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The Parliament Channel is a cable television station in Trinidad and Tobago which broadcasts on cable channel 11. [1] It broadcasts proceedings of the Parliament of Trinidad and Tobago. Its headquarters are located at Parliamentary Complex, Cabildo Building, St. Vincent Street, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad.
The RNZ website, rnz.co.nz (formerly radionz.co.nz) was launched in October 2005 and includes news coverage, programme information, online station streaming and podcasting. RNZ National, RNZ Concert, AM Network coverage of Parliament, and RNZ Pacific are available as Windows Media Audio streams.
Parliament TV is managed by Kordia under a long-term contract to the House of Representatives. [5] and is made freely available to media companies. It broadcasts though media such as TVNZ and MediaWorks New Zealand, as streaming video on the Internet, and, since 9 October 2007, on Freeview channel 31 and Sky Channel 086. [citation needed]
Live stream and on-demand HD New Zealand's first television channel. Started as four stations (AKTV2, WNTV1, CHTV3, DNTV2); amalgamated into one channel (NZBC TV) in October 1973. Renamed TV One on 1 April 1975. 2 2 TVNZ 2: TVNZ (govt.) 1 June 1975 TVNZ 1080i 576i 1080i Live stream and on-demand HD
RNZ Pacific or Radio New Zealand Pacific, sometimes abbreviated to RNZP, is a division of Radio New Zealand and the official international broadcasting station of New Zealand. It broadcasts a variety of news, current affairs and sports programmes in English, and news in seven Pacific languages.
The Aotearoa New Zealand Public Media Bill is a proposed New Zealand Act of Parliament that would merge TVNZ (Television New Zealand) and Radio New Zealand (RNZ) into a new public media entity known as Aotearoa New Zealand Public Media. It was first introduced on 23 June 2022 and passed its first reading on 26 July 2022. [1]
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During the 2017 New Zealand general election, the Labour Party campaigned on expanding public broadcaster Radio New Zealand's (RNZ) services. Following the resignation of Clare Curran as Minister of Broadcasting, her successor Kris Faafoi consulted an advisory group consisting of representatives from media companies and public service agencies to explore options for public broadcasting in New ...