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In June 1954, the Nagoya TV Tower, jointly funded by CBC and NHK, was completed. In December of the same year, CBC obtained a TV broadcasting license. At 10am on December 1, 1956, CBC officially started broadcasting TV programs, becoming the third private TV station in Japan (the first two were Nippon TV and Radio Tokyo TV). In order to make ...
Aichi International Arena (愛知国際アリーナ, Aichi Kokusai Ariina), also known as IG Arena (IGアリーナ, IG Ariina) for sponsorship reasons, is a multi-purpose arena under construction in Kita-ku, Nagoya, Japan. Scheduled to open in July 2025, the arena will be a replacement for the Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium, which was built in 1964.
[5]: 85 In 1977, Nagoya TV's 15th anniversary TV series "Holding Hands" (お手々つないで) was broadcast in prime time nationwide through the ANN network. It was the first TV series broadcast by Nagoya TV in prime time. [5]: 93 In 1978, Nagoya TV also produced the first live daily information program "Look Here!" (こっちむいてホイ!).
Aichi Television Broadcasting Company, Ltd. (TVA; Japanese: テレビ愛知株式会社, romanized: Terebi Aichi kabushiki gaisha), also referred to as TV Aichi (テレビ愛知, Terebi Aichi), with the callsigns JOCI-DTV (channel 10) is a Japanese television station in Nagoya serving as the affiliate of the TX Network for the Aichi prefecture.
In 1981, Chukyo TV proposed a new medium-term business plan, aiming to achieve a proportion of self-produced programs of 10% and a market share of 20% in the Nagoya area TV advertising market. [1]: 75 In 1984, the proportion of self-produced programs of Chukyo Television reached 10%. 12.3%, ranking first among all Nagoya channels.
A Saizeriya restaurant in Nagoya, Japan. The current president of the company, Yasuhiko Shōgaki, worked at a western restaurant in Ichikawa, Chiba called Saizeriya while he was attending Tokyo University of Science. The manager at the time recognized his skill, and when Shōgaki became a senior in school, he inherited the restaurant.
Diamond Hall (ダイアモンドホール) is a 1,014-capacity live music venue located in Naka-ku, Nagoya, Japan. Since opening in 1992 it has hosted notable artists, such as Green Day, Sheryl Crow, Anthrax, UFO, Night Ranger, Megadeth, Tool, Porcupine Tree, Cheap Trick, Band-Maid and Sonic Youth. [1] [2]
George Harrison and Eric Clapton played twelve concerts in Japan in December of 1991. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] This was the second solo tour of George Harrison's career, and ended up being his last. Recordings of performances from this tour were released on Harrison's 1992 album Live in Japan .