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Cultural, commercial, social service TV N/A N/A Televen: 1988 N/A N/A Commercial 27 N/A ViVe: 2003 N/A N/A Educational N/A N/A Globovisión: 1994 N/A N/A News, Commercial 7 N/A Vale TV: 1998 N/A N/A educational 27 N/A Meridiano Televisión: 1996 N/A N/A Commercial, sports 16 N/A TeleSUR: 2005 N/A N/A Political, News 4 N/A Regional networks
Television in Venezuela began in 1952, when the president Marcos Pérez Jiménez launched the state channel Televisora Nacional, making Venezuela the ninth country in the world to have a public television network. By 1963, a quarter of Venezuelan households had television; a figure rising to 45% by 1969 and 85% by 1982. [1]
The Venezuelan government also provides funding to Avila TV (2006), Buena TV and Asamblea Nacional TV (ANTV, network of the National Assembly of Venezuela, 2005). In 1998, independent television represented 88% of the 24 national television channels while the other 12% of channels were controlled by the Venezuelan government.
Telesur Noticias (Telesur News): Current affairs Latin American news program broadcast from the network's headquarters in Caracas, Venezuela with permanent correspondents and collaborators in several countries throughout the region and other parts of the world. El Mundo Hoy (The World Today): Extended morning edition of Telesur Noticias.
The government of Venezuela supervises a mixture of state-run and private broadcast media; 1 state-run TV network, 4 privately owned TV networks, a privately owned news channel with limited national coverage, and a government-backed Pan-American channel. A state-run radio network includes 65 new stations and roughly another 30 stations targeted ...
One of Venezuela's newest news anchors sits on a stool, dressed in a flannel shirt and chinos as he delivers the day's headlines. El Pana, and his colleague "La Chama," or "The Girl," are ...
Venezuelan opposition parties and NGOs decried the arrests of a prominent press freedom activist and a well-known opposition figure, among others, ahead of planned protests against Friday's ...
Globovisión is a 24-hour television news network. It broadcasts over-the-air in Caracas, Aragua, Carabobo and Zulia on UHF channel 33. Globovisión is seen in the rest of Venezuela on cable or satellite (Globovisión has an alliance with DirecTV, where it can be seen on channel 110) and worldwide from their website.