China Food TV
China Broadcast & TV Culture (Qingdao) Co, Ltd[1] (é’岛广电ä¸è§†æ–‡åŒ–有é™å…¬å¸ QÄ«ngdÇŽo GuÇŽngdià n ZhÅngshì Wénhuà YÇ’uxià ngÅngsÄ«) is a television production company in China. It operates China Food TV (CFTV, S: ä¸åŽç¾Žé£Ÿé¢‘é“, T: ä¸è¯ç¾Žé£Ÿé »é“, P: ZhÅnghuá MÄ›ishà PÃndà o), a digital pay television channel focusing on cooking shows. The corporate headquarters is in Office 214, Building G3 of the South City Software Park (市å—è½¯ä»¶å› Shìnán RuÇŽnjià nyuán) in Qingdao, Shandong.[2]
China Food TV is aired nationally across Mainland China, and the CFTV company is the largest food show production agency in Mainland China. The CFTV company produces about 60 minutes of self-made food shows daily.[3] Édouard Cointreau serves as the honorary president of CFTV.[4]
History
The CFTV company, a joint-stock and program operating company, was established on January 18, 2001. The Qingdao Broadcast and Television Bureau (é’岛广æ’电视局 QÄ«ngdÇŽo GuÇŽngbÅ Dià nshì Jú) invested in CFTV during its structural reformation. The first show produced by the company was the Man-Han Style Banquet, which was broadcast on China Central Television (CCTV) and Qingdao TV.[5]
In April 2005 the State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television (SARFT) permitted the company to establish its own national pay television cable channel.[5] The channel was officially launched on November 8, 2005.[6] As of 2009 the channel is one of twelve Chinese pay television channels which a consumer may watch for free for two months after he/she upgrades his/her top box set.[7]
China Food TV sponsors the "Mid-Autumn Food Festival" and the "Sino-German Food Dialogue", two events that occur during the Asia-Pacific Weeks (German: Asien-Pazifik-Wochen, APW) celebration in Berlin, Germany.[8]
Programs
The first show produced by the company was the Man-Han Style Banquet (æ»¿æ¼¢å…¨å¸ MÇŽn Hà nquánxÃ, referring to the Manchu Han Imperial Feast), which was broadcast on China Central Television (CCTV) and Qingdao TV.[5] China Food TV and China Central Television had jointly organized the program, and released many derivative products. For instance they used "leftovers" from the Manhan Quanxi shooting process so they could create "teaser trailer" programs. Therefore, the fame resulting in the brand effect would increase. China Food TV airs reruns of the programs and created recorded copies, compilations, and derivative books and video discs. For instance China Food TV created Meiri Yi Cai (A Dish Every Day) and Manhan Quanxi - Quanguo Bengren Dianshi Leitai Sai (Manchu Han Imperial Feast - National Cooking "Leitai" Competition on Television). Wang Qitai (王çªæ³° Wáng QÃtà i) of the Taizhou Broadcast and Television Bureau said that the marketing took a "three-dimensional manner" so brands could be marketed to domestic Mainland Chinese audiences.[9]
Little Fatty's Food Diary (å°èƒ–美食日记 XiÇŽo Pà ng MÄ›ishà Rìjì) is a Chinese cooking show produced by China Food TV and hosted by Qian Zhijun.[10] The program began broadcast from a television station in Qingdao, Shandong on January 29, 2007.[11] The show's production was scheduled for 365 episodes. 52 guests were scheduled to appear on the program with Qian.[12] Qian attended the contract signing ceremony in Qingdao on January 29, 2007. Around that period, Qian recorded two special programs which were broadcast on China Food TV and the Manhan Quanxi Food Entertainment Website.[13] The program aired on Mainland Chinese televisions.[12] The program was also broadcast on Sohu, one of China's major web portals.[14]
China Food TV USA
Qingdao, World Channel Inc. and CFTV partnered to establish China Food TV USA (CFTV-USA, T: 美洲ä¸è¯ç¾Žé£Ÿé »é“, S: 美洲ä¸åŽç¾Žé£Ÿé¢‘é“, P: MÄ›izhÅu ZhÅnghuá MÄ›ishà PÃndà o), a 24-hour Chinese food cooking network in the United States. It was scheduled to begin on February 1, 2011,[15] coinciding with the Chinese New Year period.[16] The programming airs in New York City, Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area, and the Sacramento Valley.[17] The operating company, World Channel Inc., has its offices in Brisbane, California.[18]
In the San Francisco Bay Area the programming airs on digital channel KMTP 32.2. In Sacramento it airs locally on station KBTV-CD 8.1, which is a Crossings TV affiliate.[19] Crossings TV is also aired throughout the Central Valley of California on Comcast channel 238 and in Greater New York City as Time Warner Cable Channel 503.[19][20] In the Los Angeles area CFTV USA airs on digital channel KNLA 20.3.[19] People not living in the New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Sacramento areas may watch CFTV USA through IPTV.[21]
The programming is in Mandarin and Cantonese. The programming includes Man-Han Style Banquet and Little Fatty's Food Diary.[22]
References
- ↑ "index_08.jpg." and "index_09.jpg." China Food TV. Retrieved on January 21, 2012.
