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Nicaraguan television channel From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Canal 10 (Canal Diez), is a nationwide terrestrial television channel from Nicaragua owned by Radio y Televisión de Nicaragua, S.A. (RATENSA), a company founded by Mexican investors.
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Country | Nicaragua |
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Programming | |
Language(s) | Spanish |
Picture format | 480i SDTV 1080i HDTV |
Ownership | |
Owner | Radio y Televisión de Nicaragua, S.A. (Grupo RATENSA/Albavisión) |
Sister channels | Canal 9 Canal 11 |
History | |
Launched | 1997 |
Links | |
Website | http://www.canal10.com.ni/ |
Availability | |
Terrestrial | |
Analog VHF | Channel 10 |
RATENSA formerly owned Canal 4 and also owns a local network of four affiliated radio stations – Tropicálida, Alfa, Radio Galaxia La Picosa and Radio Joya.
Strictly speaking, the channel only has two sister channels (Canal 9 and Canal 11). Albavisión also operates Canal 2 as an independent operation in a condominium with Maurice Ortega.[1][2]
The frequency was given to Carlos Reynaldo and César Augusto Lacayo, but was quickly bought by Ángel González.[3] The channel's frequency was assigned in 1990, and upon Ángel González's control, he assigned Chicho Silva for the post.[4] Broadcasts started on June 23, 1997, under the slogans "Sobresaliente!" (Outstanding!) and "El canal de nuestra gente" (our peoples' channel).[5]
The station initially carried exclusively foreign programming; a local newscast was added in August 2001.[6]
On January 7, 2005, the channel fired its existing news team as its newscast (Telediario 10) was replaced by Acción 10, and its presenters didn't match the new newscast's profile.[7]
On October 6, 2005, subscribers of the Estesa cable system (now Claro) got access to a 24/7 feed of the channel, with better image quality and 24/7 programming, after an agreement was signed between Estesa and Ratensa.[8] A new agreement was signed in December with local cable operators, aiming to extend the signal to the entire country, including areas with no signal of the national channel of border areas where Costa Rican channels were dominant.[9]
In August 2018, the channel's manager Carlos Pastora said that a boss from TN8 had forced him to regulate its newscasts and editorial decisions.[10]
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