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In 1986, RTHK headquarters moved across the road to the former Commercial Television studios, which were renamed Television House. The station's first news and financial news channel, Radio 7, was established in November 1989.
TVB first headquarters and studios were located at 77 Broadcast Drive in Kowloon Tong and were neighbours with fellow broadcasters RTHK and ATV.The six storey office tower and studios were located along the hills along Broadcast Drive.
New Broadcasting House, Manchester, the former headquarters of the BBC North West region in Manchester; Old Broadcasting House, the vacated headquarters of the BBC North region in Leeds, now part of Leeds Metropolitan University's School of Computing and Creative Technologies; Broadcasting House, Jersey, original headquarters of BBC Radio Jersey
Commercial Television's building from 1975 to 1978; now RTHK's Television House. Commercial Television (CTV; Chinese: 佳藝電視) was the third free-to-air broadcast television station in Hong Kong. It first went on air in 1975, and ceased transmissions in 1978. [1]
Its analogue spectrum was taken over by RTHK and its digital spectrum was partially taken over by ViuTV. RTV English → RTV2 in 1967 → aTV English in 1982 → aTV Diamond in 1987 → aTV World since 1989 (later renamed to aTV6 prior to April 2009 following the launch of digital TV on channel 16 by December 2007).
It broadcasts a range of programs from CCTV Headquarters at East 3rd Ring Road in Beijing and is available to both cable and terrestrial television viewers. The terrestrial signal of CCTV-1 is free-to-air across China. However, due to copyright restrictions, the satellite signal of CCTV-1 is encrypted, and smartcards are necessary for decryption.
Outside Broadcasting House in Kowloon Tong (the headquarters of public broadcaster RTHK) on the same day, around 100 protesters from the pro-police group Politihk Social Strategic protested against what they called anti-government bias in RTHK's programmes. The demonstrators chanted slogans, calling RTHK a "cockroach radio station". [67]
Edward Yau, the Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development, urged RTHK to abide by its own charter. [11] On 19 February, a group protesting the RTHK defamation of the police gathered outside the Hong Kong Police Headquarters, urging the force to issue a warning letter or sue the broadcaster for libel. [12]