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KiKA Der Kinderkanal — public, non-commercial children's TV, with support of ARD and ZDF; Arte — public Franco-German culture channel from ARD, ZDF and France Télévisions; 3sat — cultural network from the ARD, ZDF, ORF (Austrian Broadcasting), and SRG (Swiss Broadcasting).
"News in German" [7] NBC: Programme for the German community in Namibia "German News" [8] SBS One, SBS Two: News programme in German produced by DW TV: AHORN TV: Omni Television: German Television Program on OMNI TV broadcast weekly programming all episodes also available online after 1st airing on OMNI TV www.ahorntv.com "Pennsylvania German" [9]
Germany has run a regular Teletext service (often called Videotext) since 1 June 1980 on the public broadcasting channels. Almost all German TV stations have teletext. [12] [13] Even with the advent of digital television, teletext is still widely used. [14] Teletext pages are selected via a three-digit number, ranging from 100 to 899.
The first RTL broadcast after the starting signal was the news 7 vor 7 with Hans Meiser and Geert Müller-Gerbes. RTL plus was famous in its early years for showing low-budget films and American programmes. In 1988, it was the second most-viewed channel in Germany. [2] After reunification in 1990
Sky Atlantic (Germany) Sky Cinema (German TV channel) Sky Comedy (German TV channel) Sky Deutschland; Sky Krimi; Sky One (Germany) Sky Sport (Germany) Sonnenklar.TV; Sport1 (Germany) Sportdigital; SR Fernsehen; Stingray Classica; Suboro TV; Südwestrundfunk; Super RTL; SWR Fernsehen; Syfy (German TV channel)
Broadcasting started at 11:11 on 22 April 2013. [1] During its first years of broadcast, the channel was exclusively available for Deutsche Telekom until March 2016, when it became widespread among different providers such as Kabel Deutschland, Unitymedia, Kabelkiosk and Magine TV.
Articles related to television networks broadcasting in Germany. ... (German TV channel) (1 C, 1 P) Z. ZDF (3 C, 25 P) Pages in category "Television networks in Germany"
On 1 April 1992, Deutsche Welle inherited RIAS-TV's broadcast facilities, using them to start a German and English-language television channel broadcast via satellite, DW (TV), adding a short Spanish broadcast segment the following year. In 1995, it began 24-hour operation (12 hours in German, 10 hours in English, two hours in Spanish).