Wikipedia

Kalaallit Nunaata Radioa

Kalaallit Nunaata Radioa
TypePublic-service
radio and television
broadcaster
Country
AvailabilityGreenland
OwnerGovernment of Greenland
Key people
Karl-Henrik Simonsen,
Director General
Launch date
1958 (founded)
1982 (television)
Official website
KNR.gl
Watch KNR1 online
Watch KNR2 online

Kalaallit Nunaata Radioa (KNR) (literally Greenland's Radio; officially rendered into English as the Greenlandic Broadcasting Corporation) is Greenland's national public broadcasting organization.

Based in the country's capital city, Nuuk, KNR is an independent state-owned corporation headed by a five-person board. Its activities are funded from a mixture of sources, mainly direct government funding but also limited on-air advertising.

KNR's former Headquarters in Nuuk
Former KNR station in Ilulissat

In 2012–13 all elements of KNR Radio and TV relocated to a new building in Nuuk.

TV

KNR offers two channels nationwide, KNR1 and KNR2. They are available via digital terrestrial television (DVB-T), and digital cable television (DVB-C). Both channels are also streamed online via YouTube.

KNR1 is the primary channel and most of its programming is in the Greenlandic language (Kalaallisut). KNR2 goes on air only to broadcast live from specific events.

In 2006, KNR TV installed a complete digital SD-SDI production and editing facility with the infrastructure needed to provide for the local production of talkshows, news, and remote broadcasts.

Prior to January 2013, KNR1 also featured programming from Danish television networks DR and TV 2 but when several of DR's channels were made free-to-air in Greenland, KNR decided to focus on original Greenlandic programming. [1]

On 21 June 2020, both KNR1 and KNR2 switched to 720p HD resolution.[2]

Radio

The KNR radio station broadcasts nationwide. It is available on FM, AM, and on line. It broadcasts mainly in the Greenlandic language but some programming is also in Danish.

In Nuuk KNR also provides a direct relay of Danish national radio's first channel (DR P1) via FM.

References

  1. ^ Nielsen, Stig Hartvig. "Grønland: Mere grønlandsk tv på KNR". TVnyt.com. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  2. ^ "KNR sendes nu i HD-kvalitet". Sermitsiaq. 25 June 2020. Retrieved 25 June 2020.

External links

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