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DZEA-TV
DZEA-TV
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DZEA-TV (channel 10) is a television station in North Central Luzon, Philippines, airing programming from the GMA network. Owned and operated by the network's namesake corporate parent, the station maintains studios at the GMA Complex, Claveria Road, Malued District, Dagupan City, Pangasinan, while its hybrid analog and digital transmitter facilities shared with GTV outlet DWDG-TV channel 22 are located atop Mount Santo Tomas, and the Digital SFN relay transmitting towers is located at Luz Street, Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija.[2][3]

Key Information

History

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  • 1967 - The station began operations as DZRI-TV on Channel 10 in Benguet, becoming the first television station in Northern Luzon under ABS-CBN Corporation, until it ceased broadcasting following the declaration of Martial Law by President Marcos in 1972.
  • 1980 - GMA began broadcasting in Benguet via Channel 10. The station featured its own version of the GMA Radio-Television Arts ident, initially with a light blue square logo and white text, later adopting a circle 10 logo. In its final years, the logo resembled those used by ABC affiliates in some U.S. cities and eventually incorporated rainbow-colored stripes in red, yellow, green, and blue.
  • April 30, 1992 - With the launch of the Rainbow Satellite Network, GMA Channel 10 Baguio began nationwide satellite broadcasts, delivering Manila-based programming from flagship station DZBB-TV to viewers in North Luzon. The rebrand introduced a new logo featuring a rainbow with multicolored stripes (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet) and a metallic “GMA” in Century Gothic Extra Bold, using an indigo-toned font.
  • 2005 - GMA Network launched TV-10 Dagupan as a satellite station in Pangasinan, opening studios in Claveria Road, Malued District, Dagupan, and inaugurating a 20,000-watt transmitter on Mt. Sto. Tomas, Tuba, Benguet, significantly improving signal quality across North Luzon. That same year, QTV Channel 38 was also launched in Dagupan, later rebranded as GTV (now inactive).
  • 2008 - GMA Dagupan was upgraded to a “superstation” and rebranded as GMA North Central Luzon, primarily serving Pangasinan, Nueva Ecija, Tarlac, La Union, and Benguet (including Baguio), with coverage extending to Zambales, Pampanga, Aurora, Nueva Vizcaya, Quirino, Ifugao, and Mountain Province. On May 5 of the same year, it launched its flagship local newscast, Balitang Amianan.
  • April 27, 2009 - GMA Dagupan launched its local morning show Primera Balita.
  • October 22, 2010 – 2011 - GMA News and Public Affairs Dagupan launched Isyu Ngayon North Central Luzon, a weekly one-hour public affairs program tackling key issues in Pangasinan and Benguet.
  • November 10, 2014 - GMA News and Public Affairs Dagupan relaunched Balitang Amianan as 24 Oras North Central Luzon.
  • April 24, 2015 - Primera Balita aired its final episode as part of GMA Network’s strategic streamlining of its provincial stations.
  • August 31, 2015 - GMA News and Public Affairs Dagupan relaunched 24 Oras North Central Luzon as 24 Oras Amianan.
  • February 1, 2016 - September 2, 2022 - Balitang Amianan returned to air after over a year-long hiatus and the temporary use of the 24 Oras brand.
  • October 3, 2016 - Balitang Amianan began simulcasting on GMA Ilocos, which includes TV-5 Ilocos Norte, TV-48 Ilocos Sur, TV-7 Abra, and TV-5 Mountain Province.
  • May 2018 -GMA North Central Luzon began digital test broadcasts on UHF Channel 38, covering Dagupan, Baguio, and the provinces of Benguet, Pangasinan, Tarlac, and La Union, with extended reach into parts of Zambales, Pampanga, Aurora, Ifugao, Mountain Province, and Nueva Ecija.[4]
  • March 15, 2021 - Balitang Amianan expanded its simulcast to TV-7 Batanes, TV-7 Tuguegarao, TV-13 Aparri, TV-7 Isabela, TV-5 Baler, and TV-10 Olongapo.[5]
  • September 5, 2022 - GMA North Central Luzon relaunched Balitang Amianan as One North Central Luzon.

