Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK)
Nippon Hōsō Kyōkai / Nihon Hōsō Kyōkai
日本放送協会
Type Broadcast radio network
and Broadcast television network
Country Japan
Availability Nationwide and Worldwide
Slogan まっすぐ、真剣。("Straightforward, earnest")[citation needed]
Area Shibuya, Tokyo
Owner Government of Japan (Public Broadcast)
Launch date March 22, 1925 (radio)
1953 (television)
Former names Japanese Radio Station (1925-26)
Official website nhk.or.jp
Availability
Terrestrial
General TV Digital–Ch 1 (Tokyo)
Digital–Ch 2 (Osaka)
Digital–Ch 3 (Nagoya)
Educational TV Digital- Ch 2 (Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya)
Satellite
BS-1 Digital-Ch 101
BS-PREMIUM Digital- Ch 103
NHK WORLD nhkTV, nhkRadio Japan
NHK Broadcasting Museum
NHK Osaka

NHK (日本放送協会, nippon housou kyoukai; official English name: Japan Broadcasting Corporation) is Japan's national public broadcasting organization.[1] NHK, which has always identified itself to its audiences by the English pronunciation of its initials,[2] is a publicly owned corporation funded by viewers' payments of a television license fee.

NHK operates two terrestrial television services (NHK General TV and NHK Educational TV), two satellite television services (NHK BS-1 and NHK BS Premium, both now high-definition television services), and three radio networks (NHK Radio 1, NHK Radio 2, and NHK FM).

NHK also provides an international broadcasting service, known as NHK World. NHK World is composed of NHK World TV, NHK World Premium, and the shortwave radio service NHK World Radio Japan. World Radio Japan also makes some of its programs available on the internet.

Contents

History [link]

Until the 1940s, NHK was a national radio broadcasting monopoly.[2][3]

On 22 March 1925, one and a half years after the Great Kantō earthquake, Radio Japan produced the first radio broadcast in the country, transmitting from Atago Hill just north of the Tokugawa Tombs in Shiba Park. The first programme included Beethoven, classical Japanese music, and a play by Ōyō.[2] In the same year, there were also broadcasts from Ōsaka and Nagoya.[4]

NHK was founded in 1926, modelled on the BBC of the United Kingdom.[2] NHK evolved from the amalgamation of the three regional broadcasting corporations. This merger and reorganisation was carried out under the auspices of the pre-war Ministry of Communications.[5]

NHK’s second radio network began in 1931, and the third radio network (FM) began in 1938. In 1935 NHK began a shortwave radio service for listeners overseas known as ’’‘Radio Japan’’’ until the 1940s.

In November 1941, the Imperial Japanese Army nationalised all public news agencies and coordinated their efforts via the Information Liaison Confidential Committee.[citation needed] All published and broadcast news reports became official announcements of the Imperial Army General Headquarters in Tokyo for the duration of World War II. The famous Tokyo Rose wartime programs were broadcasts by NHK.[2]

In 1950, three post-war radio rules were enacted including the Broadcast Law (“Hōsō Hō”), replacing the pre-war Radio Telegraph Law. Under this law, NHK started afresh as a special corporation to be supported by its viewers.[6]

NHK started General TV in 1950 and its Educational TV in 1959. In 1960, it began broadcasting in colour.

In the 1980s, NHK BS TV broadcasts started.[7], and in 1995 NHK launched its international arm, ’’‘NHK World TV’’’.

In 2000, NHK started satellite digital TV broadcasts, while in 2003, terrestrial digital TV broadcasts came for three megacity areas. These expanded to cover almost all Japan in July 2011. NHK BS Hi-Vision analogue TV was discontinued in September 2007, and a year later NHK World TV was available Free-To-Air over the Astra 19.2°E (Astra 1L) in Europe.

A few months later on 28 November 2008,[8] NHK World TV began Test transmissions on the Eurobird series of satellites, Free to Air, at 28.5 Degrees East. The transmissions, on 11.680 GHz (Vertical polarity, FEC 2/3, S/R 27.5MBaud), currently appear only by adding the channel manually on Sky Digital equipment, and the channel is currently recognised by a code number, “51108”. It is not currently known how long this service will be available for, or what the plans for NHK World presently are. It appears in the Freesat EPG on channel 209.

