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Pay TV, formerly Canal + Belgique, with the channels Be 1, Be 1 +1, Be Ciné, Be Be Séries, VOOsport World (1-4) French: Cable networks in Wallonia, Brussels and Flanders - (HD version of Be 1 and VOOsport World 1) Be Ciné: Pay TV, movies channel French: Cable networks in Wallonia, Brussels and Flanders - (HD version of Be Ciné) Be Séries
On 8 May 2023, casting for season two was announced via the show's official Instagram page. Applications remained open for two weeks, closing on 26 May. [2]In June 2023, it was announced that Lufy would not return as a judge in the second season, due to a scheduling conflict with another project she was working on. [3]
Because of this, several programmes moved to a new channel called RTBF La 2, which took over that frequency. RTBF La 2's programming consisted of documentaries, cultural, live sports or non-sports coverage. During the FIFA World Cup 1998, RTBF decided to air all matches on its two main channels, La 1 and La 2. So that the wider public had ...
The communications tower at the RTBF's headquarters in Brussels. Originally named the Belgian National Broadcasting Institute (French: INR, Institut national belge de radiodiffusion; Dutch: NIR, Belgisch Nationaal Instituut voor de Radio-omroep), the state-owned broadcasting organisation was established by law on 18 June 1930, [citation needed] and from 1938 was housed in the Flagey Building ...
Public Enemy (French: Ennemi Public) is a Belgian French-language crime thriller based loosely on the Marc Dutroux case. [5] The first season of 10 episodes aired on La Une in Belgium from 1 May to 29 May 2016, [6] [7] and the second season, also of 10 episodes, aired from 10 March 2019 to 14 April 2019.
Drag Race Belgique is a Belgian French-language reality competition television series based on the original American series RuPaul's Drag Race and part of the Drag Race franchise. It airs on Tipik and Auvio [ fr ] in Belgium and on WOW Presents Plus internationally.
In 1992, about three years after the first sighting, which occurred on 29 November 1989, in Eupen, Marc Hallet wrote an essay about the Belgian UFO wave criticizing the work done by the SOBEPS: La Vague OVNI Belge ou le triomphe de la désinformation, [12] arguing that this UFOlogical organisation was spreading misinformation in the media.
Radar, Anti-Aircraft Number 3 Mark 7, also widely referred to by its development rainbow code Blue Cedar, was a mobile anti-aircraft gun laying radar designed by British Thomson-Houston (BTH) in the mid-1940s. It was used extensively by the British Army and was exported to countries such as Holland, Switzerland, Sweden [1] Finland [2] and