User:ZooPhobiaFanMx/sandbox

Azteca Uno

Beginnings and growth (1952–1970)
On August 1, 1952, the Haitian Institute of Communications, Transportation and Journalism (ICTJH) was awarded the concession for the HHTH-TV station (HaïTV 2), being the second television channel in Haiti behind HHGH-TV (HaïtiUne, owned by the government).

This channel was operated by the company Compagnie Générale de Radio Haïtienne of the former sugarcane businessman Jovenel-Renaud Laguerre. who operated the stations HHR-AM (HaïRadio 880 AM), HHRJ-AM (Radio Jérémie 1005 AM) and HHH-AM (Hinche Radio 1250 AM). On August 3, Jovenel-Renaud met with the filmmaker and businessman Emile-Claude Chirac, owner of the Studios Chirac film studio, who was looking to venture into television and after a deal was reached to merge the radio company and the film company, the merger being finalized on August 5, calling the new company Compagnie Générale de Télévision Haïtienne, S.A.

The channel would officially start broadcasting in October 1952. In 1960 Jovenel-Renaud would die at the age of 58 and the presidency of the company would pass to his son Jean-Renaud Laguerre I.

In 1961, the name of the company would be simplified to Télévision Haïtienne and the concession for HHEC-TV (Le 3sième) would be awarded, being the only television company in Haiti with two TV channels, in 1963 they would return to the production of films after 11 years of the fusion being the film Abîme profond his first film. in 1965 they would win the award of 12 repeater stations in the Sud-Est, Artibonite and Grand'Anse departments. In 1966 they would send a proposal to the American production company 20th Century Fox, the production of the film Treasure Island (based on the novel by Scotsman Robert Louis Stevenson). the proposal was accepted and presented to the British production company British Lion Films and finished recording in 1967 and opening in the summer of 1968, raising a maximum of 24,000,000 dollars on a budget of 6,000,000 dollars.

In 1967, Télévision Haïtienne acquired the newspaper Le lève-tôt d'Haïti due to its possible bankruptcy, acquiring it for 660,770 gourdes.

In 1969 an agreement would be reached with the dictator François Duvalier to maintain his concessions for 30 years and award the concession for the Sud, Centre and Nord-Ouest departments. In 1970 they would produce the telenovela Le Prince de Sans Souci (internationally titled: The Unknown Prince) and which was seen in 79 countries and dubbed in several languages. being until then the first Latin American telenovela to reach several countries (it would be followed by El carruaje (95 countries) in 1972 and Los ricos también lloran in 1979 (120 countries), both Televisa productions).

Internationalization (1970–1995)
In 1972 the concession of the HHAHM-TV channel (AHM 24) would be awarded to him, this would become the first news channel in Latin America, 17 years before the ECO channel of Televisa.

In 1980 they would begin to export content to Central America and Africa by satellite, after having renting NASA's KL-350 and KL-879 satellites, their signal would be seen throughout the Caribbean and Central America (except Cuba), the telenovela Un amour exceptionnel (Exceptional Love) being broadcast and seen in the Antilles, Central America and central Africa with a total audience of 670 million viewers.

In March 1982 they would begin the expansion of the forums of the old Studios Chirac (built in 1932) for the transmission of larger productions, in September they would found the record company Centribe Records, after the merger and purchase of independent record companies from Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Costa Rica, Venezuela, Colombia and Florida and its record company Télé Music, becoming the largest record company in Central America and the Caribbean, on November 21 the company would be listed on the Haitian Stock Exchange.

In 1984 he would found the Télévision Sub-saharienne company with the governments of Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, Niger and Chad, in an agreement where Télévision Haïtienne would have 10% of the company and the remaining 90% the governments of those countries in a government trust. this as a company to promote the television industry in sub-Saharan Africa and then French-speaking Africa. In January 1985, it would win the award of 18 repeaters in the departments of Nord, Nord-Est, Marïen and Xaragua, completing its total coverage in Haiti.

Coup against the Duvaliers and strike (February 6–10, 1986)
On the night of February 6 and the morning of February 7, 1986, a coup organized by former Haitian National Army General Henri Namphy began. the company would also broadcast the flight of the Duvalier family on a United States Air Force plane to France. On February 8, a strike began by the company workers where 1,500 of them marched in favor of the new president, since Jean-Renaud's administration agreed from the François dictatorship. On February 9, the Haitian Parliament fined Jean-Renaud and the company 82 million gourdes (20 million dollars). the company would pay the fine with a large economic fall and on February 10 Jean-Renaud would resign and his son Jean-Renaud Laguerre II would be the new president of the company.

Services
Totalplay offers pay television service, VoD, fiber optic internet and fixed telephony in its normal package, including interactive television with various streaming platforms. It also offers the Totalplay Hogar Seguro (Secure House) service, which includes exterior cameras and alarms.

Totalplay Empresarial
Totalplay Empresarial is the business service for businesses and companies which includes pay television, internet (SD-WAN under the UNNO sub-brand), cybersecurity, etc, as well as alarms and security cameras.

In Mexico

 * Mexico City
 * Greater Mexico City
 * Aguascalientes
 * Aguascalientes City
 * Baja California
 * Tijuana
 * Mexicali
 * Ensenada
 * Rosarito
 * Coahuila
 * Saltillo
 * Torreón
 * Chiapas
 * Tuxtla Gutiérrez
 * Chihuahua
 * Chihuahua City
 * Ciudad Juárez
 * State of Mexico
 * Toluca de Lerdo
 * Greater Toluca
 * Guanajuato
 * León
 * Celaya
 * Irapuato
 * San Francisco del Rincón
 * Hidalgo
 * Pachuca
 * Jalisco
 * Guadalajara
 * Puerto Vallarta
 * Michoacán
 * Morelia
 * Morelos
 * Cuernavaca
 * Nayarit
 * Tepic
 * Nuevo León
 * Monterrey
 * Puebla
 * Puebla de Zaragoza
 * Querétaro
 * Querétaro City
 * Quintana Roo
 * Cancún
 * Playa del Carmen
 * Tulum
 * San Luis Potosí
 * San Luis Potosí City
 * Oaxaca
 * Oaxaca de Juárez
 * Sinaloa
 * Los Mochis
 * Culiacán
 * Mazatlán
 * Sonora
 * Hermosillo
 * Navojoa
 * Ciudad Obregón
 * Tabasco
 * Villahermosa
 * Tamaulipas
 * Matamoros
 * Nuevo Laredo
 * Reynosa
 * Tampico
 * Tlaxcala
 * Tlaxcala de Xicohténcatl
 * Veracruz
 * Veracruz City
 * Coatzacoalcos
 * Orizaba
 * Tuxpan
 * Xalapa
 * Poza Rica
 * Yucatán
 * Mérida

In Colombia

 * Cundinamarca Department
 * Bogotá