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Canal 7 (Canal Siete, formerly Televicentro and Televisiete) is a Guatemalan terrestrial television channel owned by Grupo Chapín TV, a subsidiary of Remigio Ángel González's Albavisión group. Similar to sister channel Canal 3 , the channel has a generalist profile and also airs programming from Univision .
Canal 45 (Guatemala City): Jesus TV (Catholic channel) Canal 58 (Suchitepequez) : Mazatevision; Canal 61 (Guatemala City): Enlace Juvenil; Canal 63 (Guatemala City): Channel Archdiocese of Guatemala; Canal 65 (Guatemala City): Family TV; formerly known as EWTN and TV Light (Catholic channel) -Outside Air-
Canal 7 (Guatemalan TV channel) Canal 8 (Guatemala) Canal 11 (Guatemalan TV channel) Canal 13 (Guatemalan TV channel) G. Guatevisión; T. TV Azteca Guate
It is one of the five stations operated by Radio y Televisión de Guatemala, who also operate channels 3, 7, 11 and 23, all of which are linked to Remigio Ángel González through his Albavisión group. The channel mostly airs animated series aimed at children in the daytime, as well as sporting events, TV shows and newscasts.
Canal 3 is the first commercial TV station and the second overall station in Guatemala. It began its TV service in 1956. [1] Its programming broadcasts its own productions and telenovelas, among other international productions. It is owned by Grupo Chapín TV, a subsidiary of Remigio Ángel González's Albavisión group.
Television in Latin America currently includes more than 1,500 television stations and more than 60 million TV sets throughout the 20 countries that constitute Latin America. Due to economic and political problems television networks in some countries of this region have developed less than the North American and European networks, for instance.
Radio stations: 1 government-owned radio station and hundreds of privately owned radio stations (2007). [1] Radios: 835,000 (1997). [needs update] Television stations: 4 privately owned national terrestrial channels dominate TV broadcasting; multi-channel satellite and cable services are available (2007). [1] Television sets: 640,000 (1997).
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 ...