GMA TV-10 Dagupan programs

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GMA TV-10 Dagupan former programs

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Rebroadcasters

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Red: Home location of GMA Dagupan
Light red and red: Market audience of GMA Dagupan
Violet: Areas that may receive signals from GMA Dagupan
Red: Home location of GMA Ilocos
Light red and red: Market audience of GMA Ilocos
Violet: Areas that may receive signals from GMA Ilocos

Since October 3, 2016, the operations of GMA Ilocos (TV-5 Ilocos Norte, TV-7 Abra, TV-48 Ilocos Sur and TV-5 Mountain Province) was absorbed by the Dagupan station which led to simulcast Balitang Amianan and other regional interstitials, as well as some of the editorial and reportorial staff that are employed by the latter. GMA Ilocos were previously an originating station from 2012 to 2015, with its former flagship newscasts Balitang Ilokano and 24 Oras Ilokano. GMA Dagupan also reaches Pampanga and Nueva Vizcaya where it received signals when TV-10 Pampanga and TV-5 Bayombong (both former stations) are currently inactive. TV-7 Batanes, TV-7 Tuguegarao, TV-13 Aparri, TV-7 Isabela, TV-5 Baler and TV-10 Olongapo were former relay stations of GMA-7 Manila before being reassigned to GMA Dagupan on March 15, 2021.

Station Location Channels ERP
DZEA-TV Pangasinan and Benguet 10 (VHF) (analog)
38 (UHF) (digital)
20 kW (120 kW ERP) (analog)
15 kW (90 kW ERP) (digital)
D-5-AS-TV Ilocos Norte 5 (VHF) (analog)
24 (UHF) (digital)
5 kW (75 kW ERP) (both analog & digital)
DWBG-TV Peñarrubia, Abra 7 (VHF) 1 kW
DWBC-TV Bantay, Ilocos Sur 48 (UHF) (analog)
15 (UHF) (digital)
5 kW (both analog & digital)
DZVG-TV Mt. Amuyao, Barlig, Mountain Province 5 (VHF) (analog)
29 (UHF) (digital)
5 kW (analog)
10 kW (digital)
DWAZ-TV Basco, Batanes 7 (VHF) 1 kW
DZBP-TV Aparri, Cagayan 13 (VHF) 1 kW
DWBB-TV Tuguegarao, Cagayan 7 (VHF) 5 kW
DWLE-TV Santiago, Isabela 7 (VHF) (analog)
15 (UHF) (digital)
5 kW (both analog & digital)
D-5-ZB-TV Baler, Aurora 5 (VHF) 1 kW
DWNS-TV Olongapo 10 (VHF)

(analog)
38 (UHF) (digital)

5 kW (both analog & digital)

Digital television

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Digital channels

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UHF Channel 38 (617.143 MHz)

Channel Video Aspect Short name Programming Note
10.01 480i 16:9 GMA GMA Benguet/Dagupan (Main DZEA-TV programming) Commercial broadcast (15 kW)
10.02 GTV GTV
10.03 HEART OF ASIA Heart of Asia Channel
10.06 HALLYPOP Hallypop
10.07 I HEART MOVIES I Heart Movies
10.08 PINOY HITS Pinoy Hits
10.11 (UNNAMED) Unknown Black screen
10.31 240p GMA 1Seg GMA Benguet/Dagupan 1seg broadcast

Area of coverage

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Primary areas

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Secondary areas

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References

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See also

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
DZEA-TV, broadcasting on analog VHF channel 10 and digital UHF channel 38, is a commercial television station owned and operated by GMA Network, Inc., serving North Central Luzon in the Philippines. Its studios are located at the GMA Dagupan Complex in Claveria Road, Malued District, Dagupan City, Pangasinan, providing regional news and programming including the local newscast One North Central Luzon. As part of GMA's regional television operations, it relays national content from GMA Network while producing localized features tailored to areas such as Benguet, Pangasinan, and surrounding provinces. The station contributes to GMA's extensive coverage across the Philippines, emphasizing community reporting and events in its broadcast area.

