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ITV's weekend news bulletin in the late night.
Fox News Live is an American news/talk television program, the hard-news daytime programming of the Fox News Channel. In addition, it also referred to the short headline segments of nearly every hour daily.
TOKYO MX1 [Terrestrial Channel 9] Live broadcast from 7:00 am to 7:30 am / Start your Tokyo morning with our reporters’ words! Bringing you ‘news with a human touch’ for Tokyo residents’ mornings!
The Daily Buzz is a nationally-syndicated breakfast television news and infotainment program. The show is owned and produced by Mojo Brands Media, and it originates every weekday morning from studios at Full Sail University in Winter Park, Florida. The show caters to a younger-skewing audience demographic and has a more informal atmosphere in comparison to its morning counterparts. Premiering on 10 stations on September 16, 2002, The Daily Buzz is currently carried on stations in 180 U.S. television markets. The show normally airs for 3 hours every day in the 6:00AM-9:00AM time slot, with start and running times varying by market. The show is also streamed live-to-air on its TheDBZ.com website.
SportsRise is a daily morning sports news program on Comcast Sportsnet Philadelphia. The program repeats every 30 minutes from 6:00AM to 11:00AM on weekdays and from 7:00AM to 10:00AM on weekends.
The War Room with Michael Shure was a news and political commentary program on Current TV It was initially hosted by former Governor of Michigan Jennifer Granholm. The show debuted on January 30, 2012 and aired on weeknights followed by The Young Turks with Cenk Uygur and Viewpoint with Eliot Spitzer. "The War Room" is an allusion to the place where strategists plan a political campaign. Granholm had said that the program's stance would be progressive. Upon the departure of Granholm, The Young Turks contributor Michael Shure took up her role as the host. The show aired its final episode on August 15, 2013.
Big News is the first ever newscast on Philippine television. It was the primetime news broadcast of Associated Broadcasting Company in the Philippines. It was anchored by Cheri Mercado and Amelyn Veloso. The show was originally first aired in 1962, and went off the air in 1972 due to martial law, and re-aired again in 1992 as a revival and also as an English language newscast. In 2004, when the network reformatted most of its programs, the show became a Filipino language newscast in order to compete with the other networks newscasts. On May 10, 2004, the newscast exchanged timeslots with Sentro, the early-evening news program of the network. Mercado became the sole anchor of the program, and the length of the program was reduced to 15 minutes from the former 30. On August 8, 2008, the program, together with Sentro aired its final broadcast.
BBC News presenter Ros Atkins brings his straight-talking style of analysis and explanation to distil one of the big issues in the news into just ten minutes.
A late night, entertainment talk show, with a "rock and roll" attitude, taped in front of a live studio audience. A returning, lower budget iteration of Scorch's PFG-TV. It lasted one season and has since been considered lost.
Aksyon Balita is the final Filipino-language newscast and the late afternoon news broadcast of Radio Philippines Network in the Philippines. Launched in 2006, it is broadcast at 5:30 PM Philippine time. It was created as a spin-off of the network's longest-running news program, NewsWatch. With the latter program's final episode on January 4, 2008, the Filipino edition dropped the "NewsWatch" tag and is retitled to, simply, Aksyon Balita, apparently to complement the network's new English newscast, i-Watch News.
Pilipinas News, roughly translated as Philippine News is the flagship English language late night news program broadcast by TV5 in the Philippines. It is currently anchored by Paolo Bediones, Cherie Mercado, and Jove Francisco. Simulcast on AksyonTV and on the radio through 92.3 News FM in Mega Manila. The program airs every Monday to Friday between 11:00 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays 12:00 a.m. to 12:30 a. m..
The Seoul Music Awards (Korean: 서울가요대상; RR: Seoul Gayo Daesang) is an awards show founded in 1990 that is presented annually by Sports Seoul for outstanding achievements in the music industry in South Korea.[1] The winners are selected from singers who have released albums during the year, combined with 30 percent mobile votes,[2] 40 percent digital downloads and album sales, and 30 percent judges' scores
The BBC News at Five is an hour long news programme broadcast every weekday at 17:00 on BBC News. The programme is fronted by BBC News at Ten presenter Huw Edwards from Monday-Thursday, and Newsnight presenter Gavin Esler on Friday. The show includes a detailed look at the news, as well as analysis with guests and business, sport and weather updates.
i-News is the flagship late night news program of the Philippine television network Net 25, anchored by Alma Angeles. It is an English version and a spin-off of i-Balita, and replaces Net 25 World Report. I-Balita and I-News are the same in format, but different in emphasis. I-Balita features local, business, weather and international news, while I-News features a daily round-up of the latest international, business, technology, sports, entertainment, environment, science, health and feature stories. Programme anchors Ivy Canlas and Karen Santos were replaced by Alma Angeles on January 17, 2011. Since October 24, 2011, the program was replaced by Eagle News: Evening Edition
Today's Business was a business news programme aired on CNBC Europe from 6-7am CET between January 2001 and March 2007. The programme was originally based on the CNBC U.S. morning programme Today's Business, which was later replaced by the programme Wake Up Call. The European Today's Business was presented by Steve Sedgwick. The programme, affectionately referred to by some presenters as "TBiz", featured a look ahead to the day. Segments included a review of yesterday's business, a news headlines round-up, as well as early results. The programme also linked up with CNBC Asia for continuing coverage of the Asian session. The programme was renamed from "Today's Business Europe" in May 2003. While the title was only slightly altered, the programme was reduced from two hours to one. While Today's Business Europe had been presented in front of CNBC Europe's video wall, the new programme was presented from behind a desk. The programme ended its run on March 23, 2007 and was replaced on March 26 by a new show, Capital Connection, co-anchored by Maura Fogarty at CNBC Asia in Singapore and Sedgwick in London.
Ken Rosenthal explains how certain moves at the Trade Deadline can result in acquiring stars over the years, something that can only be described as "The Ripple Effect".