- ↑ "about_photo_09.gif." (Archive) China Food TV. Retrieved on January 23, 2012. "é’岛市å®å¤è·¯288å·å¸‚å—软件å›G3楼213室" ("Qingdao City, 288 South Ningxia Road Software Complex, Building G3, Office 213")
- ↑ "Program Brief Introduction." China Food TV. Retrieved on January 21, 2012. "The national digital pay channel - the "China Food TV", facing the whole nation, with digital interactive television programs, and producing an average of 60-minute self-made food shows every day, is the largest food show production agency of the nation."
- ↑ "Julien Gaudfroy, ambassadeur culinaire de la France en Chine." (Archive) L'Hôtellerie Restauration. Tuesday May 20, 2011. "Enfin, Edouard Cointreau, le président d’honneur de China Food TV n’a pas caché son intérêt pour le jeune prodige."
- 1 2 3 "Company introduction." (Archive) China Food TV. Retrieved on January 21, 2012.
- ↑ "生活æœåŠ¡ç±»èŠ‚目大盘点." (Archive) People's Daily. April 15, 2008. Retrieved on January 22, 2012.
- ↑ "é’å²›70万机顶盒将å‡çº§ 付费频é“å…费两个月." (Archive) People's Daily. March 19, 2009.
- ↑ "ä¸åŽç¾Žé£Ÿï¼šä¸åŽæ–‡åŒ–çš„ä¸€å¼ é‡è¦å片." (Archive) Xinhua. September 14, 2011. Retrieved on January 22, 2012.
- ↑ Wang, Qitai (王çªæ³° Wáng QÃtà i) of the Taizhou Broadcast and Television Bureau (泰州市广æ’电视局 Tà izhÅushì GuÇŽngbÅ Dià nshì Jú). Editor: intern Zhao Jingjing (赵晶晶 Zhà o JÄ«ngjÄ«ng). "寻找城市å°ä¸Žæ•°å—时代的契åˆ." (Archive) People's Daily. February 17, 2009. Retrieved on January 23, 2012.
- ↑ "Bagua Dish Little Fatty’s Food Diary Daily Broadcast." (Archive) China Food TV. Retrieved on May 15, 2011.
- ↑ "'Fatty' to host TV show." (Archive) China Daily. January 30, 2007. Retrieved on January 12, 2012.
- 1 2 "《嘻游记》八戒:å°èƒ–个人简介." (Archive) QQ News. December 20, 2007. Retrieved on January 21, 2012.
- ↑ "网络å°èƒ–æˆç¾Žé£Ÿä¸»æŒ 节目春节期间æ’出(图)." (Archive) Xinhua. February 1, 2007. Retrieved on January 22, 2012.
- ↑ "ä¸åŽç¾Žé£Ÿé¢‘é“《å°èƒ–美食日记》è”手sohuå¾é€‰å°èƒ–ææ¡£." (Archive) Digital new-Media (BMedia). December 28, 2007. Retrieved on January 12, 2012.
- ↑ "About Us." (Archive) China Food TV USA. Retrieved on January 21, 2012.
- ↑ "ä¸è¯ç¾Žé£Ÿé »é“登陸美國." Sina. February 10, 2011. Retrieved on January 22, 2012.
- ↑ "Careers." (Archive) China Food TV. Retrieved on January 21, 2012.
- ↑ "Contact Us." (Archive) China Food TV USA. Retrieved on January 21, 2012. "World Channel Inc. 100 North Hill Dr. #50, Brisbane, CA 94005 "
- 1 2 3 "關於我們." (Archive) China Food TV USA. Retrieved on January 21, 2012. "â€ç¾Žæ´²ä¸è¯ç¾Žé£Ÿé »é“在舊金山無線KMTP 數碼32.2é »é“ã€æ²™åŠ 緬度無線KBTV8åŠComcast有線238ã€ç´ç´„時代è¯ç´503é »é“和洛æ‰ç£¯ç„¡ç·šKNLA數碼20.3åŒæ™‚æ’出。"
- ↑ "Home." (Archive) KBTV-CD. Retrieved on January 21, 2012.
- ↑ "About Us." China Food TV USA. Retrieved on January 21, 2012.
- ↑ "Shows." (Archive) China Food TV USA. Retrieved on January 21, 2012.
External links
- China Food TV
- China Food TV (simplified Chinese)
- China Food TV USA (Archive)
- China Food TV USA (Chinese) (Archive)
- "ä¸åŽç¾Žé£Ÿé¢‘é“." Sina Corp. (simplified Chinese)
- Little Fatty's Food Diary - China Food TV
- Little Fatty's Food Diary - Sohu (simplified Chinese)