Deutsche Welle
Deutsche Welle
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Type |
International public broadcaster |
Country |
Germany |
Founded |
3 May 1953
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Broadcast area |
National and International |
Owner |
ARD |
Launch date |
3 May 1953 |
Official Website |
www.dw-world.de |
The Deutsche Welle building in
Bonn
Deutsche Welle (German pronunciation: [ˈdɔʏtʃə ˈvɛlə], with a [v] sound) or DW, is Germany's international broadcaster. It broadcasts news and information on shortwave, Internet and satellite radio in 30 languages (DW Radio). It has a satellite television service, (DW-TV) that is available in four languages, and there is also an online news site. Deutsche Welle, which in English means "German Wave", is similar to international broadcasters such as the BBC World Service, Radio Canada International, Radio Free Europe, and Radio France Internationale.
Deutsche Welle has broadcast regularly since 1953. Until 2003 it was based in Cologne, when it relocated to a new building in Bonn's former government office area. The television broadcasts are produced in Berlin. Deutsche Welle's World Wide Web site is produced in both Berlin and Bonn.
History
Deutsche Welle was inaugurated on 3 May 1953, with an address by German President Theodor Heuss as its first shortwave broadcast. On 11 June 1953, the public broadcasters in the ARD signed an agreement to share responsibility for Deutsche Welle. At first, it was controlled by Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (NWDR). In 1955, when this split into the separate Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) and Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR) networks, WDR assumed responsibility for Deutsche Welle programming. In 1960, Deutsche Welle became an independent public body, which on 7 June 1962 joined the ARD as a national broadcasting station.
Expansion of supported languages
- 1953: German
- 1954: English, French, Spanish, Portuguese
- 1962: Persian, Turkish, Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Hungarian, Serbo-Croatian
- 1963: Swahili, Hausa, Indonesian, Bulgarian, Romanian, Slovene
- 1964: Greek, Italian, Hindi, Urdu
- 1970: Pashtu, Dari
- 1992: Albanian, Macedonian
- 2000: Ukrainian
Some language services have been discontinued, both due to financial cuts and an allegedly decreasing demand. In 1998, Danish, Norwegian, Dutch and Italian radio services were discontinued. 1999 was the last year for language services in Japanese, Slovak, Slovene, Spanish, Czech and Hungarian.
German reunification
With German reunification in 1990, Radio Berlin International (RBI) of East Germany ceased to exist. Some of the staff and personnel of RBI joined Deutsche Welle, and it inherited some broadcasting apparatus, including the transmitting facilities at Nauen as well as RBI's frequencies.
DW-TV began as RIAS-TV, a television station launched by the West Berlin broadcaster RIAS (Radio in the American Sector / Rundfunk im Amerikanischen Sektor) in August 1988. The fall of the Berlin Wall the following year and German reunification in 1990 meant that RIAS-TV was to be closed down. On 1 April 1992, Deutsche Welle inherited the RIAS-TV broadcast facilities, using them to start a German and English language television channel broadcast via satellite, DW-TV, adding a short Spanish broadcast segment the following year. In 1995, it began 24-hour operation (12 hours German, 10 hours English, 2 hours Spanish). At that time, DW TV introduced a new news studio and a new logo.
Deutsche Welle took over some of the former independent radio broadcasting service Deutschlandfunk's foreign language programming in 1993, when Deutschlandfunk was absorbed into the new Deutschlandradio.
In addition to radio and television programming, DW sponsored some published material. For example, the South Asia Department published German Heritage: A Series Written for the South Asia Programme in 1967 and in 1984, published African Writers on the Air. Both publications were transcript of DW programming.
World Wide Web presence
In late 1994, Deutsche Welle was the first public broadcaster in Germany with a World Wide Web presence, which at the time was (www.dwelle.de), although for its first two years the site listed little more than contact addresses. This later evolved into the current 30-language Web site.
The Internet news site offers daily exclusive coverage in seven core languages (Arabic, Chinese, English, German, Spanish, Portuguese for Brazil and Russian) as well as a mixture of news and information in 23 other languages corresponding to Deutsche Welle's radio programs. Persian became DW-WORLD.DE's eighth focus language in 2007.
German and European news are DW-WORLD.DE's central focus, but the site also offers background information regarding Germany and German language courses.
The site can be viewed in a special version for mobile devices and its radio and television broadcasts are available on line.
