Television in Thailand

In Thailand, television broadcasting started on 24 June, 1955 (in NTSC).[1] Color telecasts (PAL, System B/G 625 lines) were started in 1967, and full-time color transmissions were launched in 1975. As of November 2020, there are currently 21 digital (DVB-T2) TV channels in Thailand.

History edit

Television was first officially introduced to Thailand on 24 June 1955 in NTSC.[1] One of the first broadcasters of television were the Mass Communication Organization of Thailand, which was established on 10 November 1952. In the first few years, viewership was low before gradually climbing to 2000 in 1957. Later on in 1955, the Radio Communications Act, B.E. 2498 was passed.[2]

Television had become the largest advertising medium in Thailand by 1959, with only two stations in Bangkok serving 35,000 television sets in a population of nine million.[3] As of 1967, Thailand had the third highest number of television sets in Southeast Asia, with little more than 250,000 sets available.[4] Colour telecast then started in 1967 before in 1975 full-time colour transmissions began.

Television providers edit

Subscription providers are available, with differences in the number of channels, capabilities such as the program guide (EPG), video on demand (VOD), high-definition (HD), interactive television via the red button, and coverage across Thailand. Set-top boxes are generally used to receive these services.

ProviderType of serviceNo. broadcast channelsVODHDRed buttonStill Operate?Transmission
Digital terrestrialFree-to-air36YesYesYesYesDigital terrestrial television
TrueVisionsFree and Pay TVAround 200 (TV and radio)YesYesYesYesDigital satellite, Cable television and IPTV
AIS PlayFree and Pay TVAround 100YesYesYesYesIPTV
GMM ZFree (Previously include Pay TV)Around 150YesYesYesYesDigital satellite and IPTV
PSIFree (Previously include Pay TV)Around 150 (C-band)/100 (KU-band)NoYesYesYesDigital satellite
IPMFreeAround 100NoYesYesYesDigital Satellite
Good TVFree and Pay TVAround 100 (Including 11 Paid Channels)NoYesYesYesDigital Satellite

Analog terrestrial television edit

This is currently the traditional way of receiving television in Thailand, however it has now largely been supplanted by digital providers. There are 6 channels; three of them are government public-owned by MCOT the 2 television channels terrestrial free-to-air Modernine TV and Channel 3; Channel 5 and BBTV Channel 7 are owned by Royal Thai Army; NBT and Thai PBS are fully government-owned. Analog terrestrial transmissions were switched off in phases as part of the digital switchover, which was completed in 2020 in line with ASEAN recommendations.

Independently-run Provincial Public Relations Department Television Services were discontinued in 1988 when National NBT TV feed from Bangkok, which also operated by Public Relations Department, became available to those provincial studios. Since then, local programming has been given a two hour timeslot each day in the schedule.

NameOwnerOperaterLaunch dateChannel (Analog TV - Bangkok Transmitter)Channel - LCN (Digital)Broadcasting areaTransmitted areaBroadcasting hoursFormerly known asAnalog TV Service Ended (UTC+07:00)
Channel 3Bangkok Entertainment Co., Ltd.Bangkok Entertainment Co., Ltd.
MCOT
26 March 19703 (VHF)(1970-2008)
32 (UHF) (2006-2020)
33 (HDTV)[5]BangkokBangkok24 hours26 March 2020 (00:01)[6][7]
Channel 5Royal Thai Army Radio and TelevisionRoyal Thai Army25 January 19585 (VHF)5 (HDTV)BangkokBangkok5:00 a.m. – Midnight (Next Day)HSATV (Channel 7)21 June 2018 (09:29)[8]
Channel 7Bangkok Broadcasting & T.V. Company Limited (BBTV)Bangkok Broadcasting & T.V. Company Limited (BBTV)
Royal Thai Army
27 November 19677 (VHF)35 (HDTV)BangkokBangkok24 hours17 June 2018 (00:00)[9]
Modernine TVMCOTMCOT24 June 19559 (VHF)30 (HDTV)BangkokBangkok24 hoursTTV Channel 4, TTV Channel 9, MCOT Channel 9 and Modernine TV16 July 2018 (18:30)[10]
NBTNBTThe Government Public Relations Department of the Prime Minister's Office11 July 198811 (VHF)2 (HDTV)BangkokBangkok5:00 a.m. - Midnight (End of day)TVT 11 or TV (Channel) 1116 July 2018 (00:00)[11]
Thai PBSThai PBSThai Public Broadcasting Service1 July 199629 (UHF)3 (HDTV)BangkokBangkok5:00 a.m. – 1:00 a.m. (Next Day)ITV, TITV, TPBS, TV Thai16 June 2018 (00:00)[12][13][14]

Digital terrestrial television edit

In 2005, the Ministry of Information announced their plan to digitalize nationwide free-to-air TV broadcasts led by MCOT. Trial broadcasts were undertaken, involving one thousand households in Bangkok from December 2000 till May 2001.In December 2013, the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) set up series of auction for DTTV. Four types of licenses are offered: High-Def. channel license, Standard-Def. channel license, News channel license and Youth/Family channel license. All the major operators and content owners in the industry won the bid for new licenses e.g. BEC World, Bangkok Broadcasting & T.V., GMM Grammy, Thairath Newspaper, Nation Multimedia Group, TrueVisions etc. According to the license condition, DTTV services launched since April 2014.

