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MBC 1 is a free-to-air pan-Arab general television channel. It is owned by the Middle Eastern company MBC Group. Satellite transmission started from London in September 1991, making MBC 1 the first independent Arabic satellite TV station, with an estimated audience of more than 130 million Arab people around the world.
MBC Masr (Arabic: إم بي سي مصر) is an Egyptian free-to-air television channel owned by MBC Group and United Media Services. The channel was launched during an official ceremony in Cairo on 16 October 2012, and began broadcasting on 9 November 2012. The channel serves Egyptian viewers.
The list is a list of television channels and stations in the Arab World, as well as Arab-based Western television channels. The majority, if not all, of these channels, are chiefly in Arabic . Africa
Shahid (Arabic: شاهد) is an Arabic content-streaming platform operated by the Saudi state-owned MBC Group. The platform was launched in 2008 by MBC Group and rebranded in 2020. [1] More than 27 million unique monthly users were reported by the end of Ramadan 2019, [2] and it managed to capture a market share of 85% VOD viewership in the ...
MBC Group operates over 19 free-to-air satellite TV channels, and a video-on-demand service . MBC 1 was the first broadcaster to provide a satellite-based, free-to-air 24-hour television broadcasting network across the Arab world. The Group's current chairman is Sam Barnett. [7]
MBC 2, formerly called Channel 2, is a Saudi state-owned free-to-air movie channel owned by MBC Group.In its beginnings, it was broadcasting films and TV programs subtitled in Arabic, but after the launch of MBC 4, the channel became specialized in films only.
Former staff of Al Jazeera Arabic established Al-Mayadeen in Beirut in 2012, due to dissatisfaction with Al Jazeera’s coverage of Syria. [11]The channel is part of the Al Mayadeen satellite media network, which includes: a production company; a radio station; a website in Arabic, English, and Spanish; an advertising company; and other media-related projects. [13]
Television in Egypt is mainly received through free satellite, while analog terrestrial represents 41% of total viewers. The Central Agency for Public Mobilisation and Statistics (CAPMAS) said the average time an Egyptian spends watching television a day is 180 minutes (3 hours), while Egyptian channels recorded 170,000 hours of broadcast in 2019.