Recent events
In 2001, Deutsche Welle (in conjunction with ARD and ZDF) founded the German TV subscription TV channel for North American viewers. The project was shut down after four years due to low subscriber numbers. It has since been replaced by the DW-TV channel (also a subscription service).
Unlike most other international broadcasters, DW-TV doesn't charge terrestrial stations for use of its programming, and as a result its News Journal and other programs are rebroadcast on numerous public broadcasting stations in several countries, including United States, Australia, and New Zealand. In the Philippines, it is shown nationwide on Net-25.
Deutsche Welle is still suffering from financial and personnel cuts. Its budget was decreased by about €75 million over five years and of the 2,200 employees it had in 1994, 1,200 remain. Further cuts are still expected.
In 2003, the German government passed a new "Deutsche Welle Law", which defined DW as a three-media organization—making the Deutsche Welle website an equal partner with DW-TV and DW-RADIO. The website is available in 30 languages, but focuses on German, English, Spanish, Russian, Portuguese for Brazil, Chinese and Arabic. Persian became the eighth focus language in 2007.
In April 2007, DW launched its own channel on the video platform YouTube.
In March 2009, DW-TV is expanding its television services in Asia with two new channels namely DW-TV Asia and DW-TV Asia+. DW-TW Asia (DW-TV Asien in German) contains 16 hours of German programming and 8 hours in English while DW-TV Asia+ on the other hand contains 18 hours of English programs plus 6 hours in German programs.[1]
In May 2009, the DW website was blocked in the People's Republic of China.
In August 2009, DW-TV's carriage in the United Kingdom on Sky channel 794 ceased, although the channel continues to be available via other European satellites receivable in the UK.[2]
Several times, the transponder of DW-TV on Hotbird deliberately disrupted, modified, 10 to 13 February 2010 on the occasion of the 31st Anniversary of Islamic revolution. According to the satellite operator Eutelsat, one could clearly locate the jammers in the vicinity of Iran.
Shortwave relay stations
Domestic shortwave relay stations
Transmitter sites
The Jülich radio transmitter site began operation in 1956, with eleven 100 kW Telefunken transmitters.
The Wertachtal site was authorized in 1962 and began service with four 500 kW transmitters. By 1989, there were 15 transmitters, four of which relayed the Voice of America.
The Nauen transmitter site was inherited from Radio Berlin International. RBI's Russian-made three 500 kW and one 100 kW transmitters were replaced by four Telefunken 500 kW transmitters and four rotatable antennas.
External shortwave relay stations
- Trincomalee, Sri Lanka
- 3 × 250 kW shortwave transmitters
- 1 × 400 kW mediumwave transmitter
- 20 antennas (to be verified)
- Kigali, Rwanda: A relay station in Kigali, Rwanda, provides coverage for Africa, but the site was destroyed during genocide and civil war in 1994.
- 4 × 250 kW shortwave transmitters
- Sines, Portugal
- 3 × 250 kW shortwave transmitters
A relay station in Malta has three SW and one 600 kW- MW transmitter and gives partial coverage of the Americas, Southern Asia, and the Far East.[3] It was established in the early 1970s in exchange for a grant of nearly 1 million GBP.
