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News 8 At One [1点新闻] (weekdays at 1pm) Hello Singapore – 狮城有约 (weekdays from 6:30pm to 7:30pm) Hello Singapore Highlights (weekdays 7:30am) News Tonight – 晚间新闻 (all days from 10pm to 10:30pm) (also broadcast on Mediacorp Channel U at 11pm on all days) Singapore Today – 狮城6点半 (weekends only from 6:30pm)
Pages in category "Channel 8 (Singapore) original programming" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 262 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Channel 8 (Chinese: 8頻道) is a Singaporean Mandarin-language free-to-air terrestrial television channel in Singapore, owned by state media conglomerate Mediacorp. The channel broadcasts general entertainment and news programming in the Mandarin language, including original and imported programming.
Episode Title Original airdate Encore date 1 "Episode 1" April 12, 2011 (): February 1, 2012 PG: 2 "Episode 2" April 13, 2011 (): February 2, 2012 PG: 3 "Episode 3"
The Ultimatum (simplified Chinese: 双子星) was a Singaporean television drama series that was produced by MediaCorp Studios in 2009 and aired on MediaCorp Channel 8. Starring Zoe Tay, Fann Wong, Li Nanxing and Tay Ping Hui, the series was the first drama to be fully filmed in HD.
Mediacorp Channel 8's television series The Dream Job is a blockbuster drama series produced by Mediacorp Studios in 2016. In this series, a vast fortune and inheritance is at stake when a mysterious man offers three young candidates, who are eventually discovered to be his illegitimate children from the many affairs he had during his younger days, a dream job at his horticulture estate.
Hand In Hand (Chinese: 手牵手) is a Singaporean drama produced and telecast on MediaCorp Channel 8. The drama began production in April 2015 and began airing from 25 September 2015. The show aired at 9pm on weekdays and had a repeat telecast at 8am the following day.
On 3 January 1963, the Singaporean government announced the start of pilot programming effective February 15. The station was set to broadcast on VHF channel 5 in the 625-line television standard and would provide a license fee of $24 per year ($2 per month), touted at the time as being "one of the cheapest in this part of the world".