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Juventud Rebelde, daily newspaper of Cuba's young communists. This is a list of newspapers in Cuba.Although the Cuban media is controlled by the Cuban People through the Cuban State apparatus, the national newspapers of Cuba are not directly published by the state, they are instead published by various Cuban political organizations with official approval.
In 1959, with the conclusion of the Cuban Revolution, CMQ-TV, like the other means of communication in the country, ended up under the control of the government. Subsequently, on February 27, 1961, with the disappearance of commercial advertising in Cuban media, the Cuban Government assumed the financing of the television channels.
Commercial television arrived in Cuba on October 25, 1950, the first in the Caribbean and second in Latin America. [8] In the 1940s, Cuba's two largest radio stations, CMQ (which had begun testing in 1946) and RHC-Cadena Azul, announced they would soon start broadcasting television. Since building TV stations and broadcast networks from scratch ...
For the Cuban government to agree to allow advertising is a giant step that opens the doors to other themes of capitalism,” said Mario Garcia, a renowned Cuban American graphic artist who has ...
HRTG-TV 5: Canal5 - El Lider; HRJG-TV 6: Canal 6; Canal 8 Honduras; HRTS-TV 7: HRJS-TV 9: Vica Television; HRNQ-TV 13: Cruceña de TV; Canal 11; Canal 48 - El Canal de la Solidaridad; JBN; Maya TV; Pueblovision Canal 36; SOTEL Canal 11; TEN
Televisión Serrana (TVS), is a community-based television and video collective operating in Sierra Maestra in Cuba. TVS was founded by Daniel Diez Castillo in 1993 and is located in the small town of San Pablo de Yao, in the Buey Arriba territory. This small community inhabits 32,000 people and most are coffee growers and/or producers.
Cubavisión International (Spanish: Cubavisión Internacional) is a Cuban free-to-air television channel run by Cuba's national broadcaster, Cuban Institute of Radio and Television. It serves as the worldwide arm of the domestic Cubavisión network.
The first years of television in Cuba were marked by a climate of competitiveness between two Cuban businessmen backed by US companies, Gaspar Pumarejo and Goar Mestre. Mestre started construction of Radio Center , inspired by the Radio City in New York, while Pumarejo tried to develop a television studio in his own home. [ 5 ]