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14. France 4 / Culturebox. State owned. Educational, children and cultural programming. Timeshared with Culturebox (broadcasts 20:10 to 05:00), and Okoo during the daytime. France Télévisions. 24 hours. 16:9 HDTV. SGR1.
to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at [ [:fr:C8 (chaîne de télévision)]]; see its history for attribution. C8 (pronounced [se ɥit]) is a French free-to-air television channel owned by Groupe Canal+.
Téva is a mini generalist digital television channel available on cable, satellite, and ADSL in France. The core target is the housewife under the age of 50. Since its inception, it has been aimed at an essentially female audience with children. It is the first channel to have chosen this audience niche.
Molotov TV, stylised as Molotov.TV or simply Molotov, is a French streaming television distribution service launched on 11 July 2016. [1] Founded by Jean-David Blanc (founder of AlloCiné) and Pierre Lescure (former chairman of Canal+), the service offers access to TV channels and catchup programming without any hardware other than an Internet access.
cnews.fr. CNews is a free French daily newspaper. Launched in Île-de-France on 6 February 2007, [1] it was also known as MatinPlus (before 2008), Direct Matin Plus (from 2008 to 2010), Direct Matin (from 2010 to 2017), CNews Matin (in 2017), and CNews (after 4 December 2017, with the same name as the television news channel CNews owned by Canal+).
CNews. CNews (French pronunciation: [senjuz]; stylised as CNEWS, formerly i>Télé) is a French free-to-air opinion channel [1][2][3] launched on 4 November 1999 by Groupe Canal+. It provides 24-hour national and global news coverage. It is the second most watched news network in France, after BFM TV and before LCI and France Info.
The channel was founded in 1999 by Jean-Marie Lustiger, who served as the Archbishop of Paris from 1981 to 2005. It is privately funded by 250,000 donors. [1]Programs have included documentaries about the Vatican and Christians in Iraq, [2] [3] [4] as well as funny skits.
TLC is a television channel operated in France, replacing Discovery Science France on 26 February 2024. [1] [2] The network originates no new domestic content, mainly featuring content from the original American network and its sister channels, which had previously dubbed or subtitled into Canadian French for the Canadian market, or domestic French for some programming.