It is owned-and-operated by Traffic Group as of 2003 under the TV TEM banner, which also owns three other stations under said name in the inland of São Paulo, and covers approximately 95 municipalities.
He also invested around Cr$7.5 million in necessary equipment for the creation of the station, and also signed a contract with Mário Wallace Simonsen's REBRATEL, enabling the possibility to install 1000 television sets in the city.
There were few advertisers for the channel, and with money missing from the till, many employees received payments after the due date.
[5] All these factors led Simonetti to sell the station to Organizações Victor Costa in October of the same year.
The station reached the end of the 1970s with only a reporting team made up of reporter Jair Acetuno, cameramen Moacir Mendonça and Walcir Coelho, and lighting designer Carlos Corrente, who together only produced articles shown during Jornal das Sete, produced in São Paulo.
[4] On February 28, 1980, the station started showing a 2-minute local block of JS, which on January 3, 1983, was replaced by SPTV.
On April 11, 1994, with the return of Jornal Hoje to the state of São Paulo, the first edition of SP Já also began to be produced by Globo Oeste Paulista.
[3] In 2002, Organizações Globo incurred a huge debt resulting from investments in Globosat channels and pay TV companies, which exceeded R$2 billion in October of that year.
TV Modelo then changed its name to TV TEM Bauru, and the programs shown until then were extinguished and replaced by Bom Dia Cidade, successor to the local block of Bom Dia São Paulo, and TEM Notícias, successor to SPTV .
[10] The president of TV TEM, J.Hawilla, and the director of Central Globo de Afiliadas, Cláudia Quaresma, symbolically pressed a button that activated the broadcaster's digital signal, via UHF channel 26.