History

Origins and early broadcasting

DZRI-TV was established in 1967 as ABS-CBN's inaugural television station in Dagupan City, marking the first broadcast outlet in North and extending coverage to and adjacent provinces. The launch coincided with ABS-CBN's formation earlier that year through the merger of Alto Broadcasting System and Chronicle Broadcasting Network, which consolidated resources for regional expansion beyond . Primarily functioning as a relay for national content from ABS-CBN's flagship DZAQ-TV Channel 3 in Manila, DZRI-TV delivered news, dramas, and variety shows to underserved rural and urban audiences, bridging the gap in television access during an era when infrastructure was concentrated in the capital and signal reach remained limited by analog technology and terrain challenges. Broadcasting halted abruptly on September 23, 1972, amid President Ferdinand Marcos's declaration of Martial Law via Proclamation No. 1081, which imposed government control over media and resulted in the seizure or closure of ABS-CBN facilities nationwide, including regional affiliates like DZRI-TV. This interruption persisted until 1986, reflecting broader restrictions on private broadcasting under the regime.

Transition to GMA Network ownership

In 1980, initiated broadcasting operations in on VHF Channel 10 under the callsign DZEA-TV, repurposing the frequency previously used by ABS-CBN's DZRI-TV, which had ceased operations following the declaration of on September 23, 1972. This relaunch represented GMA's strategic entry into Northern , filling a void left by the shutdown of independent broadcasting during the authoritarian regime and positioning the network as an alternative amid the gradual recovery of media freedoms leading up to Martial Law's formal lifting in 1981. The station's transmitter facilities were sited atop Mount Santo Tomas in , selected for its elevation to optimize signal propagation across rugged terrain toward Central and Northern . Initial setup involved overcoming logistical hurdles in the remote, mountainous location, including transportation of equipment and site preparation, while operating at an effective radiated power () of approximately 120 kW from a licensed transmitter power of 20 kW, which constrained early signal reach and reliability in peripheral areas. These foundational efforts established DZEA-TV as GMA's pioneering regional outpost, enabling the distribution of network programming to audiences previously underserved since the pre- , with initial focus on stabilizing infrastructure to support consistent service amid post-dictatorship economic and technical constraints.

Regional expansion and upgrades

In the early 1990s, integrated its regional stations, including DZEA-TV, into the Rainbow Satellite launched on April 30, 1992, enabling simultaneous nationwide delivery of Manila-originated programming to enhance coverage in areas like North . By 2005, GMA Network had established GMA TV-10 Dagupan as a key originating hub, with dedicated studios constructed in the Malued District's Claveria Road to support localized operations and signal improvements for and surrounding provinces. A major upgrade occurred in 2008, transforming GMA Dagupan into a full "" under the GMA North banner, with completion of a new broadcast facility equipped for live (ENG) by May to bolster production quality and regional relevance. This enhancement facilitated the introduction of Balitang Amianan, a flagship local newscast that captured leading audience ratings in AGB surveys within six months of its debut.

Shift to digital era

DZEA-TV initiated digital test broadcasts on UHF Channel 38 (617.143 MHz) in May 2018, adopting the ISDB-T standard as part of the ' national transition to . This move corresponded with GMA Network's substantial investment exceeding ₱1 billion in the second phase of its efforts that year, aimed at upgrading for higher-quality transmission and multi-channel capabilities across its stations. The station's digital rollout integrated with GMA's overarching strategy, which included deploying (SFN) relay towers to extend reliable signal coverage, such as the facility at Luz Street in , , enhancing reception in underserved parts of North amid the analog-to-digital spectrum reallocation. By September 5, 2022, these upgrades facilitated the relaunch of the regional news program—previously Balitang Amianan—as , broadening its scope to encompass provinces like , , , , and adjacent areas while leveraging digital features for sharper video, additional subchannels, and expanded audience access.

