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This is a list of television channels that broadcast for a Romanian language audience. Typically, non-Romanian content is subtitled, but maintains the original language soundtrack. Non-Romanian programming intended for children, is however, usually dubbed into Romanian.
FOX Kids Play (now Disney Junior Romania) 2006 TV K Lumea (now Kiss TV) 2007 TV Sport (now Pro Arena) A+ Anime; 2009 Info Dolce; Jetix (now Disney Channel Romania) 2010 Cosmos TV; Hallmark Channel (now Diva) MTV Two; Boom Sport (now Orange Sport) 2011 Vox News; Telesport; Playhouse Disney (now Disney Junior Romania) Digi Sport (now Digi Sport)
Sky Italia: Cooking Gold TV Gold TV Italia 24 hours 16:9 SDTV FTA satellite; DTT Teleshopping Hip Hop TV: Seven Music Entertainment 24 hours 4:3 SDTV Sky Italia: Music History (HD, +1) A&E Networks: 24 hours 16:9 HDTV, SDTV Sky Italia, Now TV Documentaries; Factual Horse TV: Class Editori: 24 hours 16:9 SDTV FTA satellite Lifestyle; Horse ...
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Cartoonito is an Italian free-to-air television channel owned by Boing S.p.A., a joint venture of Fininvest's MFE - MediaForEurope (through its Mediaset and RTI subsidiaries) and Warner Bros. Discovery (through its International division). [1] [2] It is available on digital terrestrial television and free-to-view satellite provider Tivùsat.
DN2 (Romanian: Drumul Național 2) is a national road in Romania which links Bucharest with the historical regions of Moldavia and Bukovina in north-east Romania. Recently upgraded, it is today one of the best-maintained roads in the country. The main cities linked by the DN2 are: Bucharest, Buzău, Focșani, Bacău, Roman, and Suceava. [1]
The Spanish free-to-air television channel launched in 2010 and owned as a joint venture between Mediaset España and Warner Bros. Discovery through its International unit. Series on the channel are also available in English via a secondary audio feed. Additional feeds are available in Italy, [3] and Sub-Saharan Africa.
RAI headquarters in Rome Mediaset headquarters in Cologno Monzese, near Milan. Television in Italy was introduced in 1939, when the first experimental broadcasts began.However, this lasted for a very short time: when fascist Italy entered World War II in 1940, all transmissions were interrupted, and were resumed in earnest only nine years after the end of the war, on January 3, 1954.