News
In order to comply with legislation on the mandatory minimum of 5% journalism in programming, TVS initially aired a newsletter called Plantão 11, with several short editions throughout the day, and also the program Por Dentro do Lance, which it was a short sports commentary. Only from 1980 onwards, with an expansion of programming, greater investments began to be made in journalism, with the creation of Jornal da Manhã, shown at 8am. The following year, the news program was moved to midnight and its title was changed to Jornal da Noite.
From 1984 onwards, TVS Rio de Janeiro had Jornal da Cidade as its local newsletter, which aired in the early evening, in addition to local blocks of the news programs Noticentro and Jornal 24 Horas. In 1986, SBT decided to create a new standard of local journalism and implemented the news program Cidade on its stations, while in Rio de Janeiro, TVS showed Cidade 11, presented by Ana Davis and Paulo Carvalho. In 1989, Cidade 11 was replaced by TJ Rio, the local version of TJ Brasil. The news program aired for the last time on 18 May 1991, giving way to the news program Aqui Agora, broadcast nationally by SBT. In 1992, after the end of the 1992 Summer Olympics, the network debuted the morning program Agenda, presented by Leda Nagle. The program was based on interviews and aired until the mid-1990s.
After the extinction of Agenda, SBT Rio de Janeiro began to act almost as a mere rebroadcaster of SBT, without showing any local attractions. This changed on 1 December 1999, when in an effort to reactivate journalism on its own stations, the news program SBT Rio, presented by Renata Affonso, and the weekly Câmera em Ação, now off the air, debuted. In its first years, SBT Rio managed to create balanced competition with RJTV from TV Globo Rio de Janeiro, due to a greater focus on the problems of the periphery, occupied by the dominant share of audience ratings. However, from 2006 onwards, when TV Record Rio de Janeiro canceled Informe Rio to show the second phase of the Balanço Geral in the midday slot, the news program fell to third place with the advance of its competitor.
In response, the station's management began to promote changes in the news, which resulted in the dismissal of Renata Affonso, replaced by reporter Marcelo Castilho in December of the same year, and by Paulo Nogueira, who took on the role of editor of the news program. The changes had no effect, and in March 2009, Castilho was replaced by Luiz Bacci, while SBT Rio assumed a characteristic of strong popular appeal, as did Balanço Geral.[2]
In November 2010, Rogério Forcolen was hired by TV Record RS to present SBT Rio, while Luiz Bacci left the news program to present RJ Record on Record Rio. Forcolen remained in charge of SBT Rio until January 2013, when he was also hired by Record Rio. In her place, reporter Isabele Benito debuted, who has been in charge of the news since then.[3] On 23 September of the same year, SBT Rio Manhã debuted, presented by Liane Borges, which was born from the need for SBT Rio to have more local programs and increase its audience in the mornings.
On 11 August 2014, it was confirmed that the team of sports columnist and narrator José Carlos Araújo, known as "Garotinho", had been hired by the broadcaster to present a sports program. The team, which included, in addition to Garotinho, Dé Aranha, Gérson and Gilson Ricardo, had terminated its contract with Band Rio, where it presented the Rio version of the sports game Os Donos da Bola.[4]
On 8 September, SBT Esporte Rio premiered on the station, initially, due to electoral campaign obligations for the 2014 elections, occupying the final 10 minutes of the SBT Rio news program. After the end of political campaign, the program would be shown for 30 minutes, but due to the network's national schedule, it was kept in the final 10 minutes of the news.[5] On 2 March 2015, the program stopped being a block on SBT Rio, starting to air at 12:30 pm, and only with Garotinho, Gérson and Gilson Ricardo.[6] Garotinho would also present, from 2015 onwards, the weekly program Esporte Mágico, shown on Saturday afternoons.
On 29 June 2018, the SBT news program Rio Manhã aired for the last time, which was canceled following a decision by the head office in São Paulo to allow the showing of Primeiro Impacto.[7] In December, José Carlos Araújo left the presentation of SBT Esporte Rio after going on vacation, however on 1 February 2019, he officially left SBT Rio together with Gérson and Gilson, leaving only Fernanda Maia in charge of the program.[8] In this interim, the program now featured commentary from Pedro Certezas and Casimiro Miguel.[9]
In May, reporter and comedian Smigol became part of the team of SBT Esporte Rio. Also in May, Esporte Mágico starts to be shown on Sunday mornings, due to the premiere of the new season of Cozinheiros vs. Chefs and the ratings success of Henry Danger. The program last aired on 20 October.[10]
On 20 September 2021, the station's local news programs began to be produced from its new headquarters in the Charles de Gaulle Business Center. The SBT Rio news program then gained a new setting, with views of Marina da Glória and Morro do Pão de Açúcar, while SBT Esporte gained a new space and was renamed SBT Sports Rio, following the example of the program shown on Sundays by the network.[11]
Entertainment
In its first years on air, TVS invested in an experimental schedule that was mostly made up of series, films and cartoons, which were rerun countless times at different times and days. One of them was Sessão Corrida, which aired the same film three times in a row throughout the day on the schedule. The formats created by the broadcaster itself included programs such as Silvio Santos Differente, an interview program with famous personalities and question and answer games, in a completely different style (as the title itself said) from what he had done until then on Rede Globo, the humorous Baccarat 76 with Ronald Golias, Um Instante Maestro with Flávio Cavalcanti and Horoscope with Zora Yonara. Still in the same year, together with Rede Tupi (via TV Tupi Rio de Janeiro), it started to retransmit Programa Silvio Santos, as soon as the program left Globo and debuted on Tupi on August 1.[12]
From 1 June 1977, TVS began to expand its programming, initially focusing on telenovelas such as Meu Pedacinho de Chão, originally produced and shown in 1971 by TV Cultura and Rede Globo, and O Espantalho, which was on air on TV Record in São Paulo.[13] The station would also produce the telenovela Solar Paraíso in 1978, which was restricted to Rio de Janeiro, being rerun years later on SBT. Attractions such as Programa Carlos Imperial, the children's program Bozo, the popular O Povo na TV and Sessão Premiada also appeared. Many of these programs were also shown in São Paulo through TV Record, a sister company of TVS and head of the Rede de Emissoras Independentes.