Type | Over-the-air television network |
---|---|
Country | Brazil |
Affiliates | See List of MTV Brasil affiliates |
Headquarters | São Paulo, Brazil |
Programming | |
Language(s) | Portuguese |
Picture format | 480i (4:3 SDTV) 1080i (16:9 HDTV) |
Ownership | |
Owner | Grupo Abril MTV Networks (1996–2009)[1] |
Parent | Abril Radiodifusão |
History | |
Launched | 20 October 1990 |
Founder | Grupo Abril and MTV Networks |
Replaced | TV Abril (1989-1990) |
Closed | 1 April 2012 30 September 2013 (terrestrial television) | (Satellite TV)
Replaced by | |
Former names | TV Abril (1989–1990) |
MTV Brasil was a Brazilian over-the-air television network owned by Grupo Abril focused on the youth and entertainment. The network was launched on 20 October 1990, as the first specialty television network to broadcast over-the-air, becoming the local version of MTV.[2] It was the third MTV iteration launched in the world, and the first to broadcast via terrestrial television.
The network headquarters was at 52 Avenida Professor Alfonso Bovero, Sumaré, São Paulo city, which was formerly the headquarters of Rede Tupi. This building was listed by Conselho de Defesa do Patrimônio Histórico (Condephaat) as having an historical heritage, becoming the first to be officially listed in the city.[3]
At the beginning of the 2010s, the channel was considered the largest youth network and the seventh largest terrestrial TV network in Brazil; it is still counted by Meio&Mensagem newspaper as the fifth most-viewed TV network in the country.[4][5] MTV Brasil was the first network in the country dedicated to young people,[6][7] in addition to being the first TV network in Brazil to broadcast their programming 24-hours-a-day, morning and night.[8]
The network ceased their operations on 30 September 2013, being replaced by a new channel operated by Viacom on subscription television. Its last music broadcast was “Orra Meu” by Rita Lee while its last music video to air was "Maracatu Atômico" by Chico Science & Nação Zumbi. On terrestrial television, the network was replaced by Ideal TV.[9]