Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In December 1994, RTHK launched its website and made its television productions, as well as content from its seven radio channels, available online. The website provided live broadcasts as well as a twelve-month archive (with the exception of HKCEE and HKALE broadcasts in RTHK2 due to copyright issues with the Hong Kong Examinations and ...
RTHK Radio 3 (Chinese: 香港電台第三台; Jyutping: hoeng1gong2 din6toi4 dai6saam1 toi4) is a broadcasting station under Radio Television Hong Kong. It was launched on 30 June 1928 and is the first radio broadcast station in Hong Kong .
RTHK TV 31: 港台電視31: RTHK's main channel. Cantonese: 1080i HDTV: Terrestrial and hybrid fibre-coaxial: 13 January 2014 RTHK [5] 32 RTHK TV 32 港台電視32: A live feed of Legislative Council meetings every Wednesday and other important press conferences or events. 33 RTHK TV 33 港台電視33: Simulcast of the Hong Kong version of CCTV ...
RTHK.hk Watch Live (Limited programming outside Hong Kong) RTHK TV 31 ( Chinese : 港台電視31 ; Jyutping : gong2 toi4 din6 si6 saam1 sap6 jat1 , formerly RTHK TV 31A for analogue TV) is a 24-hour Chinese-language free-to-air television channel in Hong Kong , owned by RTHK .
RTHK Radio 6 (AM 675 kHz) (24-hour relay of China National Radio) RTHK Putonghua Channel (AM 621 kHz, FM 100.9 MHz Causeway Bay, Wan Chai, Tuen Mun, FM 103.3 MHz Tseung Kwan O, Tin Shui Wai) RTHK Radio The Greater Bay (FM 102.8 MHz) Commercial radio stations: Commercial Radio. Supercharged 881 (FM 88.1 MHz - 89.5 MHz)
Jacqueline Pang (born Pang Ka-man, 27 August 1973) is a Hong Kong live television compère/host, interviewer, author, and has been a radio announcer and DJ on RTHK (Radio Television Hong Kong) since 1998. Pang is fluent in English and Putonghua, in addition to her native Cantonese.
Police Report was a weekend RTHK programme in Hong Kong, similar to Crimewatch in the UK or America's Most Wanted in the United States. It was broadcast in English and Cantonese versions (broadcast as 警訊, English: Police Magazine), and each episode differed only in broadcast language and cast.
The Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union (ABU or APBU), formed in 1964, is a non-profit, professional association of broadcasting organisations. [2] It currently has over 288 members in 57 countries and regions, reaching a potential audience of about 3 billion people.