Emissoras Unidas


Rede de Emissoras Unidas de Rádio e Televisão or Emissoras Unidas, was grouping of Brazilian radio and television stations led by Paulo Machado de Carvalho.

History

Background

Its history coincides at some stages with those of TV Record and TV Rio. In 1924, a RCA inaugurated Rádio Transmissora in Rio de Janeiro, in 1928, a group of businessmen set up Rádio Record in São Paulo. In 1931, Rádio Record is sold to Paulo Machado de Carvalho, a businessman from São Paulo. In 1935, according to the policy instituted by Getúlio Vargas' Estado Novo, a Rádio Transmissora was sold to businessmen from Rio de Janeiro, changing its name to Rádio Rio.

Formation of Emissoras Unidas; television concessions

In the early 1950s, Rádio Rio obtains the license for channel 13 in Rio de Janeiro and on September 20, 1950, Rádio Record obtains the license for channel 7 in São Paulo. In 1946, Paulo Machado de Carvalho gathered the stations he was the owner of in São Paulo: Rádio Record, Rádio Excelsior, Rádio São Paulo, Rádio Panamericana, Rádio Bandeirantes and Rádio Cultura in an association he decided to call Rede de Emissoras Unidas de Rádio. In 1948, Rádio Bandeirantes is sold to Adhemar de Barros.

1950s: start of television broadcasts

In 1952, Rádio Rio was taken by the federal government, changing its name to Rádio Mauá and given to the Ministry of Labor, which was not interested in the television license. The license for channel 13 was sold to a joint association between Paulo Machado de Carvalho and his nephew João Batista do Amaral, also known as "Pipa" Amaral.
In 1953, Rádio Excelsior was sold to Organizações Victor Costa and Paulo Machado de Carvalho inaugurates TV Record in São Paulo. With the expenses caused from the construction of TV Record, Paulo Machado de Carvalho showed lack of interest in TV Rio and sold it to his cousin "Pipa" Amaral, both however agreed that, in order to confront its main competitor, TV Tupi, both the station in Rio de Janeiro and the one in São Paulo, should associate. This association in 1957 led to the inclusion of TV Rio and TV Record in the formation of Rede de Emissoras Unidas de Televisão.
With the opening of TV Rio in 1955, Rede de Emissoras Unidas de Televisão strengthened itself, gaining a representant in Rio de Janeiro. In 1956, a fire at Rádio São Paulo shook the structure of Emissoras Unidas, however, in 1956, Paulo Machado de Carvalho and João Batista do Amaral, decided to build a "link" between Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, similar to like-minded systems that existed in the United States, using "city-to-city" links via UHF, which at the time was the most cutting-edge long distance transmitting method. TV Rio would build the link for the first half of the route, between Rio de Janeiro and Guaratinguetá in São Paulo, and TV Record would complete the link to São Paulo.
The first live broadcast from Rio de Janeiro to São Paulo was made in August 1957, "Grande Prêmio Brasil de Turfe", live from Hipódromo da Gávea. Still in 1957, a friendly soccer match between Brazil and England, from Maracanã, in preparation for the 1958 FIFA World Cup was broadcast, as well as the inauguration of the first substations, in Santos from TV Record and in Guaratinguetá, city close to Aparecida do Norte, from TV Rio, who aired the live mass from Basílica de Aparecida on October 12. In 1958, both TV Rio and TV Record launch a daily entertainment show, Show 713, which was produced in joint association with the two stations, Mondays to Fridays, at 12pm. The program ended in 1962, when it was replaced by new variety shows from the two stations.
Other productions made good use of the live link between the two cities, such as: A Turma dos Sete, Noites Cariocas, Gessy às dez and many others.
By the end of the decade, new substations emerged: in Nova Friburgo RJ, in Juiz de Fora MG, in Campos dos Goytacazes RJ, in Vitória ES, in Cachoeiro de Itapemirim ES, in Conselheiro Lafaiete MG and in Belo Horizonte MG.

Década de 1960

In April 1960, TV Rio establishes TV Alvorada in Brasília, increasing its coverage area, but, in May 1960, a massive fire destroyed TV Record's studios, causing the station to relay programs from TV Rio, until it was able to recover its structure. Beginning in 1960, with the massive implementation of television stations, Rede das Emissoras Unidas received new members: TV Gaúcha channel 12 from Porto Alegre, TV Jornal do Commercio channel 2 from Recife and TV Paranaense channel 12 from Curitiba.

Misunderstandings and restructuring

In 1967, with the misunderstanding between the two flagships of the network, TV Rio e TV Record ; the association began falling apart, and in a restructuring attempt, it changed its name to REI (Rede de Emissoras Independentes) in 1967. Still in 1967, TV Rio sold channel 12 in Belo Horizonte, channel 6 in Conselheiro Lafaiete and channel 5 in Juiz de Fora to Rede Globo, forming TV Globo Minas. But the disagreements continued, TV Rio bought the local rights to several programs from TV Bandeirantes, such as "Sítio do Pica-pau Amarelo", "Teatro Cacilda Becker" and some telenovelas such as Nunca É Tarde Demais e Era Preciso Voltar.

Closure

The problems continued until the early 1970s, when TV Alvorada and TV Rio were sold in 1972 to the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin, owner of TV Difusora of Porto Alegre. At the time, several of its stations had moved to Rede Globo, definitively ending the association between stations.

As integrantes hoje

TV Record São Paulo is currently the flagship of the Record network, controlled by Edir Macedo. It also owns the former TV Alvorada, now Record Brasília. TV Rio was sold in the 1970s to the owners of TV Difusora Porto Alegre, and with a line-up of foreign content as well as programs with less popularity, was heavily indebted and closed on April 5, 1977. Channel 13 was reactivated as a new TV Rio from June 1, 1988, having as its president pastor Nilson Fanini and politician Múcio Athayde. The station was sold to Grupo Record in 1992, becoming the current Record Rio.
The relays in Belo Horizonte, Juiz de Fora and Campos dos Goytacazes are now part of TV Globo, as well as TV Gaúcha, TV Paranaense, TV Morena and TV Anhanguera. Of the affiliates, only TV Jornal and the Nova Friburgo stations are currently with SBT. The Cachoeiro de Itapemirim station currently houses a relay of TV Canção Nova.
From the radio stations, each station went its own way:
Rádio Bandeirantes and Rádio Panamericana ended up creating large radio networks, with Panamericana later being divided in three networks, Rede Jovem Pan, Jovem Pan News and Jovem Pan FM. Beside Rádio Bandeirantes in its own right, the Band FM and BandNews FM networks exist, as well as operating stations in other cities.
Rádio Record and Rádio São Paulo were sold to Edir Macedo, airing programming from the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God.
Rádio Cultura is currently a public/educational outlet, with musical programming.
Rádio Excelsior shut down on September 30, 1991, and the name Excelsior became the legal name of its successor CBN São Paulo, flagship of the CBN network.
Rádio Anhanguera AM was sold again and is now Rádio Daqui, while the FM station is the current CBN Goiânia.
Rádio Gaúcha is currently the largest radio network in southern Brazil, being owned by Grupo RBS.

Stations

Television

; O&Os
; Affiliates