Ownership and operations

Corporate structure and ownership

DZEA-TV is wholly owned and operated by , functioning as a key owned-and-operated (O&O) station that receives direct oversight from the parent company's headquarters in , unlike independent affiliates which maintain greater autonomy in local operations. This structure ensures seamless integration of network programming and resources, with DZEA-TV's management reporting to GMA's central executive team for strategic and content decisions. GMA Network, Inc., established in 1950 and publicly listed on the since 2000, maintains a concentrated ownership model dominated by three founding families: the Gozon, Duavit, and Jimenez families, who collectively control approximately 72% of the company's shares as of recent filings. The Gozon family holds about 25.23%, the Jimenez family 23.54%, and the Duavit family 23.47%, reflecting a stable that traces back to the acquisition and rebranding of the network from Lorega Broadcasting. This family-centric governance, with Felipe L. Gozon serving as chairman and CEO since 2000, prioritizes long-term control over short-term divestitures, as evidenced by the rejection of sale offers in 2016 despite market pressures. The resilience of this ownership framework was demonstrated amid the Philippine broadcasting industry's turbulence following the 2020 non-renewal of Corporation's congressional franchise, which led to that competitor's terrestrial shutdown and market contraction. , secured by its own franchise extending to 2047, avoided similar vulnerabilities due to its entrenched stewardship and diversified , enabling it to capture displaced audience share without dilution. This stability has preserved direct corporate authority over O&O assets like DZEA-TV, insulating them from affiliate-level disruptions common in fragmented networks.

Facilities and operational setup

DZEA-TV's primary studios are housed in the GMA Dagupan Complex on Claveria Road, Malued District, Dagupan City, , serving as the hub for local broadcasting operations. This facility enables the station's staff to produce regional news segments, conduct live reports, and integrate content from GMA Network's national programming feed, ensuring coordinated content delivery without separate production silos. The transmitter infrastructure is located atop Mount Santo Tomas in , positioned to optimize signal coverage for VHF Channel 10 across North Central Luzon, including , , and parts of . This remote setup supports reliable transmission logistics, with maintenance and monitoring handled from the studios to facilitate uninterrupted operations and regional signal strength. The overall configuration prioritizes efficient news gathering through mobile units and on-site reporting teams, feeding directly into the network's broader content ecosystem.

Affiliation and network integration

DZEA-TV operates as an of , Inc., fully integrated into the broadcaster's national content distribution framework, which facilitates the relay of flagship programs from via satellite feeds established in the network's post-1992 expansion phase. This setup allows for seamless simulcasting of GMA's primetime lineup, including , dramas, and public affairs shows, while reserving slots for localized inserts that address North Central Luzon-specific issues, such as regional governance and community events, produced by the Dagupan-based GMA Regional TV team. As a regional hub, DZEA-TV contributes to operational synergies by aggregating feeds into GMA's broader ecosystem, supporting the network's strategy of blending centralized programming with decentralized production to maintain viewer across provinces. This integration extends to digital platforms, where post-2018 test broadcasts on UHF channel 38 align with GMA's transition to ISDB-T standards, enhancing feed compatibility with national digital uplinks. The station's role has aided GMA Network's sustained market dominance, with the company reporting leadership in Philippine broadcast viewership and digital metrics for 2024, attributing gains partly to robust regional coverage from outlets like DZEA-TV amid competitors' reduced presence following ABS-CBN's exit from free TV. GMA's annual disclosures highlight how such affiliated integrations have solidified an approximate 93% share in the free TV segment by enabling targeted content delivery without diluting national brand consistency.

