Commonwealth Broadcasting Network or just CBN is a Canadiancategory 2television channel available throught digital cable and satellite television. It is a general entertainment channel in English featuring programming from the Commonwealth Broadcasting Network. With comprehensive news, entertainment, dramas and sporting events from the Caribbean region and Africa. It is apart of the Asian Television Network group of channels. Category 2 channels are Canadian television channels defined by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission which may be carried, optionally, by all digital cable television and direct broadcast satellite providers. ... A television station is a type of radio station that broadcasts both audio and video to television receivers in a particular area. ... Digital cable is a term for a type of cable digital television that delivers more channels than possible with analog cable by using digital video compression. ... A satellite is any object that orbits another object (which is known as its primary). ... Look up English in Wiktionary, the free dictionary As an adjective, English refers to anything from or pertaining to England. ... NewS (NEWS) is a J-pop group from Johnny & Associates, which also produced groups such as SMAP, TOKIO, Kinki Kids and Tackey & Tsubasa. ... Entertainment is an amusement or diversion intended to hold the attention of an audience or its participants. ... This article refers to the art form. ... ... // Etymology World map showing Africa (geographically) The name Africa came into Western use through the Romans, who used the name Africa terra â land of the Afri (plural, or Afer singular) â for the northern part of the continent, as the province of Africa with its capital Carthage, corresponding to... Asian Television Network or known as ATN is a Canadian category 2 specialty channel owned by Rogers Cable which has programming from south Asian culture. ...
While commercial broadcasters often use the word as if it were a category one could observe directly, public broadcasters are forced by their very mandate to justify their use of the word — the BBC at one point claimed it would label no one a "terrorist" as they considered it a political term.
The network, formerly a public broadcaster operated by the provincial government, was sold to CHUM Limited in 1995.
State broadcasters tend to be either very weak and under-funded (as the Argentinian ATC), or to be clearly under the control of the party in power.