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The Extreme Sports Channel is a pay television channel that was launched from Amsterdam on 1 May 1999. [2] The channel broadcasts in over 60 countries and 12 languages, and covers extreme sport and adventure sports which include surfing, skateboarding, snowboarding, wakeboarding, motocross, BMX, mountain biking, FMX, music, gaming and fashion.
On November 24, 2000 Global Television Network Inc., a subsidiary of Canwest, was granted approval by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to launch a national English-language Category 2 specialty television service called Extreme Sports, described as "featuring the best of "off-beat" sports programming that will give Canadians the opportunity to live ...
The broadcast of Televize Seznam can be tuned into Multiplex 23, where it is available in HD quality. It is part of the offer of most satellite and cable TV signal providers Digi TV, Skylink and UPC. The spectrum is completed by several dozen IPTV providers, such as O2 TV, T-Mobile TV or Kuki, which distribute the TV signal over the Internet.
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Planet X Television is a famous global youth TV programming brand, with a focus on action and extreme sports; launched in early 1995 on Prime Sports (now known as FSN / Fox Sports Net) and numerous broadcast, cable and TV channels worldwide; the same summer as ESPN's X Games (then known as the Extreme Games) and the Warped Tour (all soon to have their 30th Anniversary summer of 2025).
The station broadcasts Formula 1, Formula 2, Formula 3, F1 Academy and Porsche Supercup races. The station's team of F1 presenters consists of Števo Eisele, Josef Král, Pavel Fabry and Karolína Bulisová. The station will also offer broadcasts of WorldSBK and football matches of the Bundesliga, La Liga, Ligue 1 and Serie A. The station will ...
Users had the option to play one of the archive programs or watch a live broadcast, but it had to be an original production of Czech Television. There were three different video qualities to choose from: low, medium and TV. TV quality video had a bit rate of 1.5 Mb/s.
The Czech TV crisis eventually ended in early 2001 following the departure of Hodač and Bobošíková from Czech Television, under pressure by the street demonstration participants and at the request of the Czech Parliament, which had held an emergency session due to the crisis.