24 horas (Chile)
24 horas (English: 24 hours) is the brand that identifies the gathering and broadcasting of news in the Chilean public broadcaster Televisión Nacional de Chile. It started as an informative programme of the same television network on 1 October 1990. Then in 2009 it became a television channel called Canal 24 horas.
24 Horas | |
---|---|
Genre | News |
Country of origin | Chile |
Production | |
Running time | 60–90 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | TVN |
Original release | October 1, 1990 – present |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | 60 Minutos (1975-1988) |
External links | |
Website |
It has four different editions: "24 AM" (mornings), "24 Tarde " (midday), "24 Horas central" (evening) and "Medianoche" (late night). That national news bulletins are broadcast by TVN, Canal 24 horas and TV Chile.
History
Its first edition was broadcast on October 1, 1990, led by Cecilia Serrano and Bernardo de la Maza on the "Edición Central". Gradually, the editions of the newscast gained ground in the ratings on rival Canal 13, overtaking the latter in the mid-1990s. On October 10, 2001, coinciding with the première of the soap opera Amores de Mercado (Market's Loves), which preceded the news, the Central Edition scored 42.2 rating points between 21:00 and 21:56, a figure that hasn't been matched since.
On March 8, 2004, it changed its image to match the new logo of TVN. There were other major changes that year; the old presenters, Bernardo de la Maza, Cecilia Serrano, were replaced with Amaro Gomez-Pablos and Consuelo Saavedra. This move was criticized.
Between 1999 and 2002, it had a fifth edition entitled Edición Vespertina de 24 Horas (24 Horas Evening Edition), which aired at 18:00. It was hosted by Consuelo Saavedra, Mónica Rincón, María Isabel Toloza, and later by journalist María Jesús Sáinz.
Local newscasts are issued at 14:20 and 21:35.
In 2002, the newsletter closed the signal transmitted by the Santiago Metro, called MetroTV. In 2005, she returned to the United States, the journalist Consuelo Saavedra and assumes the leadership of the main news with Amaro Gómez-Pablos. One of the highlights of the news was its live coverage of the Iraq War and especially the fall of Saddam Hussein, featuring Santiago Pavlovic, Rafael Cavada and cinematographer Alejandro Leal.
In October 2007, 24 Horas started a channel on YouTube, making Televisión Nacional de Chile the first television station in the country with an official presence on the site.
On August 1, 2008, VTR announced that by the end of the year it will air TVN 24 Horas, a 24-hour news channel which rivals the local branch U.S. news network CNN Chile (which premiered on December 4). The new channel launched in March 2009, becoming the second uninterrupted news channel in the country after CNN Chile, which was launched in December 2008. It was launched with the objective of becoming the definitive news source in the country. Air time is divided into different thematic segments, covering economic, international, sports, local issues, entertainment and technology, and it broadcasts the three main news programs of TVN. For its international content, it has an alliance with the US MSNBC.[1] After its inauguration, the channel's first long-term coverage was the aftermath of the 2010 Chilean earthquake in the south-central zone of Chile from February 2010.[2]
Editions
24 AM
The first edition under this name aired on March 12, 2019, and is currently presented by Gonzalo Ramirez and Carla Zunino. Before 2019 it was called "Tu Mañana, 24 horas", "24 Horas en la mañana", "Edición Matinal" and "Primera Edición".[3]
Presenters
Period | Presenters |
---|---|
1992-1995 | Alejandro Guillier |
1995-1999 | Benjamín Palacios |
1999–present | Mauricio Bustamante |
2002-2003 | María Jesús Sainz |
2003 | Carolina Urrejola |
2004-2012 | Mónica Pérez |
2012-2014 | Andrea Arístegui |
2014 | Consuelo Saavedra |
2014–2019 | Carolina Escobar |
2019– | Carla Zunino |
2019- | Gonzalo Ramirez |
24 Horas Tarde
The first edition under this name aired on March 8, 2004, and is currently presented by Gonzalo Ramírez and Carolina Escobar. Between 2004 and 201? it was called "Edición Uno" "Segunda Edición”, and “24 Horas al Dia”
Presenters
- Current presenters
- Special editions and holidays
- Patricia Venegas (2011-).
- Davor Gjuranovic (2012-).
- Carla Zunino (2009-).
- Carolina Escobar (2013-).
- Fresia Soltof (2013-).
- Former presenters
- Mónica Pérez (2004-2012).
- Mónica Rincón (2004-2008).
- Scarleth Cárdenas (2008-2015).
- Andrea Arístegui (2009-2011).
- Pablo Marín (2010-2011).
- Weather forecast
- Iván Torres (2004-).
24 horas central
The first edition under this name aired on March 8, 2004, and is currently presented by Matías del Río and Mónica Pérez. Before 2004 it was called "Edición Central".
Medianoche
The first edition under this name aired on 1996, and is currently presented by Felipe León. Before 1996 it was called "Edición Dos" (1990-1992) and "Edición Nocturna".
Release
The program is also available globally, via GuaoTV.
References
- "Televisión Nacional de Chile lanza un nuevo canal de 24 horas de noticias" (in Spanish). Proceso.hn. March 5, 2009. Retrieved October 9, 2020.
- "La TV y el terremoto por Jorge Cabezas" (in Spanish). Elmostrador.cl. Retrieved October 9, 2020.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "Gonzalo Ramírez asume conducción de noticiarios que dejó Bustamante". Terra Networks Chile. August 17, 2016. Archived from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved September 20, 2011.
- Mónica Ñancupán (March 7, 2013). "Carolina Escobar debuta en Canal 24 Horas". 24horas.cl. Retrieved September 20, 2011.