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TTV General (2003–2006) Links. Website. ttv.com.tw [1] Availability. Terrestrial. Digital. Channel 14. TTV Main Channel is the primary free-to-air terrestrial television channel of the Taiwan Television company and is the first television channel launched in the Republic of China (Taiwan).
TaiwanPlus. TaiwanPlus, is a public media based in Taipei. Launched on August 30, 2021, it offers live streaming and an international television channel, delivering a variety of content, including news, lifestyle features, technology, travel shows, entertainment programming, cultural insights, food content, and documentaries.
TVBS Media Inc. (Chinese: 聯利媒體股份有限公司; pinyin: Lián Lì Méi Tǐ Gǔ Fèn Yǒu Xiàn Gōng Sī; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Liân-lī Mûi-thé Kó͘-hūn Iú-hān Kong-si), formerly Liann Yee Production Co., Ltd. (Chinese: 聯意製作股份有限公司; pinyin: Lián Yì Zhì Zuò Gǔ Fèn Yǒu Xiàn Gōng Sī; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Liân-ì Chè-chok Kó͘-hūn Iú-hān Kong-si), is a ...
Taiwan Broadcasting System (TBS; Chinese: 台灣公共廣播電視集團), founded 1 July 2006, is a public broadcasting group that operates 8 television channels in Taiwan. It also owns 2 (CTS and PTS) of the five major Taiwan television networks (the other are TTV, CTV and FTV). TBS plate at Public Television Service A Building Channels. CTS
Taiwan I'm TV (members free) Taiwan Webs-TV (NT$280/month) Taiwan Yam (all free) TVBS News or (TVBS-N) is a Taiwanese pay television channel. Launched in 1995, it is ...
In 2007, Taiwan Indigenous Television (TITV), Hakka TV, and Taiwan Macroview Television (MACTV) join Taiwan Broadcasting System, completed the structure of TBS. [2] In 2020 the Taiwanese Ministry of Culture announced that they would be providing PTS with funding to produce English language programming. [1]
E! News was the only entertainment news show on the channel for much of its history until 2006, when the channel launched The Daily 10, hosted by Sal Masekela and Catt Sadler (Debbie Matenopoulos also co-hosted from the show's inception until 2008); the series was cancelled in September 2010 after E! announced that the weekday editions of E!
Cable television is prevalent in Taiwan, as a result of cheap subscription rates (typically around NT$ 550, or US$15 a month) and the paucity of free-to-air television, which comprises four channels. Programming is mostly in Mandarin and Taiwanese, with some English, Japanese and other foreign-language channels.