1967 in Japanese television

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Events in 1967 in Japanese television.

Events[edit]

  • October 31: The state funeral of former Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida (who died October 20) is held at the Nippon Budokan (Kitanomaru, Chiyoda Ward) in Tokyo, and special programs are organized on NHK and commercial TV stations. The state funeral was broadcast live on NHK General and other networks,[1] and on Fuji Television, all programs on that day were broadcast without commercials.[2]
  • November 1: The Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications relicenses 1,640 TV stations and grants preliminary licenses to 15 new UHF stations and 16 stations (see table below for details). The Radio Law requires general program stations to program at least 30% of their programs on educational and cultural topics . On this day, Sapporo Television , Yomiuri Television, and Mainichi Broadcasting changed from quasi-educational stations to general stations.[2]

First tranche of UHF television stations in Japan[edit]

Due to a major revision to the "Television Broadcasting Frequency Allocation Plan" by the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications at the time, in addition to UHF channels 45 to 62, which were previously used only by relay stations, channel 33 was used for parent stations. Channel 44 was newly opened for use (October 13). As a result, preliminary licenses for new UHF stations will be granted under the UHF 1st Channel Plan. At this time, commercial television stations that opened in the first tranche had H as the last letter of their callsign.

The dates and main stations where preliminary licenses were granted are as follows[3] If relocated within the same city, ward, town or village, the description of the current location will be omitted.

Stations that received preliminary licenses on November 1 (all commercial broadcasters)
Coverage area Callsign Company name at time of issuing the license Location Remarks
Hokkaido JOHH-TV Hokkaido Television Broadcasting Co., Ltd. (北海道テレビ放送株式会社) Toyohira Ward, Sapporo City Current location: Chuo District, Tongshi
Nagano Prefecture JOLH-TV K. K. Nagano Broadcasting (株式会社長野放送) Nagano City
Niigata Prefecture JONH-TV K. K. Niigata Sogo Television (株式会社新潟総合テレビ) Chuo Ward, Niigata City At the time, the broadcasting facilities were located in Nagaoka, Niigata
Toyama Prefecture JOTH-TV Toyama Television Broadcasting Co. Ltd. (富山テレビ放送株式会社) Toyama
Ishikawa Prefecture JOIH-TV Ishikawa Television Broadcasting Co. Ltd. (石川テレビ放送株式会社) Kanazawa
Shizuoka Prefecture JOQH-TV K. K. Shizuoka UHF Television (株式会社静岡ユー・エッチ・エフテレビ) Suruga Ward, Shizuoka (city) Name changed to TV Shizuoka before signing on.
JORH-TV Same as above, issued to the Hamamatsu station
Tokai wide area JOCH-TV Chūkyō UHF Television Broadcasting(中京ユー・エッチ・エフ・テレビ放送株式会社)) Showa Ward, Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture Current company name: Chukyo Television Broadcasting Co., Ltd.
Gifu Prefecture JOZF-TV K. K. Radio Gifu (株式会社ラジオ岐阜) Gify City Name changed to Gifu Broadcasting before the TV station signed on. First UHF television station in Japan.
Mie Prefecture JOMH-TV Mie Radio Broadcasting Co. Ltd. (三重電波放送株式会社) Tsu City Name changed to Mie Television Broadcasting before signing on.
Kyoto Prefecture JOBR-TV Kinki Broadcasting Co. Ltd. (株式会社近畿放送) Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto Now Kyoto Broadcasting.
Hyogo Prefecture JOUH-TV Hyogo Television Broadcasting Co. Ltd. (兵庫テレビ放送株式会社) Nagata Ward, Kobe City Name changed to Sun Television before signing on.
Okayama Prefecture JOOH-TV Okayama Broadcasting Co. Ltd. (岡山放送株式会社) Kita Ward, Okayama City
Kagawa Prefecture JOVH-TV K. K. New Japan Broadcasting (株式会社新日本放送) Takamatsu City Name changed to Setonaikai Broadcasting before signing on.
The station was not affiliated with the current Mainichi Broadcasting System which used this name in the 1950s.
Saga Prefecture JOSH-TV Saga Broadcasting Co. Ltd. (佐賀放送株式会社) Saga City Name changed to Saga Television Station before signing on.
Kagoshima Prefecture JOKH-TV Kagoshima Television Station (鹿児島テレビ放送株式会社) Kagoshima City
Stations that received preliminary licenses on November 1 (all commercial broadcasters)
Coverage area Callsign Business format Company name at time of issuing the license Location Remarks
Tokushima Prefecture JOXB-TV NHK NHK Tokushima Educational Television Tokushima City Practical use by reducing the power of the experimental station
Kagawa Prefecture JOHP-TV NHK NHK Takamatsu General Television Takamatsu City
JOHD-TV NHK Takamatsu Educational Television
Saga Prefecture JOSP-TV NHK NHK Saga General Television Saga City
JOSD-TV NHK Saga Educational Television
Nagasaki Prefecture JOWH-TV Commercial K. K. Television Nagasaki (テレビ長崎) Nagasaki City
Kumamoto Prefecture JOZH-TV Commercial Kumamoto Central Television Co. Ltd. (熊本中央テレビ株式会社) Temporary office: Chuo Ward, Kumamoto City Name changed to TV Kumamoto before signing on.

