Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
TVQ was the fifth station to launch in Fukuoka, and the sixth affiliate with the TX Network. There were the last stations to launch in the markets. It is customary for TX Network affiliates to use TV + region name, as in TV Hokkaido , TV Aichi , TV Osaka , and TV Setouchi .
Fukuoka Broadcasting System Corporation (株式会社福岡放送, Kabushiki Gaisha Fukuoka Hōsō, FBS), callsign JOFH-DTV (channel 5) is a Japanese TV station licensed to Fukuoka that serves as the affiliate of the Nippon News Network (NNN) and the Nippon Television Network System (NNS) for the Fukuoka Prefecture.
RKB began television broadcasts on 1 March 1958. At the same time, the station merged with Mainichi Seibu Television (tentative call sign JOGX-TV, later reassigned in 2013 after CBC TV spun off). As a result, the planned JOGX station was launched as the Kitakyushu satellite station (JOFO-TV). RKB began broadcasting a digital signal on 1 July 2006.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Thursday, December 5 - 8 p.m. (and again December 25 - 8 p.m.) - NBC. On December 5, NBC is airing two vintage half-hour holiday animated specials, starting with 1966's How the Grinch Stole Christmas.
In 1969, the Fukuoka District Court requested four television stations, including KBC (the other three being RKB Mainichi Broadcasting, Television Nishinippon, and NHK Fukuoka), to submit news footage of college students protesting the docking of a U.S. nuclear-powered aircraft carrier at Sasebo Port, but Kyushu Asahi Broadcasting refused to do ...
In Japan, "The City" events have been organised for Nagoya, Tokyo, Osaka and Fukuoka, including stamp rallies, food trucks and pop-up stores. [16] [17] The December 14 concert in Osaka was streamed live in cinemas in 60 countries across the world, with the December 15 and December 22 shows streamed on Weverse. [18]
The last team to call Heiwadai home was the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks (now Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks) for their first 3 years from 1989-1992. The stadium was eventually replaced with the Fukuoka PayPay Dome. During a renovation to Heiwadai in 1987, underneath the bleachers of the stadium, ruins of an ancient facility were found.