Deutsche Welle shares a transmitting station in the Caribbean with the BBC, and has a relay-exchange with the CBC that allows DW to use two 250 kW transmitters in Sackville.[4]
Relay stations leasing transmitter time to DW
DW leases time on the following relay stations
DW TV Europe |
 |
Launched |
August 1988 |
Owned by |
ARD |
Picture format |
16:9 |
Slogan |
"At the Heart of Europe" (English)
"Aus der Mitte Europas" (German) |
Country |
Germany |
Language |
German,English |
Broadcast area |
Europe
Middle East
North Africa |
Website |
[1] |
Availability |
Satellite |
Hot Bird 8 (Europe, Middle East, North Africa) |
11604 H 27500-5/6 |
Meo (Portugal) |
Channel 228 |
Cable |
Naxoo (Switzerland) |
Channel 159 |
DW TV Africa |
Language |
German,English |
Broadcast area |
Africa
Middle East
Europe |
Availability |
Satellite |
Atlantic Bird 3 (Africa, Europe, Middle East) |
3727 R 29950-7/8 |
DStv (South Africa) |
Channel 446 |
DW TV Arabic |
Language |
Arabic,German,English |
Broadcast area |
Middle East
Europe
North Africa |
Availability |
Satellite |
Hot Bird 8 (Middle East, North Africa, Europe) |
11604 H 27500-5/6 |
Nilesat 102 (North Africa, Middle East) |
11900 V 27500-5/6 |
DW TV Asia |
Language |
German,English |
Broadcast area |
Asia
Oceania |
Availability |
Satellite |
AsiaSat 3S (Asia-Pacific) |
3760 H 26000-7/8 |
Cable |
HKBN bbTV (Hong Kong) |
Channel 751 |
Cablelink (Philippines) |
Channel 68 |
SkyCable (Philippines) |
Channel 72 |
StarHub TV (Singapore) |
Channel 153 |
Global Destiny Cable (Philippines) |
Channel 87 |
IPTV |
mio TV (Singapore) |
Channel 57 |
DW TV Asia+ |
Language |
English,German |
Broadcast area |
Asia
Oceania |
Availability |
Satellite |
AsiaSat 3S (Asia-Pacific) |
4071 H 14240-3/4 |
Insat 4B (India) |
11490 V 27500-3/4 |
Agila 2 (Southeast Asia) |
12544 V 21429-5/6 |
Koreasat 5 (Korea & Southeast Asia) |
12470 V 25600-5/6 |
Dream Satellite TV (Philippines) |
Channel 32 |
Cable |
Cablelink (Philippines) |
Channel 104 |
Parasat Cable TV (Philippines) |
Channel 202 |
DW TV Latin America |
Slogan |
"Desde el Corazón de Europa" (Spanish) |
Language |
English,German |
Broadcast area |
Americas |
Availability |
Satellite |
Intelsat 9 (America) |
3840 H 27690-7/8 |
Telefónica TV Digital (Brazil) |
Channel 450 |
Nossa TV (Brazil) |
Channel |
Sky Brazil (Brazil) |
Channel 110 |
Via Embratel (Brazil) |
Channel 134 |
Telefónica TV Digital (Chile, Colombia) |
Channel 438 |
Sky México (Mexico) |
Channel 279 |
DirecTV Latin America |
Channel 770 |
Cable Mágico Satelital (South America) |
Channel 438 |
DW TV USA |
Language |
English,German |
Broadcast area |
North America |
Availability |
Satellite |
AMC 1 (North America) |
3740 V 29270-7/8 |
Bell TV (Canada) |
Channel 709 |
DISH Network (USA) |
Channel 725 |
Cable |
Rogers Cable (Canada) |
Channel 195 |
Shaw Cable (Canada) |
Channel 194 |
Comcast (USA) |
Channel 315
(San Francisco Bay Area) |
Time Warner (USA) |
Channel 553 |
IPTV |
TELUS TV (Canada) |
Channel 550 |
FiOS TV (USA) |
Channel 1787 |
Directors General
- 12 October 1960 – 29 February 1968: Hans Otto Wesemann
- 1 March 1968 – 29 February 1980: Walter Steigner
- 1 March 1980 – 8 December 1980: Conrad Ahlers
- 19 December 1980 – 30 June 1981: Heinz Fellhauer (interim)
- 1 July 1981 – 30 June 1987: Klaus Schütz
- 1 July 1987 – 30 June 1989: Heinz Fellhauer
- 1 July 1989 – 31 March 2001: Dieter Weirich
- 1 April 2001 – 30 September 2001: Reinhard Hartstein (interim as deputy intendant)
- 1 October 2001 – present: Erik Bettermann
Deutsche Welle services
- DW Radio: shortwave, cable TV, satellite, and digital radio (DRM) broadcasting in 29 languages, with a 24-hour service in German and English
- DW-TV: satellite television broadcasting mainly in German, English (some programs aired on Net-25 in The Philippines), Arabic and Spanish. French and Italian will be coming soon in 2009. Portuguese and Chinese will be aired on 2010.
- DW-WORLD.DE: 30-language website
DW-Academy
Deutsche Welle manages is own international training institute. A total of twenty trainees are trained each year to become future editors. Out of this ten trainees are chosen from Germany for the German programs; and the other ten from all over the world for ten different foreign language programs. The training lasts for a period of eighteen months. During this period, the trainees are trained for all the three areas of Deutsche Welle: Radio, TV and Online. In 2009 DW-Academy started Masters Program in collaboration with the University of Bonn. 25 students from all over the world can enroll themselves for the two year Masters Program. The DW-Academy is also active all over the world. It manages various programs in collaboration with international universities, for example, the IGNOU in India. The academy also holds a number of train the trainer programs.
