another one im really proud of and yes, the color change at the end was intentional
Lëtzebuerger Sovereign Radio-Televisioun (LSRT) (in English, Luxembourg Sovereign Radio-Television) is a Luxembourgish radio and television corporation based in Luxembourg City. The company also has some broadcasting towers in Belgium (around southern Wallonia and Brussels), Germany (around the Rhineland-Palatinate, Saarland, Berlin, and Bavaria areas), and France (around the Grand Est, Brittany, Corsica, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, and Île-de-France areas), due to the predominantly Luxembourgish-speaking minority in those respective countries. The countries LSRT broadcasts in (especially France) also help out with reaching more exclusive areas, like Mayotte, Martinique, Guadeloupe, Namibia, and other former or ongoing overseas territories. Of course, the company also broadcasts in NATO-affiliated countries due to the European Broadcasting Union, and its close ties with specific countries, ultimately landing LSRT radio towers in the countries of America, Canada, Brazil, Chile, Japan, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Algeria, Morocco, Cuba, Syria, Iran, Kazakhstan, India, Bangladesh, Oman, China, South Korea, Malaysia, Jordan, Israel, Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya, along with every single European country except for Belarus, Liechtenstein, and Russia. It was founded in 1950, just 5 years after the country was liberated from the Greater German Reich, following television equipment being provided from West Germany to form the national government-owned television station. Prior to this, it was simply known as LSR, Lëtzebuerger Sovereign Radio, a national radio station founded in 1939 by the German government after they had occupation of the Luxembourgish territory. The company would later be dissolved in 1945 after the GGR fell apart after World War 2, then eventually being revived in 1950 as LSRT, which still lives on to this day. The company broadcasts almost exclusively in the Luxembourgish language dialect, which is exclusive to the country. Of course, some programs are in German and French every now and then, as those are two of the many widely spoken languages in Luxembourg. [THIS IS ALL A WORK OF FICTION, OBVIOUSLY.]