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This is a list of television programmes which are either currently being broadcast or have previously been broadcast by Pakistan's national television service, the Pakistan Television Corporation (PTV).
This is a list of Pakistani dramas. The programs are organised alphabetically. [1] [2] [3. A. Aankh Salamat Andhay Log; Aahista Aahista (2014, Hum TV) ...
This is a list of Pashto-language television channels in Afghanistan, ... Pashto 1; PTV Peshawar (Established 1974) Haditv Pashto; Mashriq TV; Atal HD TV; Pashtun Tv;
[1] [7] Regional headquarters of PTV and television centers were established in Peshawar and Quetta in 1974. [5] In 1977–78, the PTV broadcast the live Cricket match between England vs. Pakistan. [8] During this time, the PTV's interview programming series brought many scientists, politicians, sportsmen, actors, musicians, and artists to ...
Pakistani dramas, or Pakistani serials, are televised serials produced in Pakistan. Although most of the serials are produced in Urdu, an increasing number of them are produced in other Pakistani languages such as Sindhi, Pashto, Punjabi and Balochi. One of Pakistan's oldest television dramas is the Urdu serial Khuda Ki Basti, which aired in ...
This is a list of Pashto-language television series. Most of such programs are produced in Pakistan. Pages in category "Pashto-language television shows"
Dehleez is a 1981 Pakistani television series which aired on PTV. Written by Amjad Islam Amjad, it featured Roohi Bano, Mahboob Alam, Uzma Gillani and Tahira Naqvi among others. The serial was directed by Yawar Hayat Khan and assisted by Qambar Ali Shah, Kunwar Aftab Ahmed and Nusrat Thakur. The drama serial is one of the famous dramas from PTV ...
PTV Home started broadcasting on 26 November 1964 [2] [3] in West Pakistan and on 25 December 1964 in East Pakistan (the current Bangladesh). [4] The broadcasts were limited to Lahore and Dacca at first (the Dhaka station would later become a part of Bangladesh Television upon Bangladesh's independence in 1971), before extending to Rawalpindi and Islamabad in 1965 and Karachi in 1966. [2]