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Canal 13 San Juan TV: Diario 13 San Juan: Diario 13 San Juan — 30.2 CuidarTV: July 14, 2020 () Public: Government of San Juan: Government of San Juan: Lifestyle 31.1 Canal Ocho : May 2, 1964 () Private: Grupo América: América Multimedios: Major commercial network: Canal Ocho 31.2 A24: March 8, 2005 () News programming 31.3
Canal 7 Argentina; Canal 9; Telefé; Canal 13; Bolivia. ATB; Bolivision; TVN (Televisión Nacional de Bolivia) ... Canal 13 (UC TV) Mas Canal 22; Colombia. Caracol TV;
LV86 TV: Canal 13/Canal 29 HD: 13: 29: Imperio Televisión S.A. Corrientes: Corrientes: LT80 TV: 13 Max Digital: 13: 32: Jorge Félix Gómez & Carlos Antonio Smith Jujuy: San Salvador de Jujuy: LW80 TV Canal 7 7 36 Radio Visión Jujuy S.A. La Rioja: La Rioja: LV91 TV Canal 9 9 29 Radio y Televisión Riojana S.E. Mendoza: Mendoza: LV83 TV: Canal ...
Canal 13 was founded in 1960, and started broadcasting on 1 October 1960, at 8:30 p.m. The channel was tendered to the company Rio de la Plata S.A. TV, founded by Cuban businessman Goar Mestre and the US network CBS. In the mid-1960s, Editorial Atlántida and Mestre's wife bought the shares of the channel.
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On October 1, 1960, Canal 13 began broadcasting under the company Río de la Plata S.A. TV, founded by Cuban businessman Goar Mestre and the American network CBS. [15] One year later, on July 21, 1961, Teleonce launched from Buenos Aires, known as Difusión Contemporánea S.A. company (Contemporary Broadcasting S.A.), or DiCon for a short ...
Current main offices and studios are located in Vía Ricardo J. Alfaro, Panama City, Panama, better known as Tumba Muerto, sharing installations with FETV (Panama), and sister channel TVMax. [7] TVN was formerly located alongside the Vía Transistmica, and had a studio alongside Avenida Balboa called Teatro ASSA.
The indigenous peoples of Panama, also known as Native Panamanians, are the original inhabitants of Panama, is the Native peoples whose history in the territory of today's Panama predates Spanish colonization. As of the 2010 census, Indigenous peoples constitute 12.3% of Panama’s population of 3.4 million, totaling just over 418,000 individuals.