Télévision Par Satellite
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Company type | Société anonyme |
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Industry | Mass media |
Founded | 1996 |
Defunct | 2008 |
Fate | Acquired by Canal+ |
Successor | Canal+ |
Headquarters | Paris, France |
Products | Satellite television ADSL television Digital television Television channels |
Owner | Eutelsat Arte TF1 Group M6 Group France Télévisions (1996-2002) CLT-UFA France Telecom Suez Environnement (1996-2008) Canal+ (2008) |
Télévision Par Satellite (French: [televizjɔ̃ paʁ satɛlit]; TPS) was a French company that offered subscription television packages via satellite.
It was created in 1996 by Eutelsat and Arte, soon joined by the TF1 Group, the M6 Group, France Télévisions, RTL Group, France Telecom and Suez Environnement. France Télévisions left the company in 2002.
TPS offered various channels, including some owned by themselves:
- TPS Star, the general entertainment flagship channel
- TPS Foot, a football channel
- Multivision, a 7-channel premium PPV service
- And several movie channels: TPS Cineclub, TPS CinéComedy, TPS Cinéculte, TPS Cinextrême, TPS Cinéfamily, TPS Cinéstar, TPS Cinétoile and TPS Homecinéma.
In November 2005, it was announced that TPS would merge with its competitor CanalSat, owned by the Canal+ Group.
The two distributors merged their packages on March 21, 2007. Essentially, TPS merged into CanalSat which was then branded as Nouveau CanalSat. All the TPS branded movie channels were merged into the Canal+-owned CinéCinéma package, TPS Star and TPS Foot would be the only channels that still used the TPS brand. Some new channels launched on both platforms. Eventually, the TPS service from the Hot Bird satellites will close down and the former TPS customers will have to change their equipment to receive the CanalSat service from the Astra satellites instead.