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A. Srinivasa Murthy (died 27 January 2023) was an Indian dubbing artist who primarily worked in Telugu cinema. [1] Over a career spanning nearly three decades, he provided voices for over 3,000 films, dubbing for prominent Indian and international actors in Telugu versions of their films.
The movement succeeded and a separate state of Andhra Pradesh was formed by merging Telugu-speaking areas of Hyderabad State (now known as Telangana) with Andhra State on 1 November 1956 as part of the States Reorganisation Act. (Andhra State had been previously carved out of Madras State on 1 October 1953).
TV9 Telugu (formerly TV9) is an Indian Telugu-language 24-hour news channel focusing on the states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. [3] It formally launched on 1 February 2004 with a 15-day trial run before the formal launch. [ 4 ]
Prime9 News is an Indian Telugu language 24-hour television news channel. [2] The channel is promoted by Samhitha Broadcasting Pvt. Ltd. Its head office is in Hyderabad. [3] The channel launched in October 2018 with a test run. [4] [5]
TV5 is an Indian Telugu-language 24-hour news channel in India, [1] launched on 2 October 2007 by Shreya Broadcasting Pvt. Ltd. [2] It was founded by B. R. Naidu (Bollineni Rajagopal Naidu) of Chittoor, [3] who is also the current chairman of the Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD) and the owner of Nuzen Hair Oil. [4]
Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya (Moːkśguṇam Viśveśvarayya; 15 September 1861 – 12/14 April 1962), [1] [2] also referred to by his initials, MV, was an Indian civil engineer, administrator, and statesman, [3] who served as the 19th Dewan of Mysore from 1912 to 1918.
TV9 Telugu: Associate Broadcasting Company Formerly known as TV9: NTV: 2007 Rachana Television Pvt Ltd TV5: Shreya Broadcasting Pvt Ltd [18] [19] ABN Andhra Jyothi: 2009 Aamoda Broadcasting Company Pvt Ltd HMTV: Hyderabad Media Pvt Ltd [20] [21] Sakshi TV: Indira Television Ltd Raj News: 2010 Raj TV Network Studio N: 2011 Narne Network T News
Initially, the demand of Dravida Nadu proponents was limited to Tamil-speaking regions, but it was later expanded to include other Indian states with a majority of Dravidian-speakers (Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Kerala and Karnataka). [1] Some of the proponents also included parts of Ceylon , [2] Orissa and Maharashtra. [3]