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Sindo Malam - an Indonesian news programme broadcast by Sindonews TV; Sport Today - a sport news programme broadcast by Sportstars; Sindo Today - a news programme broadcast by Sindonews TV in English language, for 30 minutes; World Headlines - an international news programme broadcast by Sindonews TV
RCTI is available as a free-to-air channel in East Timor, but only in Dili and other cities such as Ermera and Baucau. RCTI is also available in Malaysia as a free-to-air channel in Johor Bahru, and in Singapore as a free-to-air channel by using antenna. RCTI is the only Indonesian free-to-air TV channel to be broadcast free-to-air outside ...
They previously founded as pay TV channels for live sports. [2] Mola is owned and operated by Djarum Group's subsidiary Polytron and is headquartered in Jakarta. Mola holds live and on-demand broadcasting rights for multiple sports competitions, including the Premier League in Indonesia and Timor Leste. Mola also offers on-demand streaming from ...
Tanggal 31 Ogos ("The Date of 31st of August") is a Malaysian patriotic and national song. It is sung during the National Day celebrations throughout the nation. This song was covered by Sudirman .
The channel delivers 700 hours of live, local sports a year, with an additional 2000 hours of replays greatly expanding the amount of local sports available in the country. It also provides coverage of up to 56 hours a week of Malaysians competing at international levels or the best in world sports of a particular interest to the Malaysian ...
The 2021–22 Liga 1, also known as BRI Liga 1 for sponsorship reasons, [2] was the 5th season of Liga 1 under its current name and the 12th season of the top-flight Indonesian professional league for association football clubs since its establishment in 2008.
The most successful dangdut contest, Kontes Dangdut TPI (KDI, later Kontes Dangdut Indonesia), is a version of RCTI's Indonesian Idol, in turn a version of Pop Idol. In early January 2002, TPI announced that it would broadcast Formula One auto racing, replacing RCTI from 2002 season.
In 1989, the government allowed RCTI to broadcast as the first private television network in Indonesia, although only people who had a decoder could watch; it was opened to the public on 24 August 1990. [1] Private television (other than TPI/MNCTV) began broadcasting nationally on 24 August 1993. [2]