TV 2 is a Danish government-owned broadcast and subscription television station, based in Odense, Funen. The station was founded in 1986, and made its first official broadcast in 1988. It makes daily broadcasts of regional and national news, as well as its morning talk show, Go'morgen Danmark.
History
Since 1949, Danmarks Radio had been the sole provider of television in Denmark. Wanting to end the monopoly, the Danish Parliament voted on 30 May 1986, to create TV2, as a second choice for public service television. Upon its establishment, it had first begun its experimental test transmissions, and then, two years later, it had therefore commenced its official broadcast on 1 October 1988, with its first program being Danish Symphony which is broadcast at 17:00, followed by the news at 19:30.
To prevent competition with TV Avisen on DR, the 7:30pm bulletin moved to 7pm on 2 January 1989, with the regional programming starting at 7:28pm. TV Syd was followed by TV Fyn on 10 January that year, followed by TV Nord in April. The five remaining stations of the network opened in 1990 (the TV2 transmitter network was completed in November 1989). 1989 was also marked by the premiere of Eleva2ren, the first interactive game show on Danish television, initially featuring OsWALD. This was followed in 1990 by Hugo, which eventually spawned a series of international adaptations. Now it is a full subscription-based streaming platform with 1.2 million subscribers in 2025.
In southernmost Sweden and northernmost Germany (where a Danish minority lives), this means significant difficulties for their viewers in Germany and Sweden, as subscribers need a Danish postal address for ordering a decoder card. However, the channel is still available in Sweden through subscription to pay-TV services such as Com Hem and Telia. Also a special agreement between TV 2 and Kabel Deutschland has been made, that it is now available digitally in the cable television network of Vodafone Kabel Deutschland in northernmost Germany since 15 December 2011 and to keep it unencrypted there. The analogue transmission of TV 2 in the aforementioned German cable network ceased 31 January 2012 in the specific regions where it had been available before and was replaced with a German channel.
It is also available through pay-TV subscription in Norway through Allente, Altibox, and Telia.
Regions
{| class="wikitable"
! TV 2 Region !! Area Served !! rowspan=9|right|300px
|-
| TV Syd|| Southern Jutland including Southern Schleswig
|-
| TV 2/Fyn|| Funen
|-
| TV 2/Øst|| Western Zealand
|-
| TV 2/Nord|| Northern Jutland, Greenland and Faroe Islands
|-
| TV 2 Kosmopol|| North Zealand and Copenhagen
|-
| TV/Midt-Vest|| Central and Western Jutland
|-
| TV 2/Østjylland|| Eastern Jutland
|-
| TV 2/Bornholm|| Bornholm
|}
Programming
thumb|TV 2 journalist ([[Divya Das) reporting from the Parsons Green bombing in September 2017]]
On weekdays, TV 2 starts with Go'morgen Danmark (Literally: Good Morning Denmark), Denmark's only breakfast talk show on national TV.
At 11:00 they hand over to the regions who broadcast to 12:30 (with an interruption for national news). That is followed by TV 2's afternoon programming that mostly consists of drama series and sitcoms. The regional stations also broadcast bulletins in the afternoon and evening, as well as a longer newscast at 19:30.
TV 2's main national newscasts are shown at 19:00 and 21:30 but bulletins in the morning (first newscast at 6:00), at 12:00, 17:00 and 18:00 have been added over the years.
In common with other TV channels in Denmark, most foreign programmes on TV 2, as well as interviews originally conducted in a foreign language (e.g. for news and current affairs programming), are shown in their original language with Danish subtitles, the exception being animated series aimed at children which are dubbed.
Funding
Historically TV 2 was funded by television license fees and advertising sales. However, although the regional channels are still partly funded this way, funding by television license for the main channel ended in July 2004.
This form of double financing, along with a large injection of capital (to cover a deficit of 1 billion DKK (€134 million)) from the Danish State, was in the 2000s under investigation by the EU; accusations being that the dual funding has constituted illegal state aid. SBS Broadcasting's Danish unit complained about this scheme in 2000; a 2004 finding by the European Commission noted that the aid was incompatible with EU norms and did not fulfill its obligation on how the government still supported the network.
See also
- List of television stations in Denmark
- TV-2 (band)
- Radio 2 (Denmark)
