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Canal 24 Horas (Spanish pronunciation: [bejntiˈkwatɾo ˈoɾas], lit. ' 24 Hours Channel ' ) is a Spanish free-to-air television channel owned and operated by Televisión Española (TVE), the television division of state-owned public broadcaster Radiotelevisión Española (RTVE).
24 Horas may refer to: 24 horas (Chilean TV program) , a Chilean newscast by Televisión Nacional de Chile 24 Horas (Colombian TV program) , broadcast by the programadora 24 Hours
24 Hours, a 1931 drama; 24 Hours, a Croatian anthology film; 24 Hrs, a 2010 Malayalam language film; 24 Hours (TV programme), a BBC news and current affairs series; 24Hours, the name of CBWT Winnipeg's local newscast between 1970 and 2000
24 horas (English: 24 hours) is the brand that identifies the gathering and broadcasting of news in the Chilean public broadcaster Televisión Nacional de Chile. It started as an informative program of the same television network on 1 October 1990. Then in 2009, it became a television channel called Canal 24 horas.
Abierto 24 horas (English: Open 24 hours) was a Spanish sitcom which aired 34 episodes between 2000 and 2001. It was directed by José Miguel Ganga and was aired by Antena 3. [1] The plot centers on an extravagant commercial establishment called De sol a sol, owned by the Morcillo family.
Jacobo Zabludovsky Kraveski (May 24, 1928 – July 2, 2015) was a Mexican journalist. [1] He was the first anchorman in Mexican television and his TV news program, 24 Horas ( 24 Hours ) was for decades regarded as the most important in the country.
24 Horas was a Colombian newscast television program, produced by the programadora of the same name. It aired between January 3, 1977 [1] and January 21, 2000. [2]It had reigned at the 7:00 pm timeslot on weeknights for more than 20 years, but the new timeslot awarded in the licitación of 1997 and the programadoras crisis that soon followed brought the program and programadora to their end. [3]
In fall 2009, 24 Hours and 24 Heures were given an extensive makeover. [3] The paper was given the alternative name 24H; while 24H is short-form for "24 Hours" in French, the name was applied to all editions. The paper's colour scheme changed for the Montreal edition, from black and yellow to blue and orange, to match the other editions' colours.