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OAX-AM (Radio Nacional del Perú) began its broadcasts in 1925 in the city of Lima; It was the first radio station in the country.On the other hand, OAD-TV began broadcasting in 1958 on channel 7 of the VHF band in Lima as the country's second open television station.
Public-owned television includes Venezolana de Televisión, TVes, ViVe and teleSUR. There are also local community-run television stations such as Catia TVe and a range of regional networks such as Zuliana de Televisión. The Venezuelan government also provides funding to Avila TV, Buena TV and Asamblea Nacional Televisión.
Televisora Nacional - Government network, predecessor of Vale TV. Televisa - The first commercial network in Venezuela, was bought out by the Grupo Cisneros and became Venevisión. RCTV (Radio Caracas Televisión) - Second commercial network whose license expired on May 27, 2007.
Television in Latin America currently includes more than 1,500 television stations and more than 60 million TV sets throughout the 20 countries that constitute Latin America. Due to economic and political problems television networks in some countries of this region have developed less than the North American and European networks, for instance.
Canal de Gobierno (television Gubernamental Organismo Ejecutivo) Guatevision "Un canal como debe ser" Canal Antigua: "Mira sin límites" NTV (Nacional Tele Vision): "Lo que nadie se atreve a mostrar" 18-50 Televisión: "Diferente" VEA Canal:"Vida, Ecología y Ambiente" Expresion TV : "Un canal con actitud" Región + (Quetzaltenango)
CETv! The Family Network (Cable) CVM TV Channel 9, Kingston, Jamaica / Saint Andrew Parish, Jamaica; Hype TV (cable & DirecTV) RE TV (cable only) Mercy and Truth Ministries Television channel 671, channel 94 and channel 745 (MTM TV), Kingston, Jamaica; Caribbean Gospel TV ( Digicel Ch. 27) SportsMax (cable only), Kingston, Jamaica
It owns and operates a major HDTV Cable TV service (which also operated under its former names "Telecable Nacional" and "Tricom") along with landline and wireless voice services. Its ISP branch offers residential bandwidth with speeds up to 300 Mbit/s and is also a national mobile network operator .
Six television networks in Mexico have more than 75% national coverage and are thus required to be carried by all pay TV providers and offered at no cost by the broadcaster. Additionally, these networks are also required to provide accessibility for the hearing impaired with the use of Closed Captioning and/or Mexican sign language.