The Philippine Star

MVP, Cabangon ink TV content deal

- By ELIJAH FELICE ROSALES

Business titan Manuel V. Pangilinan’s broadcast venture is going all-out in expanding its portfolio and presence, signing a content distributi­on agreement with the company that used to operate

CNN Philippine­s.

Pangilinan-led MediaQuest Holdings Inc. and TV5 Network Inc. yesterday said that they signed a content distributi­on, sales and marketing agreement with Cabangon-owned Nine Media Corp. The deal formalizes the launch of

RPTV, the newest free TV channel in the Philippine­s centered on sports, news and entertainm­ent shows.

RPTV will use the airtime agreement between Nine Media and Radio Philippine­s Network Inc. to air on free TV. For MediaQuest and TV5, this means that they get to widen the outlets where they can show the materials they produce.

MediaQuest president and CEO Jane Basas said the agreement stems from the previous deal that TV5 entered into. TV5 had agreed to share some of its content with the now-defunct CNN Philippine­s in January, paving the way for EAT Bulaga! and PBA to stream on Channel 9.

“Both parties saw a good opportunit­y for a more robust collaborat­ion for this unique channel that puts together some of the most sought-after sports and entertainm­ent content MediaQuest has to offer,” Basas said.

Further, TV5 president and CEO Guido Zaballero said Filipinos stand to gain from the launch of RPTV, as it combines

TV5’s library of programs with Nine Media’s national reach.

“This agreement brings together TV5 and MediaQuest’s vast library of programs and also Nine Media’s broadcast network access and nationwide reach,” Zaballero said. RPTV went live last week, replacing

CNN Philippine­s on Channel 9. RPTV is also available on Channel 19 DTT, Channel 18.3 DTT and in more than 300 cable and satellite providers, with an online stream through Cignal Play.

CNN Philippine­s ended its nine-year run on Philippine TV in January after sustaining around P5 billion in losses. Nine Media, operator of CNN Philippine­s, also had to let go of about 300 workers.

Globally, newsrooms are laying off journalist­s one after the other on financial troubles, such as in the US where media institutio­ns such as Business Insider, Los Angeles Times, NBC News and Time all announced staff reductions in January alone.

CNN Philippine­s served as one of the few English-based channels in the Philippine­s and aired its content on cable and pay TV.

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