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Tele Taxi TV Gavà Televisió TV10 Granollers: VOTV Vallès Visió Canal 4 Catalunya Igualada: 25TV Canal Taronja Manresa: TV Berguedà Canal Taronja Mataró: Mataró TV Mar TV Sabadell-Terrassa: Hit TV Canal Terrassa Canal 4 Catalunya Molahits TV TVSC Vallès TV Sabadell-Vallès Vic: Teve.cat Canal Taronja El 9 TV Vilanova i la Geltrú ...
The following is a list of Spanish-language television networks in the United States. As of 2016 the largest Hispanic/Latino television audiences in the U.S. are in California (Los Angeles, Bakersfield, San Diego, Sacramento, San Francisco area), New York (New York City), Washington D.C., Florida (Miami area, Orlando, Tampa/St. Petersburg area), Texas (Houston, Dallas, Austin, Ft. Worth, San ...
R, a cable operator in Galicia, has completely switched pay TV to digital (DVB-C) by 2008 but free channels are simulcast as analog services, so users without a set-top box can watch them (including most free-to-air channels available on digital terrestrial TV in each location).
Vix (stylized as ViX) is an over-the-top streaming service owned and operated by TelevisaUnivision. [1] [2] [3] The service primarily shows content either owned by TelevisaUnivision or acquired from third-party content providers, including television series, movies, and sports programming.
FuboTV, DirecTV Stream, Sling TV, YouTube TV and Vidgo UniMás ( Spanish pronunciation: [ˌuniˈmas] , stylized as UNIMÁS , and originally known as TeleFutura from its launch on January 14, 2002, to January 6, 2013) is an American Spanish-language free-to-air television network owned by TelevisaUnivision .
Pluto TV is an American free ad-supported streaming television (FAST) service owned and operated by the Paramount Streaming division of Paramount Global. [1] Founded by Tom Ryan, Ilya Pozin and Nick Grouf in 2013 and based in Los Angeles, California, [2] Pluto is available in the Americas and Europe.
The following articles contain lists of Spanish-language television channels: This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (November 2012)
Televisión Española was established at a building of Paseo de la Habana in Madrid, and after some time of technical tests, its free-to-air black-and-white fullscreen standard-definition monaural live analogue terrestrial television transmissions on VHF frequencies were officially launched on 28 October 1956 with a special inaugural program.