Venevisión () is a Venezuelan free-to-air television channel and one of Venezuela's largest television networks, owned by the Cisneros Media division of Grupo Cisneros. It was founded in 1961 by Diego Cisneros. It is one of the major telenovela producers in the world, along with TelevisaUnivision, TV Azteca, Telemundo, TV Globo, Caracol Televisión, RCN Televisión, ABS-CBN, GMA Network and Channel 3.
In 1982, Venevisión began preliminary work in the city of El Tigre (located in the Anzoátegui State) to install equipment that would expand and improve their coverage in that region.
On November 1, 1986, Venevisión was the first television station in Venezuela to have their very own satellite dish.
On May 27, 1987, President Jaime Lusinchi gave a 20-year broadcasting license to the network.
On February 4, 1992, Carlos Andrés Pérez addressed the nation from Venevisión's studios during a coup attempt against his government.
Beginning on March 22, 1992, Venevisión would broadcast for 24 hours on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays. In April 1994, it started broadcasting for 24 hours seven days a week. Today, Venevisión is on the air 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
In 1995, Venevisión was the second television network in South America (Brazil's Rede Bandeirantes was the first in 1994 and third overall in Latin America after Mexico's Canal de las Estrellas network in 1993) to include news and movies with closed caption and the movies in Second audio program sound.
Venevisión held the broadcasting rights to Venezuelan baseball games during the 2004–2005 and the 2005–2006 baseball seasons.
Since Venevisión was inaugurated in 1961, their mascot has been a tiger; the channel is nicknamed El Canal del Tigrito because of that. The mascot returned for the Christmas spots in 2021 and 2022.
In 2007, it started simulcasting Copa America and Miss Venezuela 2007 in high-definition format.
Since September 2014, Venevisión has become the oldest television network in Venezuela and surpassed the record of its former rival Radio Caracas Televisión before its forced closure in May 2007, 53 years and 6 months after it was launched.
Its sixtieth anniversary was marked by the return of an old slogan (; "the truth is seen on screen") but had an underwhelming offer, such as reruns of old telenovelas, including low-impact productions, lack of new programs to increase fidelity among new viewers and the problems caused by competition from streaming services.
In May 2025, it was announced that Venevisión would return to fiction production with a reboot of the teen musical series Somos Tú y Yo.
On January 30, 2026, Venevisión's signal was suspended from the digital terrestrial platform and from FTA Venezuela, a free-to-air satellite television platform. The former is managed by CANTV and the latter by Conatel, both of which are state organs, and the suspension led to a large number of viewers losing access to the channel. Cable companies where Venevisión's signal was fed from FTA Venezuela were also affected.
March
Venevisión uses a march composed by Aníbal de Abreu in 1964 as its corporate theme.
International broadcasts
Many of Venevisión's programs can be seen in other countries on Ve Plus TV, Venevisión Plus and ViendoMovies, a cable channel completely owned by Venevisión. Other channels, such as Univision in the United States and Televisa in Mexico, broadcast some of Venevisión's shows.
Political position
On April 11, 2002, the network along with most of the other private networks in Venezuela, simultaneously showed Chávez's address to the nation in split screen with the shooting of people in a demonstration prior to the 2002 Venezuelan coup d'état attempt. The next day, Isaías Rodríguez announced in a news conference that Chávez had not resigned and that there had been a coup.
After the Presidential election in 2006, Venevision softened its opposition to Chávez. For the presidential election, Venevision devoted 84% of its coverage to Chavez's positions and 16% to the opposition. Critics saw the change, which created rifts in the Venezuelan elite, as a way of maintaining its broadcasting licence by avoiding a confrontation with Chávez. The criticism of Venevisión by the opposition increased during the refusal to renew the broadcasting license of RCTV by the Chávez government in 2007. Critics said Venevisión would benefit from the closure of RCTV, which was Venevisión's main rival. Cisneros, however, said he expected only around a 5% increase in advertising revenue after accounting for inflation.
Venevisión Play
Venevisión Play is a Venezuelan video on-demand over-the-top streaming service owned by Venevisión that was launched on August 25, 2023. The service mainly distributes telenovelas produced by Venevisión and other programs, including news, television series, documentaries, sports programming, talk shows, reality shows, Miss Venezuela, and other special events.
Notes
References
External links
- Official website
