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TV 5 may refer to the following television channels, networks and stations: TV 5 and Spike TV (UK), a streaming channel made by Hey-TV 5; TV5 (Acre), a commercial television station in Brazil; TV5 (Armenia), an Armenian television channel owned by CS Media; TV5 (Finnish TV channel), a Finnish television channel owned by SBS Discovery Media
DWDD-TV 29 5 kW Nation Broadcasting Corporation: SMART Cellsite, Valencia St. Puerto Princesa, Palawan TV5 Naga DWNA-TV 22 SMART Cellsite, Maharlika Highway, Naga, Camarines Sur (Bicol Region) TV5 Kalibo DYCJ-TV 41 5 kW Cignal TV, Inc. Garcia Building, C. Laserna St. Poblacion, Kalibo, Aklan: TV5 Iloilo DYMB-TV: 36 10 kW (138.7 kW ERP)
Nitro (German TV channel), a German commercial television channel; Nitro (Spanish TV channel), a former Spanish commercial television channel owned by Atresmedia "Nitro", an episode of Mission: Impossible; Nitro!, a game show hosted by Greg Lee; WCW Monday Nitro, a professional wrestling television program
Nitro HD, a high-definition simulcast of Nitro, was launched on 28 August 2012 on cable provider Kabel Deutschland, and became available via NetCologne on 1 September 2012. [3] Broadcast of RTL Nitro HD via Satellite started on 8 April 2014, available with an HD+ subscription.
TV5 (stylized as 5 and formerly known as ABC) is a Philippine free-to-air television and radio network headquartered in Mandaluyong, with additional studios in Novaliches, Quezon City. It serves as the flagship network of TV5 Network , Inc., which is owned by MediaQuest Holdings , the multimedia subsidiary of the telecommunications conglomerate ...
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With its headquarters in Budapest and regional offices around the country, MR was responsible for public service broadcasting throughout the Hungarian Republic.As well as maintaining regional studios, the corporation produced multiple different Hungarian-language radio channels (Kossuth, PetÅ‘fi, and Bartók) covering the full range of public-service radio provision, and a fourth channel (MR4 ...
The channel ceased broadcasting on 5 May 2014, as a consequence of a sdecision by the Supreme Court of Spain that annulled the concessions for nine channels broadcasting in DTT, because their permissions for frequencies were granted without the required public consensus and assignments system according to the Audiovisual Law.