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Hello Singapore – 狮城有约 (weekdays from 6:30pm to 7:30pm) Hello Singapore Highlights (weekdays 7:30am) News Tonight – 晚间新闻 (all days from 10pm to 10:30pm) (also broadcast on Mediacorp Channel U at 11pm on all days) Singapore Today – 狮城6点半 (weekends only from 6:30pm)
The channel launched exclusively on Indovision and its schedule consisted exclusively of Mediacorp's Chinese dramas, airing on a 6-hour wheel. [17] The following month, it was introduced in Australia as part of Fetch TV's Chinese package. [18] It was made available in Singapore as a free channel on Toggle on 1 February 2013, upon the service's ...
During the 1960s, Hokkien song was particularly popular. The Singapore Hokkien star Chen Jin Lang (陳金浪) was once the compere and main singer during the Hungry Ghost Festival. His famous song "10 levels of Hades" ("十殿閻君") was especially popular.
Jia Le Channel (Chinese: 佳樂台; pinyin: Jiālè Tái) is a 24-hour Chinese and Hokkien language/dialect television network, broadcasting on the Singtel TV IPTV television service. Its content includes Chinese and Hokkien language programming, as well as foreign programs targeted at Chinese viewers. Jia Le Channel available Broadcast in ...
Singapore: Bukit Batok Transmission Centre: 12 June 1995; 29 years ago () 98.0 MHz: 12 Power 98 Love Songs: POWER 98: English: Soft adult contemporary: 31 October 1994; 30 years ago () The station focuses on ballads and love songs.
Capital 958 (Chinese: 958城市頻道; lit. '958 City Channel') is a Mandarin-language radio station in Singapore. Owned by the state-owned broadcaster Mediacorp, it broadcasts a classic hits format. The station's origins can be traced back to Radio Malaya Singapore's Green Network—which broadcast programming in Chinese dialects.
Hokkien pop, also known as Taiwanese Hokkien popular music, T-pop (Chinese: 臺語流行音樂), Tai-pop, Minnan Pop and Taiwanese folk (Chinese: 臺語歌), is a popular music genre sung in Hokkien, especially Taiwanese Hokkien and produced mainly in Taiwan and sometimes in Fujian in Mainland China or Hong Kong or even Singapore in Southeast Asia.
When Lo Man's getai business becomes unable to keep up with the times, and also because of the Speak Mandarin Campaign, he decided to add English lyrics to Chinese and Hokkien songs, much to the dismay to Master Lo Man, his friends, Ah Fei and Ah Hua, and frequent getai-goers. At the same time, his poor command of the English language made it ...