License fee [link]

NHK is paid for by license fees (known in Japanese as reception fee (受信料 Jushinryō?)). The Broadcast Law which governs NHK’s funding stipulates that any television equipped to receive NHK is required to pay. The fee is standardized,[9] with discounts for office workers and students who commute, as well a general discount for residents of Okinawa prefecture.

However, the Broadcast Law lists no punitive actions for nonpayment; as a result of this, after a rash of NHK-related scandals, the number of people who had not paid the license fee surpassed one million users.[citation needed] This incident sparked debate over the fairness of the fee system.[10] In 2006, the NHK opted to take legal action against those most flagrantly in violation of the law.[11]

NHK domestic broadcasting stations [link]

TV programming [link]

NHK General TV broadcasts a variety of programming. The following are noteworthy:

News [link]

Local, national, and world news reports. NHK News 7 offers bilingual broadcasts on NHK General TV, NHK World TV and NHK World Premium. Its current flagship news program is News Watch 9, also broadcast throughout the whole NHK network. NHK also offers news for the deaf, regional news and children’s news. News Today 30 Minutes is the new name of NHK NEWSWATCH which ran for 6 years. It is an English newscast designed for foreign viewers. On 2 February 2009, NHK World TV changed and the flagship newscast, Newsline, also changed and is currently the flagship newscast on NHK and NHK World TV.

In his book 'Broadcasting politics in Japan:NHK and television news', ES Krauss states:' in the 1960s and 1970s, external critics of NHK news were complaining about the strict neutrality, the lack of criticism of government, and the 'self-regulation in covering events' ' Krauss claims that little had changed by the 1980s and 1990s.[12] After the Fukushima nuclear disaster in 2011 NHK was criticised for underplaying the dangers from radioactive contamination.[2][13]

Emergency reporting [link]

Under the Broadcast Act, NHK is under the obligation to broadcast early warning emergency reporting in times of natural disasters such as earthquakes and tsunamis. Their national network of seismometers in cooperation with the Japan Meteorological Agency makes NHK capable of delivering the news in just 2–3 minutes after the quake. They also broadcast air attack warnings in the event of war, using the J-Alert system.[14] All warnings are broadcast in five languages: English, Mandarin, Korean and Portuguese (Japan has small Chinese, Korean and Brazilian populations), as well as Japanese. The warnings were broadcast in these languages during the 11 March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.[15]

Education [link]

Education programmes are watched nation-wide at primary schools. Tensai Terebikun MAX (better known as TTK) is a show combining a small amount of education with entertainment. TTK is currently hosted by the Yasuda Big Circus, Maki Nishiyama and a cast of 24 children ranging from ages 8 to 14.

Weather [link]

Weather in detail, nationwide, and international for travellers.

Sports [link]

NHK broadcasts the six annual Grand Sumo tournaments (having done so since the 1953 Natsu Basho), high-school baseball championships from Koshien Stadium, Olympic Games, National Sports Festival of Japan, and a range of other sports. NHK also broadcasts Boston Red Sox games when Daisuke Matsuzaka pitches. NHK also holds rights to broadcast the FA Premier League in Japan.[16]

News analysis [link]

The network carries in-depth reports on current topics, political debate, and similar programming.

Music [link]

The annual Kōhaku Uta Gassen on New Year’s Eve is the highlight. The weekly schedule includes an amateur hour, and prime-time shows for all ages. Music Japan is shown each week with brand new Japanese pop, and rock acts.

J-Melo is NHK’s first music program to be recorded entirely in English for international consumption.

The NHK Symphony Orchestra, financially sponsored by NHK, was formerly (until 1951) the Japanese Symphony Orchestra. Its website details the orchestra's history and ongoing concert programme.[17]

Drama [link]

A sentimental morning show, a weekly jidaigeki and a year-long show, the ’’Taiga drama’’, spearhead the network’s fiction offerings. NHK is also making efforts to broadcasting the drama made in foreign countries as "Overseas Drama (海外ドラマ Kaigai Dorama?)".

