CGTN Spanish

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CGTN Spanish
CGTN Espanol.png
TypeState media
CountryChina
Programming
Language(s)Spanish language
Picture format16:9/14:9 (576, SDTV)
Ownership
OwnerChina Central Television
History
LaunchedOctober 1, 2007
ReplacedCCTV E&F, CCTV-Español
Links
WebsiteCGTN en Español
Availability
Cable
Vodafone TV [es] (Spain)Channel 208
TelecableChannel 433
Claro ColombiaChannel 1486 (HD)
Satellite
Dish Network
(United States of America)
Channel 884 (SD)
Claro TVChannel 31
Streaming media
CNTV Ai Bugu[1]
Sling TVIntenet Protocol television

CGTN Spanish (formerly CCTV International Spanish or CCTV-Español and CCTV-E) is the Spanish language entertainment and news channel of China Global Television Network (CGTN), which is part of the state-owned broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) originating in China, and is part of the Chinese Government's information ministry.

The channel caters to an international audience. All programs are dubbed into Spanish or they have Spanish subtitles. There are also news programs featuring Spanish-speaking reporters. These programs provide both Chinese and international news coverage.

Most programs on CGTN Spanish are 30 minutes long. They feature a variety of content, including news programs, educational programs, and Chinese soap operas.

There are also programs offering tourism advice and showcasing new Chinese artists.

CGTN Spanish was launched on October 1, 2007, as CCTV-E. It replaced the bi-lingual Spanish / French language CCTV E&F channel which was launched on October 1, 2004.

In 2016 CCTV-E partnered with TeleSUR to coproduce a cultural program called Prisma.[1]

See also[]

  • CCTV-9 Documentary.
  • CCTV-4 (International Chinese)
  • CCTV-Русский (International Russian)
  • CCTV-Français (International French)
  • CCTV-العربية (International Arabic)
  • CCTV-NEWS (International English)
  • CNTV International

References[]

  1. ^ Cook, Sarah. "Beijing's Global Megaphone: The Expansion of Chinese Communist Party Media In uence since 2017" (PDF). freedomhouse-files.s3.amazonaws.com. Freedom House. Retrieved 30 January 2020.

External links[]


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