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Telesistema Boliviano (TSB), the initial licensee, was founded on November 22, 1983, as the first commercial television company in Bolivia, [3] granting the license to operate in La Paz on channel 2. The channel was the opposite of ATB (channel 9) in some way, as the channel provided "quality programming" over political preferences.
UNITEL (UNIVERSAL DE TELEVISIÓN) [1] is a Bolivian commercial television network headquartered in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, La Paz and Cochabamba, Bolivia.It was founded in 1987 in Santa Cruz de la Sierra as Teleoriente, which in 1997 created the current network and bought two Telesistema Boliviano stations.
Radio Kawsachun Coca, also known as RKC and by its English channel name Kawsachun News, is a Bolivian online and radio news network. It was founded on November 7, 2007 by the campesino workers unions and focuses on Latin American politics. It has a pro-socialist editorial line. It has both English and Spanish language channels.
Bolivisión is a commercial Bolivian television station with its main station in La Paz. [1] The channel was launched on June 17, 1997, following the dissolution of Telesistema Boliviano, and later the creation of Unitel and the beginning of its relations with Galavisión. [2]
Bolivia: Broadcast area: Bolivia Chile Argentina Uruguay Peru Colombia Venezuela Dominican Republic : Programming; Picture format: 1080i HDTV (downscaled to 480i for the SD feed) Ownership; Owner: Sistema RTP (1985-1995) (2009-present) Grupo Garafulic (1995-2002) PRISA (2002-2009) History; Launched: May 10, 1985: Links; Website: www.rtpbolivia ...
Radio broadcast stations: AM 171, FM 73, shortwave 77 (1999). [1] Television broadcast stations: 48 (1997). [1] Bolivia has a large number of radio and TV stations broadcasting with private media outlets dominating. [1] There has been a recent, rapid growth of state-owned media, including a network of community radios. [2]
Red ATB (Asociación Teledifusora Boliviana) is a Bolivian free-to-air television channel.Its origins date back to 20 October 1984 in La Paz, when Paceña de Television (Channel 9) began broadcasting.
Mario Mercado Vaca Guzmán, one of Bolivia's wealthiest entrepreneurs and a well-known ADN militant, owned Última Hora. [2] This newspaper had hired outstanding academics to write its editorials. [2] Perhaps the most politicized of all newspapers in Bolivia was Hoy, owned by Carlos Serrate, an eccentric politician who also owned Radio Méndez. [2]