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TRT Arabi, (formerly TRT Arabia; Arabic: TRT عربي / العربية TRT) is an Arabic television channel of TRT, broadcasting to Arabic-speaking audiences in Turkey and the Middle East, 24 hours a day, on subjects, events, and news as well as soap operas from and pertaining to Turkey. It was launched on 4 April 2010.
The list is a list of television channels and stations in the Arab World, as well as Arab-based Western television channels. The majority, if not all, of these channels, are chiefly in Arabic . Africa
TV. ART Aflam 1: Arabic movie channel one; ART Aflam 2: Arabic movie channel two; ART Cinema: Arabic movie channel three; ART Hekayat: Arabic drama channel; ART Hekayat 2: Egyptian drama channel; ART Hekayat HD: Arabic series Pop-up channel in HD during Ramadan; ART Hekayat 2 HD: Arabic series channel in HD during Ramadan; Cima: Arabic movie ...
Another special TV channel aimed at the Turkic world, TRT Avaz was launched on 21 March 2009 and broadcasts in the Azerbaijani, Russian, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Uzbek, Tatar and Turkmen languages; while the TRT Arabic television channel started broadcasting on 4 April 2010. [17]
VH1 and MTV2 (the national channels, until 2003–2004 MTV2 used to be just about the same like MTV1 and the Parliament Channel used to be titled MTV3 and was intended for the minorities living in Macedonia. Back in 2003–2004 MTV3 transformed into MTV2 and MTV2 was retitled as Parliament Channel, having broadcast only the National Parliament ...
NTV (Turkish TV channel) Number 1 TV; R. Rabea TV; S. ShortsTV; Show TV; Star TV (Turkish TV channel) T. TBMM TV; Teve2; TGRT; TGRT Haber; TLC (Turkish TV channel ...
Türksat 1C first television channel such as TRT 1, TRT 2/GAP, TRT 3, TRT 4, TRT int, TRT int-Avrasya, atv, atv int, Kanal D, Euro D, Show TV, Kanal 6, Kanal 7, Samanyolu TV, HBB, Cine5, Maxi TV / Supersport TV, Flash TV, Prima TV, Genç TV, Eko TV, Number One TV, TV1 Azerbaijan, Sun TV, Mesaj TV, Meltem TV, Discovery Channel Turkey ...
There was only one television channel controlled by the state until the wave of liberalization in the 1990s which began privately owned broadcasting. [3] Turkey's television market is defined by a handful of large channels, led by Kanal D , ATV and Show , with 14%, 10% and 9.6% market share, respectively.