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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
The two main Belgian public TV networks, VRT in the Flemish Community and RTBF in the French Community of Belgium, broadcast their channels via operators using cable, satellite, IPTV and digital terrestrial television . In the French community of Belgium the channels of RTBF can be received by DVB-T2 free of charge. The privately owned channels ...
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 ...
Arte Belgique: Cooperation between RTBF and ARTE: Cultural network: ... TV Direct 13; Cyprus ... (Free to Air French TV channel)
La Trois (lit: The Three) is a Belgian national television channel operated by the French-language public-service broadcasting organisation RTBF. It was launched on 30 November 2007 and is distributed via digital terrestrial television, satellite, cable, and IPTV. La Trois timeshares with Auvio Kids TV, a children block, between 6/9 am to 8pm.
On 1 March 1997, RTBF 21 split for the second time, but this time, it was known as Eurosport 21, which became more of an events channel and simulcast with Eurosport on some days. 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 ...
M6+ Catchup, live TV, radio and video on demand. Available in Germany and Hungary as RTL+: 100% (via M6 Web) 4 November 2013 Gulli Replay Catchup and live TV, available on TV providers, and Gulli website and mobile app Gulli is also available on M6+. 100% (via Jeunesse TV) April 2010 2 September 2019 Gulli Max
In 1977, the German-language service was separated from RTB – which became Radio-Télévision Belge de la Communauté française – and BRT, which in 1990s became Vlaamse radio en televisie - and the new company, Belgischer Rundfunk, began broadcasting from Eupen. For some years afterward, it continued to use BRT/RTB's old stylised "ear ...