Nippon Television
0 sources
Nippon Television
Summary
Nippon Television is a broadcaster[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of broadcaster entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,731 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- A notable work attributed to Nippon Television is Shōten[3].
- A notable work attributed to Nippon Television is ZIP![4].
- A notable work attributed to Nippon Television is Hirunandesu![5].
- A notable work attributed to Nippon Television is WORLD GREAT TV[6].
- A notable work attributed to Nippon Television is Q2105344[7].
- A notable work attributed to Nippon Television is The Tetsuwan Dash[8].
- Nippon Television was a member of Nippon Television Group[9].
- Nippon Television is in the country of Japan[10].
- Nippon Television's instance of is recorded as broadcaster[11].
- Nippon Television's instance of is recorded as television station[12].
- Nippon Television's anthem is recorded as Q11506617[13].
- Nippon Television's founder is recorded as Matsutarō Shōriki[14].
- Nippon Television is owned by Nippon Television Holdings[15].
- Nippon Television's headquarters location is recorded as Nittele Tower[16].
- Nippon Television's has organizational division is recorded as Nittele G+[17].
- Nippon Television's has organizational division is recorded as Nippon Television Kobato Cultural Foundation[18].
- Nippon Television's has organizational division is recorded as Q11504676[19].
- Nippon Television's child organization or unit is recorded as Nippon TV Tokyo Verdy Beleza[20].
- Nippon Television's child organization or unit is recorded as Tatsunoko Production[21].
- Nippon Television's child organization or unit is recorded as Madhouse[22].
- Nippon Television's child organization or unit is recorded as VAP Inc.[23].
- Nippon Television's child organization or unit is recorded as NTV Technical Resources[24].
- Nippon Television's child organization or unit is recorded as NTV Service[25].
- Nippon Television's child organization or unit is recorded as Nippon Television AX-ON[26].
- Nippon Television's child organization or unit is recorded as Studio Ghibli[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
-
Type: Holding[28]
-
Country: JP[29]
-
Began / founded: 1953-08-28[30]
-
MusicBrainz ID: 06abc9b5-510c-4028-8ab4-bd6076a816bd[31]
Body
Founding
Nippon Television's founder is recorded as Matsutarō Shōriki[14]. October 28, 1952 marks the founding of it[32]. Its location of formation is recorded as Chiyoda[33].
Identity
Official names include {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '日本テレビ放送網株式会社'}[34] and {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Nippon Television Network Corporation'}[35]. Short names include {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '日テレ'}[36] and {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'NTV'}[37].
Operations
Nippon Television's headquarters location is recorded as Nittele Tower[16]. Its parent organization or unit is recorded as Nippon Television Holdings[38]. Subsidiaries include Nippon TV Tokyo Verdy Beleza[20], a women's association football club[39], in Japan[40], founded in 1981[41], headquartered in Chōfu[42]; Tatsunoko Production[21], an animation studio[43], in Japan[44], founded in 1962[45], headquartered in Musashino[46]; Madhouse[22], an animation studio[47], in Japan[48], founded in 1972[49], headquartered in Nakano[50]; VAP Inc.[23], an entertainment company[51], in Japan[52], founded in 1981[53], headquartered in Yonbanchō[54]; NTV Technical Resources[24], a business[55], in Japan[56], founded in 2007[57], headquartered in Tokyo[58]; and NTV Service[25], a business[59], in Japan[60], founded in 1972[61], headquartered in Tokyo[62].
Industry
Nippon Television's industry is recorded as television[63].
Ownership
Nippon Television is owned by Nippon Television Holdings[15]. Its product or material produced is recorded as television program[64].
Why It Matters
Nippon Television ranks in the top 3% of broadcaster entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,731 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 23 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[65] It is known by 84 alternative names across languages and contexts.[66]