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Newsroom Afrika is a South African 24-hour digital satellite television news channel broadcast across Africa on DStv. [1] [2] [3] It is one of two channels on the platform that is 100% black-owned, and 50% female-owned. [4] The channel comes after MultiChoice ended their contract with the now defunct and controversial Afro Worldview. [5]
MultiChoice. M-Net; M-Net Movies; Mzansi Magic; KykNET; Africa Magic; 1Max; Independent Stations. Moja Love; Mindset Learn; Newzroom Afrika; Movie Room; Play Room; DBE TV
This is a list of television stations in Africa. Many African countries have various television stations both public and private in nature. Many African countries have various television stations both public and private in nature.
A third channel, known as TSS (Topsport Surplus Sport), was introduced, with Topsport being the brand name for the SABC's sports coverage. However, this was replaced by NNTV (National Network TV), an educational, non-commercial channel, in 1994. [41] The main channel, now called TV1, was divided evenly between English and Afrikaans, as before.
On 1 December 1997, SABC 1 introduced a new channel identity used since its 1996 relaunch, while continuing to use Simunye as its slogan. [14] The channel introduced a new identity at 5pm [15] on 18 August 2003, presenting itself as Ya Mampela (The Real Thing), aiming to solidify its position among an increasingly urban viewing audience.
SABC Africa; SABC Children; SABC Education; SABC Encore; SABC Sport; Sony Channel (South African TV channel) Sony MAX (South African TV channel) Soweto TV; Spice TV; StarSat; SuperSport (South African broadcaster)
News24 is an English-language South African news website created in October 1998 by the multinational media company, Naspers. Its team of approximately 100 journalists, [1] led by editor-in-chief Adriaan Basson, is based in Cape Town, Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban and Gqeberha. Its brands include Fin24, Sport24, Channel24, Health24, Arts24 ...
Radio and TV broadcasting in Pretoria is supplied via a network of VHF/FM and UHF transmitters and repeaters owned and operated by Sentech - South Africa's state-owned broadcast signal distributor - from four transmitter sites in and around the city. A number of community radio stations operate transmitters from non-Sentech sites.