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El Comercio started advertising Canal N to the public for the first time in 1998 in the PC World magazine, American magazine whose local version was produced by the newspaper. Later, advertisements for the channel appeared on Cable Mágico 's magazine for the subscribers of the cable operator: the advertisement included a photo of the studios ...
Canal 31 (Guatemala City): TV Azteca; formerly known as Latitud Televisión; Canal 33 (Guatemala City): TV-USAC; Canal 35 (Guatemala City): TV Azteca; Canal 40 (Petén): Corporación de Radio y Televisión Petenera, S. A. Canal 41 (Guatemala City): International Channel Telecentro; Canal 43 (Guatemala City): International Channel Telecentro
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Canal N Peru: Grupo Plural TV: Spanish: PBO Digital Peru: 4 Hearts Inc S.A. Spanish: RPP TV Peru: Grupo RPP: Spanish: ABC News Live United States: Walt Disney Television: English: Free Speech TV United States: Public Communicators Inc. English: Link TV United States: Public Media Group of Southern California English: NewsNation United States ...
RCN Televisión, branded as Canal RCN (Radio Cadena Nacional) is a Colombian free-to-air television network owned by Organización Ardila Lülle. It was founded as a television production company on March 23, 1967, and officially launched as an independent channel on July 10, 1998. [ 1 ]
NTN24 (acronym for Nuestra Tele Noticias 24) is a Colombian cable television news channel, owned and operated by RCN Televisión.. NTN24 was launched on 3 November 2008 with journalist Claudia Gurisatti appointed as the channel's first editorial director.
Canal 1 started broadcasting on 13 June 1954 as Canal Nacional on channel 8 VHF in Bogotá and was operated by the National Radio of Colombia. In 1963, it was operated by Inravisión (Instituto Nacional de Radio y Televisión), the now-former Colombian public broadcaster.
In Mexico it was first available on Televisa's Cablevisión cable TV system in March 1996 followed by its launch in Brazil that same year. Unlike most television networks in Latin America, which air all imported shows dubbed in Spanish or Portuguese , Sony started airing its programming with subtitles, which led to its role as a regional TV leader.