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  1. Yugoslav Radio Television (Jugoslavenska radiotelevizija/Југославенска радиотелевизија or Jugoslavenska radio-televizija/Југославенска радио-телевизија; JRT/ЈРТ) was the national public broadcasting system in the SFR Yugoslavia.

  2. Regular transmissions of domestically produced TV content in the remaining Yugoslav republics was established gradually over the course of the 1960s and the early 1970s, with Radio-television Sarajevo in Bosnia and Herzegovina launching its own programme in 1961, Radio-television Skopje in Macedonia in 1964, and Radio-television Titograd in ...

  3. The NATO bombing of the Radio Television of Serbia (RTS) headquarters occurred on the evening of 23 April 1999, during Operation Allied Force. Sixteen employees of RTS were killed when a NATO missile hit the building.

  4. Jul 24, 2021 · The aim of this paper is to navigate through the layers of the Yugoslav television heritage and digital archives constituted by the national broadcasting televisions in Serbia and Croatia.

  5. Our main focus is to explore the Yugoslav fiction series (with the Second World War narratives), distinctively seen as a remediated cultural heritage format that enables its viewers to have a facile interaction with the collective memory from the overall socialist past.

  6. Yugoslav Radio Television (Jugoslavenska radiotelevizija/Југославенска радиотелевизија or Jugoslavenska radio-televizija/Југославенска радио-телевизија; JRT/ЈРТ) was the national public broadcasting system in the SFR Yugoslavia.

  7. Yugoslav Radio Television (Jugoslavenska radiotelevizija/Југославенска радиотелевизија or Jugoslavenska radio-televizija/Југославенска радио-телевизија; JRT/ЈРТ) was the national public broadcasting system in the SFR Yugoslavia.