Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kana TV is an Ethiopian satellite television channel that airs television dramas and local programmes. Launched in 2016, Kana TV is known for broadcasting Turkish television series, which gained significant marketing share.
Kana TV (Amharic: ቃና ቲቪ) is an Ethiopian satellite television channel owned by Dubai-based Moby Group. [1] It was co-founded by three Ethiopian entrepreneurs in combination with Moby Media Group and was officially launched on April 4, 2016. [2] Kana TV produces voice-over translation by dubbing foreign content to Amharic.
Bisrat TV; Balageru TV; TV 9 Ethio; NBC ETHIOPIA; Zee Alem; Abol TV; Hagerie TV; Yegna TV; Abbay Media; Harari Television; Kana TV; JTV Ethiopia; LTV; Nabad TV ; Nahoo TV; New Africa TV; Oromia Broadcasting Network (OBN) Oromia Media Network; Oromia News Network; Sidama Media Network; Somali Region Television; South TV; Tigrai Media House ...
Qubee TV is a satellite television channel dedicated to delivering educational, entertainment, and news content to a diverse audience. Established with a vision to enhance media accessibility and cultural representation, Qubee TV serves as a trusted source of information and storytelling , particularly for Afaan Oromo-speaking communities.
CVM TV Channel 9, Kingston, Jamaica / Saint Andrew Parish, Jamaica; Hype TV; RE TV; JUICE TV (Mandeville, Jamaica) Mercy and Truth Ministries Television channel 671, channel 94 and channel 745 (MTM TV), Kingston, Jamaica; Caribbean Gospel TV (Digicel Ch.27) SportsMax
Most popular of these channels being Kana TV, which focused on providing dubbed foreign dramas, very popular in Ethiopia, to their audiences. [2] Since the end of the Ethiopian Civil War private newspapers and magazines have started to appear, and this sector of the media market, despite heavy-handed regulation from the government and the ups ...
Channel Four Television Corporation is a British state-owned media company which runs 12 television channels and a streaming service. [3] Unlike the BBC, it receives no public funding and is instead funded entirely by its own commercial activities. [4]
Channel C was used by a relay transmitter in Glanmire, Co. Cork. Channel B video is the same as Italian Channel A video and Channel C audio is the same as Channel 4 audio. There are currently no Band I Channels used in Ireland (except on cable TV, and these have mostly been phased out for DOCSIS use) and no plans to resume using them.