Bangkok public/state media terrestrial channels edit

Bangkok public/state media free-to-air stations include:

NameOwnerChannel (Bangkok)MUXFrequency (Bangkok)Broadcasting areaTransmitted area
Bangkok NBT Digital 2HDBangkok The Government Public Relations Department of the Prime Minister's Office2 (HDTV)PRD MUX1CH26 (514MHz)BangkokBangkok
Bangkok TV 5 HDBangkok Royal Thai Army5 (HDTV)RTA2 MUX2CH36 (594MHz)BangkokBangkok
Bangkok MCOT HDBangkok MCOT30 (HDTV)MCOT MUX3CH40 (626MHz)BangkokBangkok
Bangkok 7 HDBangkok Broadcasting Television Co., Ltd.35 (HDTV)RTA2 MUX2CH36 (594MHz)BangkokBangkok

Cable television edit

All national cable TVs in Thailand must accept by MCOT, The first provider is International Broadcasting Corporation (IBC) in 1989, next one is Thai Sky TV in 1991 (but off-air in 1997). Universal Television Cable Network (UTV) is the third provider in 1993. But after Asian financial crisis, UTV merged with IBC in 1998, changed its name to United Broadcasting Corporation or UBC (TrueVisions in present) and became a monopoly provider.[citation needed]

IP television (IPTV) edit

In contrast to Internet TV, IPTV refers to services operated and controlled by a single company, who may also control the 'Final Mile' to the consumers' premises.

Mobile television edit

True Move provide mobile television services for reception on third generation mobile phones. They consist of a mixture of regular channels as well as made for mobile channels with looped content. True Move H TV now offers more than 20 channels to True-H 3G subscribers who own compatible mobile phones. Yet, True is expected to roll out broadcast mobile TV services based on DVB-H in the near future.

Internet television edit

Television received via the Internet may be free, subscription or pay-per-view, multicast, unicast, or peer-to-peer, streamed or downloaded, and use a variety of distribution technologies. Playback is normally via a computer and broadband Internet connection, although digital media receivers or media centre computers can be used for playback on televisions, such as a computer equipped with Windows Media Center.

Popularity of terrestrial TV stations edit

The audience share achieved by each terrestrial channel in Thailand is shown in the first table below. The second table shows the share each channel receives of total TV advertising spending. Channel 7 is both the most popular and most commercially successful station with just under 50% of the total audience followed by Channel 3 at just under 30%. The other terrestrial stations share the remaining 20% of the TV audience between them.[15]

Audience Share:[15]

TV Station (Operator)2005200620072008200920102011 1H[16]
Channel 742.441.342.044.745.443.847.5
Channel 324.525.629.526.827.729.529.0
Channel 58.17.36.77.68.68.06.9
Modernine TV10.310.29.29.69.99.79.2
NBT2.93.02.44.93.43.42.4
Thai PBS (Values shown for 2005 - 2007 is for iTV and TITV)11.812.610.26.14.95.65.0

Market Share - Share of total TV advertising spending:[15]

TV Station (Operator)2005200620072008200920102011 1H[16]
Channel 728.027.427.731.028.031.031.7
Channel 320.822.222.528.028.027.027.0
Channel 516.516.015.920.020.018.017.7
Modernine TV13.914.414.517.019.020.020.0
NBT2.32.82.64.04.04.03.6
Thai PBS18.517.316.90000

Audience Share (2022):

PositionChannelShare of total viewing (%)
1Channel 715.6
2Channel 310.8
3Mono 299.1
4Workpoint TV6.5
5One 316.3
6Thairath TV6.0
7Amarin TV5.3
8Channel 83.8
9PPTV 362.5
10True4U1.9
11MCOT1.8
12GMM 251.6
13TV 51.5
14Thai PBS1.4
15NBT0.8
16TNN160.6

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Is TV Still Relevant To Thais?". The ASEAN Post. 29 December 2016. Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  2. ^ "เมื่อเริ่มกิจการโทรทัศน์ในประเทศไทย จากบล็อก โอเคเนชั่น oknation.net". 4 August 2020. Archived from the original on 4 August 2020. Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  3. ^ "Broadcasting" (PDF). 9 November 1959. p. 106. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  4. ^ "Television and Radio Age" (PDF). 1 January 1968. p. 58. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  5. ^ Note - Digital TV Station, owned by BEC Multimedia Company Limited and Launched on 25 April 2014 on 16:00 (Thailand Standard Time)
  6. ^ “26 มี.ค. 63” ดีเดย์ช่อง 3 ยุติอนาล็อก พร้อมเผยแผน Next Move 2020 posted by Jenpasit Puprasert Yarmfaojor page
  7. ^ Last TV Analog in Thailand 🇹🇭 posted by bundit konroo YouTube page
  8. ^ Video of Channel 5 analogue switchoff posted by the Broadcast.Engineering.NBTC Facebook page
  9. ^ ช่อง 7 ยุติการออกอากาศระบบแอนะล็อก posted by JRK YT YouTube page
  10. ^ ช่อง MCOT ยุติทีวีอนาล็อก 16/7/2561 posted by DorRorSor YouTube page
  11. ^ ช่อง NBT ยุติทีวีอนาล็อก 16/7/2561 posted by DorRorSor YouTube page
  12. ^ ThaiPBS (Analog) - Technical Difficulties (15th June 2018) posted by Watty Tyanmy YouTube page
  13. ^ ETC - การเปิดเครื่องส่งแอนะล็อกอีกครั้ง 2:00 หลังจากที่ปิดไปเมื่อ 0:00 16 มิถุนายน 2561 posted by ezybzy YouTube page
  14. ^ Video of Thai PBS analogue switchoff posted by the Broadcast.Engineering.NBTC Facebook page
  15. ^ a b c "Analyst Briefing Presentation" (PDF). MCOT. 2 March 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
  16. ^ a b "Analyst Briefing 2Q" (PDF). MCOT. 16 August 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2012.