Slogan
- DW-TV: At the Heart of Europe. (English)
- DW-TV: Aus der Mitte Europas. (German)
- DW-TV: Desde el Corazón de Europa. (Spanish)
DW-TV programmes
Business
- Global 3000 (Globalization Program)
- Made In Germany (German Business Magazine)
Cars and sports
- Bundesliga Kick Off! (The Soccer Magazine)
- Drive It! (The Motor Magazine)
- Kick off! Report (German version of Bundesliga Kick Off!)
- Motor Mobil (Germany Auto Magazine)
Culture
- Arts.21 (The Cultural Magazine)
- Kultur.21 (German version of Arts.21)
- Kino (The German Film Magazine/Das Deutsches Film Magazin)
- Ideas for a Cooler World[5][6], for Climate change mitigation
Documentaries and features
- Faith Matters (The Church Program)
- In Focus (Documentaries and Reports)
- Im Focus (German version of In Focus)
- Germany 60 Years (60 Years of Germany)
- 60 x Deutschland (Germany version of Germany 60 Years)
Lifestyle and entertainment
- Faith Matters (Religion)
- Hin & Weg (German Travel Magazine, German version of Discover Germany)
- Discover Germany (The TV Travel Guide)
- Euromaxx (Lifestyle Europe/Leben und Kultur in Europa)
- Germany Today (Window on Germany)
- Deutschland Heute (German version of Germany Today)
- In Good Shape (The Health Show)
- popXport (The German Music Magazine)
- Talking Germany (The German Way of Life)
- Typisch Deutsch (Living in Germany)
News and politics
- European Journal (The Magazine From Brussels)
- Journal News (The News Program)
- People & Politics (The Political Magazine)
Talk show
- Quadriga (The International Talk Show)
Science
- Tomorrow Today (Science Journal)
- Projekt Zukunft (German Science Magazine)
DW-TV Channels
These are 7 channels operated and transmitted by DW-TV as of 2009
- DW-TV Europe: Broadcast in Europe (UK feed broadcasts English-language programming only)
- DW-TV Arabia: Broadcast in the Middle East
- DW-TV Africa: Broadcast in Africa
- DW-TV USA: Broadcast in the United States of America and Canada
- DW-TV Latin America: Broadcast in Latin America
- DW-TV Asien: Broadcast in Asia (predominantly German-language programs)
- DW-TV Asia+: Broadcast in Asia (predominantly English-language programs)
Info: 6 DW-TV channels programs are edited. Some German-language programs from ARD and ZDF are imported to the channels. And also, the newscast not broadcast every top of the hour and shifted many hours. Original channel in Europe still going with normal schedule, newscast broadcast every hour and on the hour. African feed also receive European feed schedule. Digital on screen graphic also edited. In Asia, DW-TV logo is added the Asien word for DW-TV Asia and Asia+ word for DW-TV Asia+. 5 channels still appearing DW-TV logo.
See also
- Voice of Indonesia
- Radio Canada International
Notes and references
- McPhail, Thomas L. Global Communication: Theories, Stakeholders, and Trends. 2006, Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 1405134275.
- Wallis, Roger, and Stanley J. Baran. The Known World of Broadcast News: International News and the Electronic Media. 1990, Routledge. ISBN 0415036046.
- Wood, James. History of International Broadcasting. 2000, IET. ISBN 0852969201.
