Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
JOLX-DTV (channel 6), branded as Mētele (メ~テレ, Mētere) is the Chūbu region flagship station of the All-Nippon News Network, owned by the Nagoya Broadcasting Network Co., Ltd. (名古屋テレビ放送株式会社, Nagoya Terebi Hōsō Kabushiki gaisha), with its headquarters in Nagoya.
Nagoya Broadcasting Network; T. Tōkai Television Broadcasting; TV Aichi This page was last edited on 27 April 2020, at 09:58 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
It is close to Nagoya Broadcasting Network [3] and Higashi Betsuin Temple, [4] after which it is named. Higashi Betsuin is an abbreviation of the name Higashi Hongan-ji Nagoya Betsuin, a Buddhist temple known formally as Shinshuōtaniha Nagoya Betsuin, which is a temple associated with the temple in Kyoto called Higashi Hongan-ji.
So, the broadcasting company constructs a network with other regions, and with this network establishes the exchange of news or programs. The broadcasting companies which send out many programs to these networks are called key stations. Presently the broadcasting stations located in Tokyo send out the programs for the whole country.
[1]: 16 In terms of joining the network, Chubu-Nippon Broadcasting and Tokai Television Broadcasting had already established a very solid network relationship at that time, but Nagoya Broadcasting Network broadcast programs from both Nippon Television and NET at the same time (the ratio was 60% to 40%); therefore, Chukyo UHF TV decided to ...
Mobile Suit Gundam (機動戦士ガンダム, Kidō Senshi Gandamu) is an anime television series created and directed by Yoshiyuki Tomino, and produced by Nagoya Broadcasting Network, Sotsu Agency, and Sunrise. The English adaptation of the anime is licensed by Bandai Entertainment. [1]
Chubu-Nippon Broadcasting Co., Ltd. (中部日本放送株式会社, Chūbu Nippon Hōsō kabushiki gaisha, CBC) is a regional radio and television service serving Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, Japan. It is majorly owned by the Chunichi Shimbun .
On 1 September 1951, the first commercial broadcaster, CBC Radio (JOAR) in Nagoya, started broadcasting, followed shortly after by NJB in Osaka. [22] Subsequently, several other stations obtained broadcasting rights (among them ABC Radio , RKB Radio , KBS Kyoto and KRT Radio Tokyo ) [ 23 ] and by 1952 there were eighteen private radio stations ...