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Dream TV
TypeSatellite television network
Country
First air date
November 2 2001
AvailabilityNileSat
HeadquartersEgyptian Media Production City Egypt
OwnerAhmad Bahgat
EstablishedNovember 2 2001
Launch date
November 2 2001
Official website
http://dreamstv.im2all.com


Dream TV (Arabic: دريم تيفي) is an Arabic satellite television channel headquartered out of Media Production City, Egypt. [1] Dream TV was the first Egyptian private television channel, and now offers two channels on Nilesat: Dream TV 1 and Dream TV 2. The network provides cultural programming, news analysis, and a platform for talk shows - most notably "10 o'clock pm" (Arabic: العاشره مساءا) with Mona as-Shazly (Arabic: منى الشاذلي). [2]

Launch

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Dream TV was launched by business magnate Ahmad Bahgat in 2001. It was the first satellite channel to respond to the government of Egypt's limited opening of private satellite channels from a designated media 'free zone' in Media Production City (EMPC), which is a media and information complex near Cairo, Egypt.[3][4] In 2000, the Egyptian government made the decision to allow private Egyptian-owned satellite broadcasters to start transmitting - with certain restrictions - from EMPC. Those businessmen with close relations to President Hosni Mubarak benefited most, and a Ahmad Bahgat, head of the Bahgat group and owner of Dreamland leisure and residential complex near Cairo, took the initiative by being the first to sponsor and launch Dream TV on November 2, 2001.

Bahgat accepted part ownership of Dream TV by the Egyptian Radio and Television Union (ERTU). The ERTU is also the main shareholder of Egyptian Media Production City and Nilesat, which are both essential to private broadcasters' operations. As a result, there were limitations put on Dream TV's programming by ERTU. For example, as the ERTU already possessed its own Egyptian news networks, it had no interest in promoting news competition on Dream TV. Additionally, companies that operate within the EMPC are subject to intervention by the Public Authority for Investment and Free Zones, which has authority to suspend licenses. [5]

Political Content

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A dilemma for Dream was finding a balance between attracting viewers with compelling programming and not provoking authorities to suspend their broadcasting license. [6] Vaguely worded prohibitions on criticizing those in power were a threat to Dream TV's broadcasting discretion. Moreover, Egypt's Emergency law grants Egypt's government carte blanche to take action against against political criticism. Since its launch, Dream TV has received repeated warnings for its political content. The Egyptian free-zone authority warned Dream TV in 2002 that was at risk of losing its license after a week of programming that was deemed sexually explicit and critical of local politics. Although the sexual content was cited as the official reason for the warning, many suspected that political commentary was the real cause. [7]

In 2005, Wael al-Ibrashi, a Dream TV presenter and journalist on Sawt al-Umma, was one of three journalists put on trial for publishing the initials of judges accused of condoning electoral fraud while overseeing parliamentary elections. Ibrahim Eissa, host of Aala al-Qahwa on Dream TV and also editor of Al-Destour and Sawt al-Umma, was dropped in 2003 from the network as a condition of the prime minister for Ahmad Bahgat debt rescheduling to state-owned banks. In June 2006, Eissa was one of two people on Al-Destour to be sentenced to one year in prison after reporting a legal case that had accused President Mubarak of misusing public money in the privatization of public companies. Ibrahim Eissa's contract with Dream TV guaranteed that he would be allowed to express himself freely and use his program to 'present what people are feeling.'[8]

References

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  1. ^ Sakr, Naomi (2007). Arab Television Today. I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. pp. 29–30. ISBN 9781845115647.
  2. ^ "Dream TV Homepage". Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  3. ^ Sakr, Naomi (2007). Arab Television Today. I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. pp. 29–30. ISBN 9781845115647.
  4. ^ "EMPC Homepage". Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  5. ^ Sakr, Naomi (2007). Arab Television Today. I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. pp. 29–30. ISBN 9781845115647.
  6. ^ Sakr, Naomi (2007). Arab Television Today. I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. p. 37. ISBN 9781845115647.
  7. ^ Sakr`, Naomi (2006). "'The impact of commercial interests on Arab media content', in the Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research (ed)". Arab Media in the Information Age: 72.
  8. ^ Sakr, Naomi (2007). Arab Television Today. I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. p. 42. ISBN 9781845115647.