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Watch live The Thai Public Broadcasting Service ( Thai : องค์การกระจายเสียงและแพร่ภาพสาธารณะแห่งประเทศไทย ; RTGS : Ongkan Krachai Siang Lae Phrae Phap Satharana Haeng Prathet Thai ), or Thai PBS , is a public broadcasting service in Thailand.
TTV Channel 4 (later to TTV Channel 9 since 1970, M.C.O.T. Channel 9 in 1977 and Modernine TV in 2002 to 2015) Channel 3 (BEC-Bangkok Entertainment Company, under license from MCOT) (Defunct in 2020, Now all program was forced to move Digital TV Station on 3 HD) ITV (Thailand) (Later TITV in 2007 and TPBS in 2008 (Now renamed as ThaiPBS))
Bangkok TV 5 HD: Bangkok Royal Thai Army: 5 2: RTA2 MUX2 CH36 (594MHz) Bangkok: Bangkok: Bangkok MCOT HD: Bangkok MCOT: 30 3: MCOT MUX3 CH40 (626MHz) Bangkok: Bangkok: Bangkok Channel 3 HD: Bangkok BEC Multimedia Co Ltd: 33 4: TPBS MUX4 CH44 (658MHz) Bangkok: Bangkok: Bangkok 7 HD: Bangkok Broadcasting Television Co., Ltd. 35 5: RTA2 MUX2 CH36 ...
Television had become the largest advertising medium in Thailand by 1959, with only two stations in Bangkok serving 35,000 television sets in a population of nine million. [3] As of 1967, Thailand had the third highest number of television sets in Southeast Asia, with little more than 250,000 sets available. [ 4 ]
Bangkok Media & Broadcasting Co., Ltd. was registered with a capital of 100 million baht on 27 March 2013 to operate a television channel called BMB (temporarily), later the name was changed to PPTV. as well as producing television programs for news, information and entertainment The first phase was broadcast via C-Band satellite system since 1 June, the same year, later winning the auction ...
Regional television stations started outside of Bangkok beginning in 1962, in February of that year it opened a station in Khonkaen (HSKK-TV, channel 5), followed by Chiang Mai (HSKL-TV, channel 8), Hat Yai (HSBK-TV, channel 9, later channel 10 in the 625-line service) in May 1962, Surathani (HSS-TV, channel 7) in January 1968 and Muang ...
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The Bangkok Post was at one time well known among expatriates for Bernard Trink's weekly Nite Owl column, which covered the nightlife of Bangkok. Trink's column was published from 1966 (originally in the Bangkok World) until 2004, when it was discontinued. The newspaper has a letters page where expatriate and Thai regulars exchange opinions on ...