Documentaries [link]

NHK has become known for its documentary series, first for the popular mini-series Legacy for the Future, and later for the NHK Tokushu (later known as NHK Special) [18] documentaries series such as The Silk Road and The 20th Century on Film (映像の世紀 Eizō no Seiki?).

Children [link]

The longest running children’s show in Japan, Okaasan to Issho (おかあさんといっしょ?, With Mother, 1959 [19]), still airs to this day on NHK-ETV.

Sesame Street was one of the first imports, debuting in 1971. It resumed in 1988, until 2004, when a local adaptation was announced, which NHK refused to be involved in. Teenagers and adults watched the program to learn English (though much later on, a dubbed version was also available). When the American Sesame Street aired on NHK, the channel produced episode guides. In the 2000s, when the show was available in both English and Japanese, Sesame English was interspersed within the program, first as a replacement for Elmo's World, but later in addition to it.

Other [link]

Cooking, comedy, exercise, gardening, crafts, anime, igo, shogi.

Notable programs [link]

See also [link]

References [link]

Notes [link]

  1. ^ NHK: Profile
  2. ^ a b c d e Sidensticker, Edward. (1990). ’‘Tokyo Rising: The City Since the Great Earthquake,’’ p. 67.
  3. ^ See article "Frank Shozo Baba"
  4. ^ NHK: Evolution of television
  5. ^ NHK.or.jp
  6. ^ NHK.or.jp
  7. ^ NHK.or.jp
  8. ^ Techworld.co.uk
  9. ^ NHK.or.jp
  10. ^ Asahi.com: IHT/Asahi: February 24, 2005
  11. ^ NHK.or.jp Summary of Press Conference (November 2006): On the demanding of fee payment through legal proceedings
  12. ^ Ellis S Krauss Broadcasting politics in Japan: NHK and television news Cornell University Press 2000 pp39-40
  13. ^ [1], accessed 5th Jan 2012
  14. ^ Corkill, Edan, "Planning pays off as NHK takes its quake news global", Japan Times, 20 March 2011, p. 9.
  15. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gYLh6AroU20&feature=related An actual recording of an emergency broadcast in English, Mandarin, Korean and Portuguese
  16. ^ https://www.premierleague.com/page/International/0,,12306~1393637,00.html
  17. ^ "NHK Symphony Orchestra website" Referenced 24 November 2010
  18. ^ "50 Years of NHK Television". Categories. NHK World. p. 30. https://www.nhk.or.jp/digitalmuseum/nhk50years_en/categories/p30/index.html. Retrieved 13 September 2009. 
  19. ^ "50 Years of NHK Television". Categories. NHK World. p. 45. https://www.nhk.or.jp/digitalmuseum/nhk50years_en/categories/p45/index.html. Retrieved 13 September 2009. 

Additional sources [link]

External links [link]

Coordinates: 35°39′55.07″N 139°41′45.41″E / 35.6652972°N 139.6959472°E / 35.6652972; 139.6959472


https://wn.com/NHK

NHK (disambiguation)

NHK may refer to the following:

  • NHK, the Japanese public broadcasting corporation
  • NHK Trophy, a figure skating competition jointly held by the broadcasting corporation and Japan Skating Federation
  • NHK Spring Company Ltd
  • Welcome to the N.H.K., a Japanese novel later adapted into a manga and anime series
  • The Dutch Reformed Church (Nederlandse Hervormde Kerk)
  • The Nederduitsch Hervormde Kerk van Afrika, a Dutch Reformed denomination in Southern Africa
  • Nucleosomal Histone Kinase, a protein
  • Nozaki–Hiyama–Kishi reaction, a coupling reaction used in organic synthesis
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Shading

    by: All That Remains

    I've seen through the shading
    And down to what's within
    Reaching you will feel me
    Lost and alone
    You said i was what you were looking for
    So why do i feel so empty
    And it seemed so real
    Pulled from my grasp taken away
    Am i nothing in your eyes
    Reaching out i feel
    You were pulling away, never letting me in
    I am nothing in your eyes
    Day in day out i see you live your life again
    A fool i stand here in waiting
    In letters words and pictures
    You profess your love to me
    And to the last they were lies
    The malice i should feel for you deceitfulness
    Some how always escapes me
    And in the shading
    Between the words you said to me




    ×