Telediario is a flagship television news programme, produced by the Spanish public service broadcaster Televisión Española. Three news programmes a day are broadcast domestically on TVE1 and internationally on TVE Internacional. Special international editions of Telediario are also aired on TVE Internacional every day.
The term Telediario in Spain has become synonymous with television news, with people saying 'put on the Telediario' when simply referring to news. "Le quedan dos telediarios" is a common colloquial Spanish expression to suggest someone's days are numbered, either literally or metaphorically.
BBC Look North is the BBC's regional television news service for South and West Yorkshire, parts of North Yorkshire and the North Midlands. The programmes were produced and broadcast from the BBC Broadcasting Centre at St. Peter's Square in Leeds with journalists also based at newsrooms in Bradford, Sheffield and York.
Look North can be watched in any part of the UK from Astra 1N on Freesat channel 966 and Sky channel 956. The latest edition of Look North is also available to watch on the BBC iPlayer.
Al Qahera Al Youm is a live television talk show that broadcasts nearly throughout the year from the 6th of October studios located in Cairo. Al Qahera Al-Youm is one of the most popular and influential shows in the Middle East with more than a million viewers world wide. Hosted by the leading Arab presenter Amr Adeeb, with Co-host Politician and journalist, Mohammed Mustafa Sherdy. The show has dedicated segments to stars like Raga'a el-Geddawi and Hala Fakher. The program efficiently covers all aspects of life in Egypt from politics, to arts, sports, cultural and economic issues, and even international affairs. It airs on Al Yawm channel which is part of Orbit Communications Company now known as the OSN. The Show currently broadcasts throughout the week, because of their new addition to the show Al Qahera Al-Youm Weekend that runs on Thursday and Friday, hosted by presenter shafky Al Monayery and celebrity actor Ezzat Abu Ouf.
Close-up Gendai, is a social affairs television show on NHK. The program is broadcast Monday through Thursday 19:30 - 20:00, 24:10 - 24:36. It is also broadcast on NHK World and NHK World Premium.
Teledyaryo was the flagship newscast of People's Television Network in the Philippines. Shown every weeknight at 5:00 pm Philippine Standard Time, it is anchored by Angelique Lazo, Rocky Ignacio on Saturdays and Joseph Parafina on Sundays.
BBC Arabic's Nawal Al-Maghafi reveals how the UAE hired mercenaries to conduct targeted assassinations of its political enemies in Yemen, with American mercenaries starting the killings in 2015.
Firsthand accounts from authorities and journalists illuminating four disturbing events as they describe the twists and turns of the investigations and the breakthrough moments that led investigators and police to each killer's doorstep.
Aktuellt is a Swedish nightly news programme produced by Sveriges Television and broadcast on its second channel, SVT2 in Sweden.
First broadcast on 2 September 1958, Aktuellt was Sweden's first television news programme. With the start of TV 2 in 1969, the Aktuellt brand disappeared but was revived in 1972 when TV1 began airing two main bulletins at 6pm and 9pm. The 6pm bulletin was moved to SVT2 in 1997, followed on 15 January 2001 by the 9pm edition. The year before, editorial responsibility for Aktuellt, Rapport, and SVT's news channel, SVT24, was unified; nevertheless, the name "Aktuellt" continues to be used to designate SVT2's news programmes.
A relaunch of Aktuellt in November 2007 saw Rapport begin a 6pm bulletin on SVT1 while the sole 9pm Aktuellt programme relaunched as an in-depth news and current affairs programme, covering two of three main items in detail. On 5 March 2012, the programme was extended to 60 minutes.
CBC News Magazine was a weekly Canadian news television series which debuted on CBC Television on September 8, 1952. The series presented the week's international news highlights and documentaries from CBC correspondents around the world. It ran until 1981 when it was cancelled in order to make way for The Journal.
Lorne Greene, then an announcer and newsreader for the CBC, was narrator for the series in its early years. It was hosted by the anchor of The National from the 1970s until its demise.