel called Tango TV launching as a competitor (only because the Eurovision lot were hoping they could join the EBU) but that failed quite quickly.
I don't think Austria and German speaking Switzerland have that many of their own main channels because they're so well served by German channels. Austria has a private one called ATV, I'm not sure if Switzerland has any?
Luxembourg does not have BBC/C4 equivalents. It's the only country I know of in the world that has not had a history of any public broadcasting to the degree that its European neighbours had. Even weirder is that many of the FTA channels airing there are clearly intended for the Netherlands, where the same channels require a paid subscription to watch and given that the Netherlands does not even border Luxembourg.
The Dutch RTLs are all (well I assume they still are) licensed from Luxembourg. RTL became big by broadcasting commercial channels from Luxembourg to neighbouring countries whose laws prevented them from launching commercial channels, hence why RTLs exist in Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands.
Luxembourg's so small and the local language is only spoken by a limited number of people so the single Luxembourgish RTL is all they need when supplemented by neighbouring channels. I vaguely remember a channel called Tango TV launching as a competitor (only because the Eurovision lot were hoping they could join the EBU) but that failed quite quickly.
I don't think Austria and German speaking Switzerland have that many of their own main channels because they're so well served by German channels. Austria has a private one called ATV, I'm not sure if Switzerland has any?