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Economía de Mercado; El Mañanero; El Noticiero con Guillermo Ortega (1998-2000) El Noticiero con Joaquín López Dóriga (2000-2016) El Noticiero con Lolita Ayala (1998-2016) En Concreto (1997) En Contraste (2002 - 2004) En 1 Hora; Fuera de la Ley; Hora 21; Hoy Mismo; Las Noticias por Adela; Muchas Noticias (1987–1998) Noticias ECO (1988 ...
Empresa Estatal de Televisión Boliviana Bolivia TV 7.2: Entertainment El canal de los deportes: May 29, 2012 Red Uno de Bolivia: Generalist Para todos: July 1, 1985 Grupo Kuljis Red Uno de Bolivia S.A. Bolivisión: Generalist Somos parte de ti: September 1, 1985 Albavisión: Antena Uno Canal 6 S.R.L/Galavisión S.R.L Unitel: Generalist Unidos ...
UNITEL (UNIVERSAL DE TELEVISIÓN) [1] is a Bolivian commercial television network headquartered in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, La Paz and Cochabamba, Bolivia.It was founded in 1987 in Santa Cruz de la Sierra as Teleoriente, which in 1997 created the current network and bought two Telesistema Boliviano stations.
On October 15, 2005, the channel adopted El Canal de las Estrellas, as Galavisión was associated to old movies, outdated telenovelas and sports events broadcast with delay. The rebrand enabled the channel to get up-to-date with the Latin American feed. [10] In January 2025, satellite distribution of the feed changed from Eutelsat 9B to ...
XEW-TV came on air March 21, 1951. It was the second television station to come to air in Mexico and built on the tradition of the successful and influential XEW-AM 900. . The concession was and remains held by Televimex, S.A. de
Televisión Boliviana (Bolivia TV) is the first television channel of Bolivia and serves the only means of television communication from the government. The channel was established in August 1969 under the government of Luis Adolfo Siles after years of planning by the government of then-recently deceased René Barrientos. [2]
In December 2006, Reyes Villa called for Cochabamba to hold a second referendum to give Cochabamba autonomy from the central government. [3] Reyes Villa claimed that the measure was only defeated before because the Morales government misled voters, saying "People thought autonomy meant you would need a passport to travel from one province to ...
Cochabamba (Aymara: Quchapampa; Quechua: Quchapampa) is a city and municipality in central Bolivia in a valley in the Andes mountain range.It is the capital of the Cochabamba Department and the fourth largest city in Bolivia, with a population of 630,587 according to the 2012 Bolivian census. [1]