[1] At this time, the management of the station, as well as the other Diários Associados vehicles in Goiânia, became the responsibility of the lawyer and journalist Francisco Braga Sobrinho.
The station went through several massive changes at the end of the 1960s and throughout the 1970s, such as the increase in the power of its transmitter, which, according to advertisements at the time, reached 65 cities, although its signal had irregular reception in its own territory.
On July 18, 1980, Rede Tupi was extinguished after a decree published two days earlier by the Federal Government in the Official Gazette of the Union declared seven stations' licenses revoked due to social security debts and financial corruption.
In 1983, still suffering from the financial crisis, Diários Associados sold TV Goyá to businessman and then federal deputy Múcio Athayde, owner of Grupo Desenvolvimento.
Involved in several scandals, the most notorious being the construction of Centro da Barra (Athaydeville), which ended unfinished, and the bankruptcy of some of his companies, Athayde had several problems regarding the right to administer the TV Goyá concession, which he intended to use together with other communication vehicles owned by him in Goiás and the Federal District to create an electoral base that would enable his candidacy for the Federal Senate in the 1986 elections, which however was challenged by the TRE due to several irregularities.
Still in the 1980s, the station moved its news editorial office from its old headquarters in Serrinha (which today houses TV Goiânia) to a new address in Praça Tamandaré, in the West sector.
[4] During this period, under the direction of Luiz Cláudio Costa, the broadcaster underwent several reformulations, eliminating much of its local programming, and in 1995, it brought together all its departments in a new headquarters in the Business Center Building, located a few blocks away.
[9] Still in 2014, the station migrated from the Business Center Building to the former Espaço Ambientar, in the Bueno sector, purchased in 2011 and after a period of renovations, it became its new headquarters on June 5.