External links
Public broadcasting in Germany |
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Broadcasters |
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BR · DW · HR · MDR · NDR · RB · RBB · SR · SWR · WDR
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Television channels |
Das Erste · ZDF · 3sat · arte · KI.KA · Phoenix · EinsPlus · EinsFestival · EinsExtra · ZDFneo · ZDFinfokanal · ZDFtheaterkanal · BR-alpha · DW-TV
Bayerisches Fernsehen · hr-fernsehen · MDR Fernsehen · NDR Fernsehen · rb.tv · RBB Fernsehen · SR Fernsehen · SWR Fernsehen · WDR Fernsehen
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Deutschlandradio |
DLF · DKultur · DRadio Wissen · Dok&Deb
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Discontinued |
D-Plus · Eins Plus (culture programme) · ZDFdokukanal
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Member organizations of the ARD |
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Current |
Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR) · Deutsche Welle (DW) · Hessischer Rundfunk (HR) · Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (MDR) · Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) · Radio Bremen (RB) · Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB) · Saarländischer Rundfunk (SR) · Südwestrundfunk (SWR) · Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR)
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Former |
Sender Freies Berlin (SFB) · Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg (ORB) · Süddeutscher Rundfunk (SDR) · Südwestfunk (SWF) · Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (NWDR)
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Members of the World Radio Network |
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Austrian Radio International · Commonwealth Broadcasting Association1 · Deutsche Welle · Earth & Sky · Israel Radio International · KBS World Radio · National Public Radio · Pacifica Radio · Radio Australia · Radio Budapest · Radio Canada International · Radio France Internationale · Radio Guangdong · Radio Japan · Radio Netherlands Worldwide · Radio New Zealand International · Polish Radio External Service · Radio Prague · Radio Romania International · Radio Slovakia International · Radio Sweden · RTÉ · swissinfo · United Nations Radio · Vatican Radio · Voice of Russia · YLE Radio
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1 The Commonwealth Broadcasting Association has dozens of members within it |
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International news channels |
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Africa |
Africa Independent Television · A24 news channel · CNBC Africa · MSNBC Africa · Orbit News · SABC News International · Nile TV International
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Asia |
Aaj Tak · Aaj TV · ABS-CBN News Channel · Al Arabiya · Al Ekhbariya · Al Jazeera · Al Jazeera English · Al-Alam News Network · Asianet News · Astro Awani · ARY News · ATV News · Bernama TV · Business Plus · Bloomberg UTV · Blue Ocean Network · CCTV News (Chinese, English) · CNBC Arabiya · CNBC Asia · CNBC Awaaz · CNBC-TV18 · CNBC Pakistan · Channel 10 · CNC (CNC World · Finance and Business) · CNN-IBN · CNN International · CSB News · CTi News · CTV News Channel · DD News · Dawn News · Era News · ETtoday · ETTV News · HLN ET Now · Express 24/7 · Express News · FTV News · GEO News · Global News Network · Headlines Today · IBN-7 · IBN-Lokmat · i-CABLE News Channel (Hong Kong) · Indus News · IRINN · Kolkata TV · Mahuaa Khobor · Manorama News · MBN · MediaCorp Channel NewsAsia · MetroTV · NDTV 24x7 · NDTV India · NDTV Profit · Ne Bangla · News One · News Time · NewsX · Nikkei CNBC · NTV News 24 · NHK World TV · OSN News · Phoenix InfoNews Channel · Press TV · PTV News · SBS-CNBC · SET News · STAR Ananda · STAR Majha · STAR News · Tara Newz · TBS News Bird · Times Now · TTV Finance · TV1 · TV9 (Kannada) · TV9 (Telugu) · TVB News · TVBS-NEWS · tvOne · Unique Business News · Waqt News · YTN · Zee News · Zee 24 Taas · 24 Ghanta
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Europe |
3/24 · 6 News · Ada TV (TRNC) · Antena 3 (Romania) · BBC Arabic Television · BBC Persian Television · BBC News · BBC World News · BFM TV · Bloomberg HT · Canal 24 Horas · Class CNBC · Class News · CNBC Europe · CNBC-e · CNN+ · CNN International · CNN Türk · ČT24 · DW-TV · Euronews · France 24 · I-Télé · Kanal 5 · LCI · N24 Germany · N24 Romania · NTV (Turkey) · N-tv · OSN News · RBC TV · RaiNews 24 · Realitatea TV Romania · RTPN · RT · Russia 24 · Rusiya Al-Yaum · SIC Notícias · Sky News · SKY TG24 · SVT 24 · TA3 · TV 2 News · TV 2 Nyhetskanalen · TVI 24 · TVN 24 · TVN CNBC · TVP Info · Polsat News
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North America |
ABC News Now · Argent · Bloomberg Television · Business News Network · Caribbean Media Corporation · CBC News Network · CNBC · CNBC World · CNN · CNN en Español · CNN International · CTV News Channel · Fox Business Network · Fox News Channel · HLN · LCN · RDI · MSNBC · VOA TV · Milenio TV · Foro TV
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Pacific |
ABC News 24 · Australia Network · SBS World News Channel · Sky News Australia · Sky News Business Channel · Sky News New Zealand · TVNZ 7
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South America |
América 24 · Band News · Canal i · Canal 5 Noticias · Canal 26 · Canal N · CNC3 · CNN Chile · CN23 · Crónica TV · Globovisión · Globo News · HLN Nuestra Tele Noticias 24 Horas · Record News · teleSUR · Todo Noticias · TVN 24 Horas
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Related topics |
International broadcasting · Technical: TVRO · Cable Television · Television standards conversion
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Lists of TV programs broadcast by country |
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Asia-wide |
