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Channel owned and operated by China Central Television
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Television channel
CCTV-14
👁 Image
CountryChina
Broadcast areaWorldwide
Programming
Picture format1080i HDTV
(downscaled to 16:9 576i for the SDTV feed)
Ownership
OwnerChina Central Television
History
Launched28 December 2003
ReplacedCCTV-7
Former namesCCTV-Children
Links
WebsiteCCTV-14
Availability
Terrestrial
Digital TV (DTMB)Digital channel number varies by area.
Cable TV (Hong Kong)Channel 14 (SD)
Channel 514 (HD)
Streaming media
CCTV program websiteCCTV-14

CCTV-14 is a Chinese free-to-air television channel that was launched on 28 December 2003 and is owned by the China Central Television. It airs animated films and series as well as kids game shows and other young-oriented programmes.

Before its launch, CCTV children's programs were broadcast on CCTV-7.

History

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Test transmissions of the channel were started on 8 December 2003. Its first broadcast was made on 10 December 2003 with a duration of 16 hours. The channel was made available on UHF channel 33 in the Beijing area; most of the other CCTV channels (except CCTV-1 and CCTV-2) were only available on cable and satellite television at the time.[1] CCTV-14 was formally launched on 28 December 2003 as CCTV-Children and was split from CCTV-7. As of August 2006, when the government began enacting a ban on foreign-made animated series between 5 and 8pm taking effect from 1 September, most of its programming was produced in China; competing channels from local networks were more dependent on dubbed foreign programming, especially Korean, American and Japanese.[2] On 1 January 2011, the channel was renamed to CCTV-14.

Since 2013, CCTV-14 has aired the CCTV New Year's Gala.

In August 2019, the channel produced an adapted version of The Selfish Giant, titled The Giants Garden, a live musical phenomenon with a cast of nearly 300 of Shanghai's top child actors. It was presented in English instead of Mandarin and broadcast to all of the People's Republic of China. The show was met with acclaim,[citation needed] and aided in installing a yearly tradition of the channel producing a musical to be broadcast entirely in English with original music.

References

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  1. ^ 2005 World Radio and Television Handbook, page 639
  2. ^ McDonald, Joe (13 August 2006). "China Bans 'Simpsons' From Prime-Time TV". The Washington Post. Associated Press.

External links

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