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El 19 digital is a Nicaraguan newspaper, with close political ties to the Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional.The first printed edition circulated in the capital city of Managua on August 21, 2008, a couple of months before the 2008 municipal elections.
[3] [4] Digital television has reached 80 percent of Argentina as of December 2013. [5] The country was expected to end all analogue broadcasts in 2019, [6] but the date was later delayed to August 31, 2021. [7] As of 2019, household ownership of television sets in the country is 99%, with the majority of households usually having two sets. [8]
Television in Latin America currently includes more than 1,500 television stations and more than 60 million TV sets throughout the 20 countries that constitute Latin America. Due to economic and political problems television networks in some countries of this region have developed less than the North American and European networks, for instance.
TGV-TV: 3 (Guatemala City)| 10: Canal 3 - El Súper Canal (Televisión Guatemalteca - Albavisión) TGCE-TV: 5 (Guatemala City) | 12: TV Maya (Academy of Mayan Languages of Guatemala); formerly known as Cultural and Educational TV (military channel)
Name Owner Description Language Availability Arte Belgique: Cooperation between RTBF and ARTE: Cultural network: French: Cable networks in Wallonia, Brussels and Flanders Satellite
Canal 2 is a Nicaraguan free-to-air television network owned by Televicentro de Nicaragua, S.A., owned by the Mexican media mogul Remigio Ángel González.In theory, the channel's sister channels are those of Grupo Ratensa, but in practice, the channel is an independent operation with support from the Nicaraguan government.
The first television channel in Nicaragua opened on VHF channel 8 on July 15, 1956 [2] as Televisión de Nicaragua, S.A., owned by the Novedades newspaper. [3] The government followed on January 11, 1957 with Canal 6. In 1962, the government merged channels 6 and 8, with the latter becoming a relayer of the former. [2]
The company operates three main television channels—channels 9, 10 and 11—and previously had interests in channel 4, which González established with local Sandinista partners. In addition, Ratensa operates a network of radio stations. It claims to be "the most complete media network and the network with the widest reach in national ...