Programming

Simulcast of content

DZEA-TV serves as a key relay for 's national programming, broadcasting the Manila-originated feed that forms the core of its daily schedule from early morning to late night. This encompasses flagship news bulletins such as , which delivers evening updates on current events, alongside public affairs programs like State of the Nation with focusing on and policy analysis. Entertainment content, including Kapuso teleseryes (such as ongoing dramas emphasizing family-oriented narratives and romance) and variety shows like , occupies primetime slots, drawing consistent viewership through serialized storytelling and live performances. The station maintains tight synchronization with GMA's central feed transmitted via satellite from the network's headquarters, enabling real-time airing without significant delays or regional offsets, as the operates under a single . This setup prioritizes national consistency, with brief interruptions limited to station identifications or emergency alerts, ensuring viewers in North access the same content as audiences. GMA's programming strategy, rooted in high-production-value content and advertiser-driven scheduling, has empirically outperformed competitors; Nielsen National Urban TV data for early 2025 showed GMA averaging 5.1 rating points across its main channel, surpassing rivals in key demographics. In September 2025, the network's primetime lineup continued to dominate, with multiple shows securing top ratings in both afternoon and evening blocks per AGB Nielsen metrics. This rebroadcast model underscores GMA's emphasis on scalable national content over fragmented local adaptations, leveraging to sustain viewer loyalty amid a competitive landscape where television retains primacy despite streaming growth. Empirical metrics affirm the efficacy: GMA's overall share reached 40.8% nationwide in the first half of 2025, reflecting broad driven by relatable narratives and timely coverage rather than ideological framing.

Local productions and news

DZEA-TV's primary local production is the regional news program , which delivers coverage of current events, activities, and community issues across , , , and adjacent provinces. Relaunched on September 5, 2022, the program expanded from its predecessor Balitang Amianan to incorporate broader regional reporting, including on-air segments anchored by local journalists such as Cris Zuñiga and CJ Torida. The station emphasizes verifiable local journalism, aligning with GMA Network's Panata Kontra Fake News initiative launched in 2024 to combat through fact-checked reporting and public awareness. This effort received commendation from the City Council via a resolution passed on October 14, 2024, recognizing its role in addressing social media-driven prevalent in the . One North Central Luzon integrates community-oriented content, such as reports on , economic developments, and cultural events, to provide region-specific insights distinct from national broadcasts.

Discontinued local programming

Primera Balita, DZEA-TV's local morning newscast, was discontinued in April 2015 as part of GMA Network's broader cost-cutting and manpower reduction initiatives across provincial stations, aimed at enhancing . These measures involved terminating regional programs and staff to streamline production and align with audience consumption patterns, without evidence of external political or regulatory influences. 24 Oras Amianan, a rebranded of the station's evening news aligned with GMA's national format, was phased out in early 2016, consolidating into the reverted Balitang Amianan to reduce redundancy in news delivery and focus resources on core local content. Balitang Amianan itself, the flagship regional newscast since its 2008 launch, ended in 2022 amid GMA's transition to expanded digital platforms, where program formats evolved to integrate online streaming and data-driven efficiencies, replacing it with for broader multi-platform reach.

Technical specifications

Analog transmission details

DZEA-TV broadcast its analog signal on VHF Channel 10, employing a transmitter power of 20 kW to achieve an (ERP) of 120 kW. This configuration supported from the station's transmitter facilities atop Mount Santo Tomas in , targeting primary coverage in , , and adjacent North regions during the pre-digital period. The elevated Mount Santo Tomas site was essential for overcoming terrain challenges in the , enabling reliable VHF signal reach without in core areas until digital alternatives emerged. Analog operations formed the backbone of DZEA-TV's service since its 1980 launch as GMA Network's first outlet for Northern and . Following GMA Network's expansion of digital broadcasting capabilities after 2018, analog transmission on Channel 10 underwent gradual de-emphasis, prioritizing toward the national transition while maintaining legacy service amid the mandated analog shutdown by December 31, 2025.

