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Roberts Radio is a British consumer electronics company that produces radios and related audio equipment. Based in Mexborough , the company has been making radios since its foundation in 1932 and claim to be the oldest active radio manufacturer in the UK.
Televicentro launched on December 15, 1964 [1] under the TGBO-TV calls, with a daily schedule between 5pm and 11pm. [2] The station was founded by the El Imparcial newspaper, with initial funding costing 250,000 quetzales and with video taping equipment worth 80,000 quetzales.
Pages in category "Radio stations in Guatemala" This category contains only the following page. This list may not reflect recent changes. T. TGN (AM)
The Guatemalan government issued a license for channel 11 in 1960, announcing on December 27 that year as "Voz e Imagen de Centroamérica" on an advertisement at the El Imparcial newspaper, promising an 8,000-watt antenna and a budget of 25,000 quetzales. [2]
Canal 33 (Guatemala City): TV-USAC; Canal 35 (Guatemala City): TV Azteca; Canal 40 (Petén): Corporación de Radio y Televisión Petenera, S. A. Canal 41 (Guatemala City): International Channel Telecentro; Canal 43 (Guatemala City): International Channel Telecentro; Canal 45 (Guatemala City): Jesus TV (Catholic channel)
Radio stations: 1 government-owned radio station and hundreds of privately owned radio stations (2007). [1] Radios: 835,000 (1997). [needs update] Television stations: 4 privately owned national terrestrial channels dominate TV broadcasting; multi-channel satellite and cable services are available (2007). [1] Television sets: 640,000 (1997).
These entities began receiving money from Guatemala Radio and Television and Televisiete. [citation needed] As the campaign progressed, channels increased payments to the four companies to the sum of Q17 679 200.00. Monthly, two payments were recorded for Q215 600.00, one for each channel.
It also had an internet radio station where Osvaldo Benavides hosted a weekend show. Zoom TV was the precursor of what Argos' dubbed as "la tercera mirada" (the third look), a new television station, that would compete directly with the giant Televisa and TV Azteca (whom they had just broke ties with).