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Record Belém

Coordinates: 1°27′44.9″S 48°29′30.7″W / 1.462472°S 48.491861°W / -1.462472; -48.491861
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Record Belém (ZYB 204)
Channels
Programming
AffiliationsRecord (1997–present)
Ownership
Owner
History
FoundedJune 10, 1997
Former names
TV Record Pará (1997–2008)
TV Record Norte (2008–2009)
RecordTV Belém (2016–2023)
Former channel number(s)
Analog: 10 (VHF, 1997–2018)
Technical information
Licensing authority
ANATEL
ClassE
ERP52.15 kW
Transmitter coordinates1°27′44.9″S 48°29′30.7″W / 1.462472°S 48.491861°W / -1.462472; -48.491861
Links
Public license information
Profile

Record Belém (channel 10) is a Brazilian broadcast television station in Belém founded on June 10, 1997.

History

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The license for VHF channel 10 in Belém was granted on August 19, 1988 for politician Jader Barbalho, at the time Minister of Social Security in José Sarney's government, through a company formed by his wife Elcione Barbalho and radio personality and businessman Carlos Santos.[1] In 1990, Barbalho acquired RBA TV from the family assets of businessman Jair Bernardino, who had died in an air accident,and having a television station already operational, he left aside the implementation of the channel 10 license, which remained under the possibility of Carlos Santos.

During the 90s, Santos tried to bring the station on air, investing in equipment and renting rooms in the Manoel Pinto da Silva Building (where the studios of TV Guajará and SBT Belém had also been located),[2] however due to several technical and administrative problems, he didn't bring the project ahead. With just under a year left before the deadline for installing the station was up, Carlos Santos negotiated the concession and the entire structure he had already set up with the businessman and leader of the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, Edir Macedo, owner of Rede Record. In 1995, both Edir Macedo and the Assembly of God bid for the takeover of TV Guajará (channel 4). Macedo's bid to convert the station (a Record affiliate) to a Record O&O was ultimately defeated as it bid US$2.7 million against the Assembly of God's US$3.5 million. As a consequence, thanks to Record's connections to the UCKG, Boas Novas Belém ceased its afiliation with Record and affiliated with CNT.[3] In November 1995, after months of negotiation, Central Record de Comunicação agreed to pay R$3,5 million for the structure, less R$ 500 mil than what the businessman initially wanted.[4][5]

Record Belém programs

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  • Balanço Geral PA Manhã (morning news)
  • Fala Pará (morning news)
  • Balanço Geral PA (afternoon news)
  • Cidade Alerta Pará (afternoon news)
  • Pará Record (night news)
  • Balanço Geral PA Especial (Saturday)

Retransmitters

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1°27′44.9″S 48°29′30.7″W / 1.462472°S 48.491861°W / -1.462472; -48.491861

References

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  1. ^ "Decreto nº 96.536, de 19 de agosto de 1988". Planalto. Retrieved October 25, 2021.
  2. ^ "Amazonas 1; Amazonas 2; Pará 1; Pará 2". Folha de S.Paulo. August 8, 1994. Retrieved November 26, 2016.
  3. ^ "Assembléia lança o Jesus-Sat". Folha de S.Paulo. November 26, 1995. Retrieved March 26, 2023.
  4. ^ Lobato, Elvira (October 11, 1996). "FHC autoriza transferência de TVs da Igreja Universal". Folha de S.Paulo. Retrieved November 26, 2016.
  5. ^ Lobato, Elvira (November 5, 1996). "Igreja Universal compra mais uma TV". Folha de S.Paulo. Retrieved November 26, 2016.

References

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