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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)
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.
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 5 is an English-language free-to-air terrestrial television channel in Singapore, owned by state media conglomerate Mediacorp.The channel primarily airs English language programming made in Singapore, and imported programmes from other nations such as the United States and United Kingdom, broadcasting news (as News Tonight) and entertainment from a variety of genres.
Monday night football schedule, Oct. 28 New York Giants at Pittsburgh Steelers, 6:15 a.m. Mountain/7:15 p.m. Central, ESPN, ESPN2, ABC This article originally appeared on El Paso Times: NFL Week 8 ...
The plan also outlined the conversion of Channel 5 to an English-language service, Channel 8's conversion to an all-Chinese service, and the move of Channel 8's Tamil output to Channel 12. [85] SBC's successors would be set to face commercial competition from Singapore Telecom and the NTUC. The two companies would also act as channel providers ...
In 2000, MediaCorp Studios was created to produce content for MediaCorp TV channels, such as Channel 5, Channel U and Channel 8. [251] In 2001, EagleVision was created to produce content for Suria and Vasantham. [ 252 ]
WST was also used for a short time in the US, with services provided throughout the late 1970s and early 1980s by several regional American TV networks (such as the University of Wisconsin–Madison's Infotext service in the mid-1980s, which was carried on several TV stations across Wisconsin (and nationally by The Discovery Channel), [52] [53 ...