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Empresas Públicas de Medellín (EPM) was established on 18 November 1955 as a residential public utilities company which, initially, only served the inhabitants of Medellin, Colombia its hometown. EPM is the head of a group that consists of twelve companies and has equity participation in eight others in the electricity and water sectors.
En Vivo (known as Nuevos Días TV from 1995 until the end of 1997) was a Colombian programadora that operated between 1995 and 2001. Its main productions were the morning program En vivo (1995–96), the interview program by the same title (1996–97), and the newscasts En vivo 9:30 (evening) and En vivo 6:30 (morning) that aired on Canal A from 1998-2001.
City TV Colombia; CMB TV; CNC (Canal NotiColombia) Cristovisión; Guasca TV; Humor Channel; Canal RCN (Radio Cadena Nacional) RCN Nuestra Tele Internacional; Nuestra Tele Noticias 24 Horas; RCN Novelas; Señal Colombia; Series & Series TV; TV Prensa; Teleamiga; Teleantioquia; Telecafé; Telecaribe; Telepacífico; Tele VID
TV Colombia logo from 2003 to 2011. RCN Nuestra Tele Internacional (previously known as TV Colombia and RCN Nuestra Tele) is an international pay television channel owned by Colombian television network RCN. It is a Spanish-language network aimed to Colombian and Latin American viewers around the world.
It was originally carried on the regional version of the channel, when it was pulled off and picked up by I.Sat on November 19, 2007, another Turner Broadcasting System Latin America-owned-and-operated network. [2] The premiere of Adult Swim was received by a major backlash from at least a pay TV operator in Latin America.
There are 13 hydroelectric plants managed by EPM (Empresas Publicas de Medellin) with a generation capacity of 2,574 MW. The useful capacity of stored water in the EPM reservoirs is 1,606 million m 3 or the equivalent to 3,468.2 GWh. This total represents 21.2% of the total capacity (16,340 GWh) in all storage reservoirs in Colombia.
América CV was a Spanish television network in the United States, created as a result of the joint venture agreement between Sherjan Broadcasting (owner of América Teve) and Caribevision Holdings (owned by Barba TV Group & Pegaso Television) (owner of CaribeVisiòn). The network's name was a combination of the names of the two companies ...
Outside of Latin America, the channel is an associate member of the Caribbean Cable Cooperative. [3] By mid-2010, the channel's logo was slightly modified. By May 2011, it was the only Boomerang channel in the world that would not air any animated content.