RCTV

Radio Caracas Televisión
CountryVenezuela
HeadquartersCaracas, Distrito Capital, Venezuela
Programming
Language(s)Spanish
Picture format480i SDTV
Ownership
OwnerEmpresas 1BC
ParentRadio Caracas Televisión RCTV, C.A.
Key peopleMarcel Granier
Eladio Lárez (Pres., RCTV)
History
Launched15 November 1953 (15 November 1953)
FounderWilliam H. Phelps Jr.
Closed27 May 2007 (27 May 2007) (as a terrestrial network)
24 January 2010 (24 January 2010)
Replaced by
  • RCTV Internacional
  • TVes (free-to-air frequencies)
Links
Websitewww.rctvinternational.com

Radio Caracas Televisión (RCTV and sometimes referred to as the Canal de Bárcenas) is a Venezuelan over-the-top streaming service and formerly a free-to-air television network headquartered in the Caracas neighborhood of Quinta Crespo and owned by Empresas 1BC. Radio Caracas Televisión (RCTV) was inaugurated on 15 November 1953 by William H. Phelps, Jr.

Its radio counterpart was Radio Caracas Radio.

On 27 May 2007, president Hugo Chávez decided to shut down the channel by refusing to renew their broadcast concession, accusing the channel of being involved in the 2002 coup d'état in Venezuela, which briefly overthrew his government. The Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ) upheld the National Commission of Telecommunications (CONATEL) decision. RCTV continued to broadcast via pay television on RCTV Internacional. In January 2010, RCTV was sanctioned with temporary closure. It rejected the Venezuelan media regulator's finding that it was a domestic media provider.

On 7 September 2015, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruled that the refusal to renew the concession was an "indirect restriction on the exercise of freedom of expression [...] aimed at impeding the communication and circulation of ideas and opinions", that the government violated the right to due process and that it must restore the concession for RCTV. The Venezuelan government has ignored the ruling.

In 2010, the Council on Foreign Relations described RCTV as "the most important independent television station in Venezuela".