DZBB-TV

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DZBB-TV
Metro Manila
City of license Quezon City
Branding GMA-7 Manila
Slogan "Kapuso ng Bawat Pilipino."
Channels Analog: 7 (VHF)
Translators Ch. 5 Baler, Aurora
D13ZR 13 Occ. Mindoro
Affiliations GMA Network
Owner GMA Network, Inc.
Founded October 29, 1961
Call letters meaning DZ
Bisig
Bayan
Sister station(s) DZOE-TV (Q)
Former callsigns None
Transmitter Power 100,000 Watts
Website iGMA.tv

DZBB-TV, channel 7, is the flagship station of Philippine television network GMA Network. Its studios are located at the GMA Network Center at the corner of Timog Avenue and Epifanio de los Santos Avenue in Quezon City.

Contents

DZBB-TV traces its history to Metro Manila radio station DZBB, owned by Loreto F. de Hemedes, Inc.[1] , later renamed Republic Broadcasting System of Robert "Uncle Bob" Stewart. After the success of its radio station, the company ventured into television. On October 29, 1961, RBS DZBB-TV 7, the third television station in the Philippines, started operations with just 25 employees (other stations had 200), a surplus transmitter and two old cameras.

The station was always in the red and Stewart was about to give up when the program "Dancetime with Chito" became a big hit and advertising revenues rolled in. Canned programs from the United States further sustained its success.

GMA Radio-Television Arts logo in Metro Manila in 1978.
GMA Radio-Television Arts logo in Metro Manila in 1978.

In 1972, President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law in the Philippines and the station was forced to shut down. It was not until 1974 that the station went back on-air. RBS, including its TV and radio stations, were sold to a triumvirate composed of Felipe Gozon, Gilberto Duavit, Sr., and Menardo Jimenez who introduced a programming concept catering to the new audience. The new management acquired new equipment and introduced new programs, a new name, GMA (Greater Manila Area) Radio-Television Arts, and a new identity, "Where You Belong."

When democracy in the Philippines was restored in the People Power Revolution in 1986, other television stations began to air, some with their original owners. The political instability of the country also added to the station's burden, when soldiers stormed into its studios for two days in a part of coup attempt to topple then President Corazon Aquino.

On November 7, 1988, the GMA Tower of Power, the tallest man-made structure in the country at that time was inaugurated. With its 50,000 Watts TV transmitter and a high-gain corner reflector antenna, GMA dramatically improved its reach and signal in Luzon. The tower's height is 777ft.

In 1998, Channel 7 greatly improved its TV signal after switching on their 100,000 Watts transmitter facility in Tandang Sora, Quezon City.

The National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) ordered that all analog television signals would have to shut off by 11:59 p.m. on December 31, 2015, requiring television service providers to migrate to digital television by that time. GMA Network is currently applying for a digital license from the NTC.[2]

  1. ^ GMA Network Corporate Information, GMANetwork.com
  2. ^ Amojelar, Darwin (November 6, 2006). Regulator orders shift to digital television by 2015. The Manila Times. Retrieved on March 20.
  • "GMA Turns Gold", Manila Bulletin, 2000, June 14, pp. S1-S12. (English) 
  • Anastacio & Badiola. what's the story, pinoy tv?. Retrieved on August 21, 2006.

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