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The cinema honoured Belgian director Jean Harlez in early 2014, when it screened Harlez' most famous film, Le Chantier des Gosses , for seven weeks. [ 4 ] In January 2024, as part of a program leading up to its acquisition of a new long lease on its premises 31 March 2024, Cinéma Nova opened its program with a screening of Le chantier des ...
6ter (French:) is a French television network which is available free-to-air through digital terrestrial television, satellite and DSL, owned by Groupe M6.. The name's wordplay represents its positioning as M6's little "sister", and (via the ter suffix) as Groupe M6's third free-to-air entertainment channel (after M6 itself and W9).
On 4 November 2013, M6 Replay was replaced by 6play. On 27 March 2014, M6 launched 4 new thematic channels, "100% online", on 6play: 6play Comic (Humor), 6play Crazy Kitchen (Cooking), 6play Sixième Style (Fashion/Beauty), and 6play Stories (TV films). [8] On 9 February 2015, M6 launched 6play home time (Universe de la Maison). [citation needed]
Since late 2017, RTL radios joined 6play. 6play was declined in Belgium and Croatia as RTL Play, and in Hungary as RTL Most. On 14 May 2024, 6play became M6+ and is now using the same platform as Germany’s RTL+ as they are developed by streaming technology company Bedrock co-owned by Groupe M6 and RTL Group. [9] [10] [11]
The ING Arena is an indoor arena in Brussels, Belgium, that is part of the Brussels Expo complex. Located on the Heysel/Heizel Plateau in Laeken (northern part of the City of Brussels), it was originally built as the twelfth hall of the complex in 1989, but was extensively redesigned and reopened in its current form in September 2013. [2]
W9 (pronounced [dubləve nœf]) is a French television network available through digital terrestrial television TNT, satellite and ADSL.It is a subsidiary of the Groupe M6; the name W9 has been selected for the channel because "W9" is a mirror written equivalent of "M6", and also as it was the nation's ninth broadcast network.
In November 1988, Kinepolis Brussels was opened by Kinepolis as the first branch of the European chain, with 25 screens and 7,600 seats, [1] credited as being both the first and the then-largest cinema Megaplex in the world.
Name Owner Description Language Availability Arte Belgique: Cooperation between RTBF and ARTE: Cultural network: French: Cable networks in Wallonia, Brussels and Flanders Satellite