Cartoon Network Southeast Asia · Disney Channel Asia · MTV Asia · Nickelodeon Asia · Syfy Asia · STAR World · Channel V
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East Asia |
Japan
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Animax
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South Korea
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Hong Kong
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ATV · Phoenix InfoNews · TVB
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South Asia |
India
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Colors · Disney Channel India · STAR Plus · Zee TV · Imagine TV · STAR One · Cartoon Network India · DD National · POGO
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Nepal
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NTV
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Southeast Asia |
Malaysia
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TV3 · ntv7 · 8TV · TV9
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Philippines
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ABS-CBN · Cartoon Network Philippines · GMA · Hero · IBC · NBN · Net 25 · Q · RJTV · RPN · SBN · Studio 23 · TV5 ·
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Singapore
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Channel 5 · HD5 · Channel 8 · Channel U
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Australasia |
Australia
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ABC · MTV Australia · Network Ten · Nickelodeon Australia · Nine Network · Sci Fi Channel Australia · Seven Network
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New Zealand
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C4 · TV3 · TVNZ
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Europe |
Bulgaria
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bTV
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Cyprus
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CyBC · METV
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France
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France 2 · Sci Fi Channel France
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Greece
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Alpha TV · Alter Channel · ANT1 · ERT · Mega Channel
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Ireland
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RTÉ · TG4 · TV3 Ireland
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Italy
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Boing · Boomerang Italy · Cartoon Network Italy · Fox Italy · FX Italy · Joi · Mya · Steel
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Norway
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Canal+ Scandinavia · FEM · NRK · TV 2 Norway (current) · TV3 Norway · TVNorge
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Poland
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TVN · TVN Siedem
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Spain
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Antena 3 (Spain) · Telecinco · La Sexta
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UK
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BBC · CBBC · CBeebies · Boomerang UK & Ireland · Bravo · Cartoon Network UK & Ireland · Channel 4 · CITV · Comedy Central UK · Discovery Home & Health · Disney Channel UK & Ireland · Disney XD UK & Ireland · ITV · Living · Nickelodeon UK & Ireland · Sci Fi Channel UK · Sky1 · Playhouse Disney UK & Ireland · Channel One
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Middle East |
Israel
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Channel 2 Israel · Channel 1 Israel · Israeli Educational Television
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North America |
Canada
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A · CBC · Citytv · CMT Canada · Comedy Gold · The Comedy Network · Cosmopolitan TV Canada · CTV · DejaView · E! Canada · Family · Food Network Canada · G4 Canada · Global · MTV Canada · MTV2 Canada · MuchMore · MuchMusic · Nickelodeon Canada · OUTtv · The Pet Network · Radio-Canada · Showcase · Star! · Teletoon · Teletoon Retro · TVA · TVtropolis · V · YTV
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Caribbean
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Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation · CaribVision · Cubavision International · Tempo TV
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Mexico
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MASTV · Televisa · TV Azteca
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USA
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ABC · ABC Family · Adult Swim · A&E · Animal Planet · Anime Network · Boomerang · Cartoon Network · CBS · CMT · Comedy Central · Create · The CW · Discovery Channel · Discovery Kids · Disney Channel · Disney XD · DuMont · E! · ESPN · Food Network · Fox · Fox Kids · Fox News · FX · G4 · GSN · GAC · HBO · History · The Hub · ION · Jetix · Kids' WB · MTV · MTV2 · MyNetworkTV · NBC · NFL Network · Nickelodeon · Nick at Nite · Nick Gas · Nick Jr. · Nicktoons · PBS · Showtime · Spike · Syfy · TBS · TechTV · TeenNick · Telemundo · TLC · TNT · Toon Disney · Toonami · TV Land · Univisión · UPN · USA Network · VH1 · The WB · WGN America
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Latin America-wide |
Warner Channel
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South America |
Brazil
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Multishow
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Venezuela
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RCTV · Venevisión
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Worldwide |
Boomerang · Jetix · The Filipino Channel · GMA Pinoy TV · GMA Life TV
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