1995-2000 | 2000-2003 | 2003-2005 | 2005–2006 |
2006–2011 | 2011-2017 | 2017–2018 | 2018–present |
Gran Santiago Televisión[]
1995-2000[]
Enrique "Cote" Evans, Gonzalo Chamorro and José Artemio Espinosa who were members of Canal Uno Productions for UCV Televisión, founded Gran Santiago Television and began broadcasting on October 9, 1995 on Channel 22; the first UHF TV channel of Chile which lasted five years in this era. As for this logo, It was composed of the letters "GRAN SANTIAGO" and on a crimson-colored rectangle that said "televisión" both in Times New Roman font.
Andrés Bello Televisión[]
2000-2003[]
In August 2000, the channel became the property of the Universidad Nacional Andrés Bello (UNAB), which launched Andrés Bello Televisión (ABT for short) on the night of October 1 of that year after spending US$1 million at the time for the signal. The first logo of ABT was an orange ellipse with the initials abt in blue and a yellow ellipse on the blue letter b with a slogan Ver para crear.
2003-2005[]
In 2003, when the channel had pact with Canal de Fútbol, ABT changed the 3D logo which had an eye tilted to the left, next to it were the letters "ABT" in stylized letters. Next year, CDF was intended to buy this channel, but it didn't have permission to set as the sports channel.
Televisión Óptima[]
2005-2006[]
UNAB sold to Bernardo Carrasco, owner of Óptima Producciones S.A. to launch Televisión Óptima (TVO for short) on Monday, May 9, 2005. The logo consisted of a red letter V, which held two squares with the letters T and O (as a speaker) in white that appear to be made of aluminum, with a slogan Rompe con todo.
+Más Canal 22[]
2006-2011[]
Just 17 months later, the channel resulted a commercial failure and massive quittings, and was sold for the third time by Máximo Sotta, owner of Pabellón de la Construcción, changing the name to +Más Canal 22. As for this logo, it presented as a blue cross tilted to the right. Next to it, the word “más” in red. Below was a blue rectangle with the text "CANAL 22" in white letters.
Más Visión[]
2011-2017[]
In 2010, after massive layoffs followed by the financial crisis of 2008, the channel was sold by Álvaro Saieh, owner of Copesa. Eleven months later, it change the name to Más Visión, and extended the frequency signals of channels 57 (Viña del Mar), 35 (Concepción) and 21 (Temuco) as a regional television network. In 2013, this channel was intended to transfer 3TV by Copesa itself, but it never made it on September 23 due insufficient budget to transmit this channel, resulting a failure for this channel. As for this logo, Several blue crosses, close to the lowercase letters the text "más", and the gray rectangle below with a "visión" word.
Canal 22[]
2017-2018[]
On August 10, 2016 the network was acquired by Marcelo Mendizábal Terrazas, owner of CNC Medios (its final owner to this day), and in March 2017 it changed the name simply as Canal 22 (C22), as a music TV channel with a digital channel 8.1 only in this era. The channel had two short-lived logos, one is with the letter C in red and the number 22 in white on a black background, and the other one was a red "Canal" and the number 22.
TVR[]
2018-present[]
Eleven months later, the channel was renamed as Televisión Regional de Chile (TVR), and began broadcasting definitively in HD, replacing its digital channel to 14.1 on February 1, 2018. This logo consists of the initials “TVR” in triangular grid multicolor diagonally: Red, Yellow Green and Blue.