TV Mundo Maior
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Country | Brazil |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | Nationwide |
| Headquarters | Guarulhos, SP |
| Programming | |
| Picture format | 1080i HDTV |
| Ownership | |
| Owner | Fundação Espírita André Luiz |
| History | |
| Launched | 1 January 2006 (2006-01-01) |
| Links | |
| Website | www |
TV Mundo Maior (stylized in upper case) is a Brazilian Spiritist television network headquartered in Guarulhos, SP, owned by the André Luiz Spiritist Foundation (Fundação Espírita André Luiz).
The André Luiz Spiritist Foundation started television production by assisting in Espiritismo Via Satélite in 2001, with assistance from SEDA in Salvador. The existing Spiritist program was produced by Alamar Régis and aired on Embratel's executive channel. In 2003, the foundation took over and renamed it as Boa Nova na TV, after its sister radio station, Rádio Boa Nova.[1]
The station started broadcasting on 1 January 2006 with limited resources from a studio in São Paulo's Santana district, from small facilities which included a TV studio that was "the size of a garage". The channel broadcast two hours of original programming each day, limited to three programs: talk show Nova Consciência, Vida Nova, about people who recovered from vices such as drugs, and Protagonistas, about the voluntary sector. The rest of the schedule was occupied by relays of Rede STV (Rede Sesc Senac de Televisão, renamed SescTV later in the year), by means of a partnership, which provided it with a direct simulcast of the channel. Gradually, the amount of in-house programs increased.[2] After operating in test phase, the station made its official launch on 17 March, with a special event held at FEAL's auditorium in Guarulhos.[3]
Its early years were marked by strong improvisation, most of its programs being made without massive editing. Its programming largely consisted of cultural interest and self-help programming.[4]
The first live broadcast only took place in 2007, coinciding with the fifth anniversary of the death of Chico Xavier. The agreement with SescTV was later broken as one of the channel's staff noted that it aired a short film where a page of the Bible was used to smoke drugs, which would be seen negatively by its audience. This enabled the channel to deliver a 24-hour schedule.[2] By early 2009, the channel had a staff of 39 (including interns and volunteers, though aiming to become a fully-professional operation over time), produced over 50 hours of new content per week and was eyeing the creation of a feature-length Spiritist film, at a time when Spiritist-themed movies and biopics were a trend in Brazilian cinema. It also aimed at lowering its age demographic: at the time, the average age of the channel's viewer ranged between ages 40-60, however its ambitions were targeting the 20-40 demographic, having attempted programs for viewers in their thirties.[5] In June 2009, the channel produced a program from Frutal, adjacent to Uberaba, for the first time, which was a weekly program combining Spiritism with local news. The local relay station was set up at an improvised studio from the local partner.[6]
On 7 November 2011, its physical capacity on satellite began to be shared with TV CEI, of the International Spiritist Council, with each part providing equal amounts of airtime: six hours of new content and six hours of repeats from each channel, totalling twelve hours each. The goal was to merge the two channels in early 2012.[7] In November 2015, the partnership (by then, TV CEI was renamed FEB TV, of the Brazilian Spiritist Federation) was dissolved and the channel resumed 24-hour programming.[2]
In February 2012, it moved to its current premises at a two-floor building in Guarulhos.[2]
On 1 April 2016, the station launched in Uberaba, city where Chico Xavier lived from the late 1950s up until his death in 2002 (replacing a relay of TV Integração Ituiutaba on channel 11; at the same time TV Integração Uberaba started on channel 3) and, in September, in Araraquara.[8] It also received authorization to start over-the-air broadcasts in Juiz de Fora.[9] On 16 October 2017, it started broadcasting to Araçatuba.[10]
On 11 March 2022, the channel received authorization from ANATEL to migrate from C-band to Ku-band TVRO satellite.[11] In early January 2024, it shut down operations on C-band satellite, causing its over-the-air relay station in Uberaba to be temporarily off air.[12]
References
- ↑ Considerações sobre a nota que está no site da FEAL
- 1 2 3 4 Mundo Maior Repórter: Especial 10 Anos da TV Mundo Maior, 9 January 2016
- ↑ RIE (in Brazilian Portuguese). Centro Espírita "Amigos da Pobreza". 2006. Retrieved 19 March 2026.
- ↑ Leão, Frederico Camelo. Saúde, Espiritualidade, Religiosidade: uma abordagem comunicacional (PDF) (in Brazilian Portuguese). Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo.
- ↑ André Marouço: Responsável pela TV Mundo Maior
- ↑ A história da imprensa de Frutal: um passado presente.
- ↑ TV CEI e TV Mundo Maior fazem parceria para unificar programação
- ↑ TV Mundo Maior estreia em TV aberta na cidade de Araraquara
- ↑ O IDEAL
- ↑ A primeira grande TV espírita
- ↑ 5G: Anatel publica lista das 106 emissoras que migrarão da banda C para banda Ku
- ↑ TV Mundo Maior encerra transmissões na banda C