Digital television implementation

DZEA-TV operates its digital terrestrial television service on UHF channel 38 (617.143 MHz) using the ISDB-T standard, enabling multiplexed transmission for multiple subchannels. This implementation aligns with GMA Network's broader strategy to deploy digital signals across its stations, supporting the primary GMA feed alongside secondary channels such as GTV and Heart of Asia, which deliver varied programming including news, entertainment, and archived content. The digital setup provides benefits over analog, including superior and audio , resistance to interference, and expanded capacity for simultaneous subchannel delivery without bandwidth trade-offs. An SFN relay configuration extends signal consistency, particularly in areas like via a Cabanatuan site, mitigating multipath distortion and ensuring robust single-frequency operation. This facilitates a smoother transition amid the ' delayed analog switch-off, prioritizing efficient spectrum use for enhanced viewer access.

Rebroadcaster extensions

DZEA-TV extends its broadcast footprint through relay stations in northern , including sites in (D-5-AS-TV, channel 5), Abra (DWBG-TV, channel 7), (DWBC-TV, channel 48), and , integrated into its operations on , 2016, from the former GMA Ilocos setup. These rebroadcasters operate under the DZEA-TV license as non-originating relays, relaying the main station's signal without local deviations to streamline administrative and technical management across GMA Network's regional assets. Additional extensions reach via dedicated low-power relays like DWAZ-TV (channel 7), contributing to broader northern coverage. The primary purpose of these extensions is to overcome challenges in the mountainous and coastal terrains of the and , where direct line-of-sight from DZEA-TV's primary transmitter in is obstructed, thereby sustaining GMA Network's viewer penetration in underserved rural and island communities.
LocationCallsignAnalog ChannelRole
D-5-AS-TV5Relay
AbraDWBG-TV7Relay
DWBC-TV48Relay
(Unspecified relay)5Relay
DWAZ-TV7Relay

Coverage and reach

Core service areas

DZEA-TV's core service areas center on City and province, where its primary studios enable production of localized content, including the daily news program , ensuring timely coverage of regional events and issues affecting local populations. The station prioritizes these areas for their high viewer density and economic significance, with facilities designed for rapid response to community-specific news and programming needs. province, particularly City, forms another key core area, supported by the station's operational infrastructure to deliver tailored broadcasts amid the region's mountainous terrain and urban demands. Service extends to urban hubs like San Fernando City in , targeting substantial population centers for optimal content relevance and accessibility through overlapping analog and digital signals.

Extended and secondary coverage

DZEA-TV's signal reaches secondary areas including parts of , , , , , and through enhanced digital transmission and relay extensions implemented by in 2024. These peripheral zones benefit from the station's VHF analog and UHF digital broadcasts, though reception quality diminishes with distance from the primary transmitter site near Dagupan City due to terrain obstacles and atmospheric conditions. Southern portions of also fall within intermittent range, supported by regional relay infrastructure. In remote northern locales such as , geographic isolation—spanning over 300 kilometers of sea and rugged topography—severely restricts direct signal propagation from DZEA-TV, resulting in unreliable or absent terrestrial reception without local relays. addresses such gaps via low-power stations and digital (SFN) configurations, which synchronize frequencies across relays to minimize interference and extend viable coverage. This approach has incrementally improved fringe-area accessibility since the ' digital TV transition began in 2017, though full mitigation remains challenged by ' insular position. These extensions bolster GMA Network's aggregate Luzon footprint, aiding the company's reported national viewership metrics exceeding 90% household penetration in key regions as of 2023 financial disclosures. However, secondary coverage does not guarantee consistent service parity with core areas, with propagation-dependent zones prone to signal fade during inclement weather or peak usage.

References

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