Debuts[edit]

Show Station Premiere Date Genre Original Run
Akakage Kansai TV April 5 Tokusatsu April 5, 1967 – March 27, 1968
Captain Ultra TBS April 16 Tokusatsu April 16, 1967 – September 24, 1967
Chibikko Kaiju Yadamon Fuji TV October 2 Anime October 2, 1967 – March 25, 1968
Giant Robo NET October 11 Tokusatsu October 11, 1967 – April 1, 1968
Goku no Daiboken Fuji TV January 7 Anime January 7, 1967 – September 30, 1967
Kaiju Ouji Fuji TV October 2 Tokusatsu October 2, 1967 – March 25, 1968
Mach GoGoGo[4] Fuji TV April 2 Anime April 2, 1967 - March 31, 1968
Ōgon Bat Yomimuri TV April 1 Anime April 1, 1967 – March 23, 1968
Oraa Guzura Dado Fuji TV October 7 Anime October 7, 1967 – September 25, 1968
Perman TBS April 2 Anime April 2, 1967 - April 14, 1968
Ribbon no Kishi Fuji TV April 2 Anime April 2, 1967 – April 7, 1968
Ultraseven TBS October 1 Tokusatsu October 1, 1967 – September 8, 1968
kometto-san TBS July 3 Tokusatsu July 3, 1967 - December 30, 1968

Ongoing shows[edit]

  • Music Fair, music (1964–present)
  • Hyokkori Hyō Tanjima, anime (1964-1969)

Endings[edit]

Show Station Ending Date Genre Original Run
Ambassador Magma Fuji TV September 25 Tokusatsu July 4, 1966 – September 25, 1967
Captain Ultra TBS September 24 Tokusatsu April 16, 1967 – September 24, 1967
Goku no Daiboken Fuji TV September 30 Anime January 7, 1967 – September 30, 1967
New Jungle Emperor: Go Ahead Leo! Fuji TV March 29 Anime October 5, 1966 – March 29, 1967
Obake no Q-tarō TBS August 29 Anime August 29, 1965 – June 28, 1967
Ultraman TBS April 9 Tokusatsu July 17, 1966 – April 9, 1967

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "映像と資料で振り返る 55年前 吉田茂元総理の「国葬」は". NHK News. NHK Online. 2022-09-07. Retrieved 2022-09-07.
  2. ^ a b Fifty Years of Broadcasting History Materials, page 805, published by NHK
  3. ^ Japanese TV and radio launch date database
  4. ^ "マッハGoGoGo". Tatsunoko Productions (in Japanese). Archived from the original on February 19, 2009. Retrieved 2010-03-30.