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The channel was relaunched as Discovery Real Time on 7 May 2005 in the British market. The channel aimed at complementing the female-skewed Discovery Home & Health (which itself replaced Discovery Health). [6] A sister channel called Discovery Real Time Extra was launched on 22 August 2005. [7] On 20 March 2009, it was replaced with Discovery Shed.
DMAX is a Southeast Asian pay television channel centred on broadcasting documentaries, factual-entertainment, lifestyle and reality programming TV series for male audiences. It is owned by Discovery Asia-Pacific , a division of Warner Bros. Discovery In South Asia, the channel is available under the Discovery Turbo name carrying the same ...
On 16 July 2015, DMAX moved from 144 to 167 on Sky, switching places with sister channel Quest. [2]Following the re-combination of the Entertainment and Lifestyle & Culture sections of the Sky guide, Discovery relocated some of their stations on the platform, resulting in DMAX being pushed down the grid to allow Discovery Home & Health to be moved up.
DMAX is a men's lifestyle channel operated by Warner Bros. Discovery EMEA, a division of Warner Bros. Discovery International owned by Warner Bros. Discovery.. It broadcasts free-to-air in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Asia-Pacific, United Kingdom, Ireland, Italy and Spain; Turkey has their own version of the channel too.
It launched on 30 April 2013 at 8:00 p.m., [1] replacing Discovery Real Time and DMAX +2. [2] The original version of TLC was launched in 1994 and was subsequently renamed Discovery Home & Leisure and later Discovery Real Time as part of Discovery's catalogue of themed channels. Given that TLC was chasing a completely different demographic than ...
Real Time (Discovery Real Time until 31 August 2010) is an Italian television channel owned by Warner Bros. Discovery EMEA. The channel launched on 1 October 2005, becoming the sixth Discovery network to launch in Italy. It showed lifestyle programmes targeting a female upper-class audience of 25- to 44-year-olds.
DMAX underwent its first transformation on September 12, 2016, when the channel added series and movies to its programming, and was renamed from Discovery MAX to DMAX. [3] As of the same date, DMAX began to target the male audience due to the launch of DKISS , a channel owned by Grupo Radio Blanca but fed with Discovery programming, however ...
Discovery Turbo launched in Southeast Asia on September 22, 2008, replacing Discovery Real Time. Discovery Turbo Asia ended its broadcast on July 7, 2014 as it has been rebranded to DMAX on the same day.