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1996 - 2002, replaced by NBA TV: CTi News Taiwan: Chinese 1994 - 2020 DXAB Teleradyo Philippines: Cebuano 2020 Dzaïr News Algeria: Arabic, Tamazight, French, English 2014 - 2019 e.tv News & Sport South Africa: English 2018 - 2022 Económico TV Portugal: Portuguese 2010 - 2016 ETV Marathi India: Marathi 2000 - 2015, replaced by Colors Marathi
TaiwanPlus. TaiwanPlus, is a public media based in Taipei. Launched on August 30, 2021, it offers live streaming and an international television channel, delivering a variety of content, including news, lifestyle features, technology, travel shows, entertainment programming, cultural insights, food content, and documentaries.
In 2007, Taiwan Indigenous Television (TITV), Hakka TV, and Taiwan Macroview Television (MACTV) join Taiwan Broadcasting System, completed the structure of TBS. [2] In 2020 the Taiwanese Ministry of Culture announced that they would be providing PTS with funding to produce English language programming. [1]
Covering a market of 23 million people, the country has 8 twenty-four-hour news stations (compared to 3 in the US, 3 in the UK, and 3 in Japan), approximately 200 radio stations, about 2,500 newspaper publishers, and more than 4,000 magazine publishers; moreover, Taiwan also has the highest density of Satellite News Gathering (SNG) trucks in ...
Taiwan Television. TaiwanPlus. The Walt Disney Company Asia Pacific. TTV Family. TTV Main Channel. TTV World. TVBS. TVBS Entertainment Channel. TVBS-Asia.
SET iNews. SET iNews Channel ( Chinese: 三立iNEWS; pinyin: Sānlì iNEWS) is a Taiwanese 24-hour news channel, broadcasting predominantly in Mandarin, owned by Sanlih E-Television and launched in May 2011 as SET Finance ( Chinese: 三立財經台; pinyin: Sānlì Cáijīng-tái ), switching to its current name on 26 June 2017. It is a sister ...
Unique Business News. Categories: Television stations in Taiwan. 24-hour television news channels by country. Television news in Taiwan.
Cable television is prevalent in Taiwan, as a result of cheap subscription rates (typically around NT$ 550, or US$15 a month) and the paucity of free-to-air television, which comprises four channels. Programming is mostly in Mandarin and Taiwanese, with some English, Japanese and other foreign-language channels.