Médiaszolgáltatás-támogató és Vagyonkezelő Alap | |
Image Alt: | MTVA headquarters |
Type: | State-owned corporation |
Location City: | Budapest |
Location Country: | Hungary |
Area Served: | Hungary |
Industry: | Mass media |
Services: | Television, radio, online |
Owner: | Government of Hungary |
Subsid: | Duna Média |
Médiaszolgáltatás-támogató és Vagyonkezelő Alap (MTVA) (en|Media Services and Support Trust Fund) is a Hungarian fund company owned and financed by the Hungarian state, through the National Media and Infocommunications Authority (hu|Nemzeti Média- és Hírközlési Hatóság, NMHH). MTVA was established on 1 January 2011, and from July 2015 the company's main task has been to finance and operate Duna Média, Hungary's state public company. It is an active member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU).
A 2019 report by the European Federation of Journalists stated that news coverage of Hungarian public broadcaster is not balanced, opposition politicians' viewpoints are nearly absent from the reports, and there is a lack of transparency over the funding and work of MTVA. The report concluded that the "public service media have been deformed into state media."[1] Moreover, MTVA withdrew its participation from the EBU's Eurovision Song Contest amid a rise in anti-LGBTQ+ sentiment among the leadership of Hungary and MTVA; while no official reason for the withdrawal was given by the broadcaster, an inside source speaking with the website Index.hu speculated that the contest was considered "too gay" for MTVA to participate.[2]
MTVA brought together four public media companies in Hungary: Magyar Rádió (MR), Magyar Televízió (MTV), Duna Televízió (Duna TV) and Magyar Távirati Iroda (MTI). At the same time, MTI was given the exclusive right to produce news content for the public broadcasters.[3] [4] [5] According to Hungarian politicians, the establishment of MTVA should help clean up the country's "dysfunctional public broadcasting sector". However, the media reform received criticism from foreign politicians and media experts, who believed the reform limited the independence of broadcasters and gave the government greater control over the country's public broadcasters.[6]
The four broadcasters continued as four divisions under MTVA, but on 1 July 2015 were merged into one joint broadcasting company: Duna Media. This nonprofit organization is the legal successor to each of the four formerly separate entities managed by the MTVA.[7] The Duna TV channel become the main generalist channel, replacing the first Magyar Televízió channel M1, the oldest in Hungary, which changed its format/genre and assumed continuous broadcast of news related programming.[8] Among other things, MTVA is responsible for distributing funds and resources to the various departments in Duna Media. Most people who work for Duna Media are also employed through MTVA. According to the Hungarian National Assembly, MTVA wants to have a relationship with its British counterpart, BBC.[9]
Its activities include radio, television, news agencies and online services as listed below:
Current:
News and entertainment
Pop music and youth programming
Classical music
Folk, operetta and pop-folk
broadcasts programs aimed at ethnic minorities in Hungary
Parliamentary broadcasts and political events
jazz music
sport programs and broadcasts
kids programsFormer:
Regional programs from Debrecen, Győr, Miskolc, Pécs and Szeged. The radio closed down on 22 December 2012.
Folk, operetta, pop-folk. The radio closed down on 22 December 2012.
Temporary radio set up due to the 2013 European floods.
broadcasts, news and Hungarian programs to Hungarians abroad. The radio closed down on 13 June 2024.
Current:
Duna Media's main generalist channel for television.
international channel which caters to Hungarians abroad
broadcasts news, debates and current affairs programming.
children channel
channel for young people
Sports channel established in July 2015
Sports channel established in September 2020 which caters to Hungarians abroad
culture and educational programmingFormer or planned channels
broadcasts, movies and historical programs, taken from the archives of Magyar Televízió and Duna TV. As a TV channel, it closed down on 30 April 2019 and launched as an online service the following day.
The first 3D television channel between 25 June 2012 and 13 August.
News channel about the digital television transition between 4 April 2013 and 31 January 2014.
A channel which was announced but never launched. It would have broadcast Ultra HD programs.
A channel which was announced but never launched. The channel was planned as a regional channel of Budapest.
In 2011, MTVA's news editor Dániel Papp manipulated a news segment about politician Daniel Cohn-Bendit to make it look like he fled the scene without an answer after being questioned on accusations of child abuse. Subsequently uncut footage showed that Cohn-Bendit actually replied to the reporter's questions and denied the accusations. Papp was later promoted.[10] In the same year, Zoltán Lomnici, the former president of the Supreme Court was blurred out from a report about a press conference he was co-hosting. The censoring of Lomnici was suggested to be politically motivated.[11] [12]
In 2019 a leaked audio recording made during the run-up to European Parliament elections showed a senior MTVA editor, Balazs Bende informing reporters that the institution does not favor the opposition's list and the reporters should work accordingly. Bende instructed the reporters to produce content using the "appropriate" narrative and methodology, especially on topics like Brussels and migrants.[13] [14]