Hír TV


Hír TV is a Hungarian television news channel, the first of such made in the country. It began broadcasting on 2 January 2003.

History

Initial years

On 26 November 2002, the TV channel was registered using 20 million Hungarian forints of capital. The first CEO of television was Gábor Borókai, who had recently served as Viktor Orbán's first government spokesman, and the first editor-in-chief was Imre Dlusztus, who was the sometime editor-in-chief of Délmagyarország, the local newspaper of Szeged.
The first test broadcast began on 2 December 2002. After one month of test broadcasts, the TV channel started its regular broadcasting on 2 January 2003, according to contract with several cable television companies.

Role in the 2006 protests in Hungary

Hír TV was the only channel to broadcast continuous live coverage of the 2006 anti-government protests in Hungary. The channel's reports were aired on every Hungarian television channel, as well as on CNN, and via Reuters, the BBC, Euronews and Sky News. Hír TV continued to report on all of the events that took place during the protests. On 18 September 2006, when demonstrators tried to storm the headquarters of the public broadcaster Magyar Televízió in Szabadság tér, the fights that broke out between the police and the protesters at the entrance to the building were not broadcast by Magyar Televízió. Instead, they continued to broadcast their primetime investigation programme Az Este with anchorman György Baló, and he made an announcement at the end of programme that "the television is obsessing by protesters".
Due to the Hír TV coverage, the siege of the Magyar Televízió headquarters building by the anti-government protesters was seen by 1 million viewers in Hungary.
Following the demonstrations and the storming of the Magyar Televízió headquarters, the National Radio and Television Board ruled in its report that the Hír TV channel had violated the "law of objective and factual information providing" and the law of "respect the Hungarian Republic's constitutional order". The channel consequently received a fine of 1 million Hungarian forints for breaching their legal obligations.

2007–2014

The first big development came on 15 March 2007, when Hír TV and the daily newspaper Magyar Nemzet started up a new radio station called Lánchíd Rádió.
In September 2007, the channel's logo was redesigned and modifications were also made to the programme structure: a new breakfast television programme was introduced, which included live reports and a more informative style of news programme. The primetime TV schedule was also updated, with the introduction of new programmes: Rájátszás ; Vonalban ; Civil kaszinó ; Lapzárta, in which the anchor and the guests talk about the articles published in the main Hungarian daily newspapers; Paletta, a programme about public issues; and Panaszkönyv, which focuses on consumer protection.
Hír TV also airs investigative reports, political discussion programmes, talk shows and morning programmes. In addition, Hír TV broadcasts BBC programmes such as Click, Reporters and Talking Movies with Hungarian translation.

2015: A year of change

Some newspaper sources began to report in 2014 that the longterm positive relationship between the channel's owner, Lajos Simicska, and prime minister Viktor Orbán had deteriorated. In February 2015, Simicska declared in an interview with the social-democratic newspaper Népszava that "there is a total media war" in progress. Following this statement, he received resignations from the editors-in-chief, and their assistants, of Magyar Nemzet, Hír TV, Lánchíd Rádió and MNO; Simicska subsequently launched a verbal tirade against his former employees, as well as the prime minister.
Meanwhile, the state broadcaster MTVA decided to establish a news channel, M1, which up to this point had been incorporated into the generalist channel of MTVA. Some of Hír TV's anchors went to work for the new MTVA news channel.
In response to this event, in September 2015, the pro-government newspaper Magyar Idők was established by journalists previously employed by Simicska's outlets. At the same time, the Hír TV channel completely changed both its logo and its programmes.

Current programmes

The channel broadcasts every day from 5:50 am to 2:00 am. The programme themes are targeted on public issues, investigation programme, life style, sport and to culture. The channel tends to interrupt its programmes for breaking news.

News programmes

The channel broadcasts the following pre-recorded BBC programmes: Reporters, HARDtalk, Our World and The Travel Show, with Hungarian dubbing provided by the channel's journalists.

Political views

Ever since its founding, the channel was viewed as a Fidesz-sympathizer broadcaster due to its owner's background and the political views of its anchors, a viewpoint that was typical until 2015. Several anchors who defined themselves as right-wingers later worked in the political scene: Ákos Krakkó, the Célpont anchor, worked from 2010 as press agent for the Fidesz parliamentary group, and from 2014 as press agent for the Prime Minister's Office; and in 2014, anchorwoman Éva Kurucz became the spokeswoman for Viktor Orbán's third government.
In 2015, there was a breakdown in relationships between prime minister Orbán and the owner of Hír TV, Lajos Simicska, who had previously been head of Hungary's internal tax revenue service in Orbán's first government; the dispute caused the channel's political stance to be modified. Since September 2015, the channel has been increasingly critical against the government and open to left-wing and right-wing intellectuals and opinions.