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Page "Television in Australia" ¶ 88
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WIN and Television
Commercial television channels are provided by Southern Cross Tasmania, Tasmanian Digital Television ( TDT ), also providing One HD in high definition only, and WIN Television, also providing the nationwide Go!
TVT-6 ( since known as TasTV, now WIN Television ) took on a Nine Network affiliation, with Southern Cross carrying both Seven and Ten programming.
Channels available include Prime7 ( part of the Seven Network ), WIN Television ( part of the Nine Network ), Southern Cross Ten ( part of Network Ten ), as well as the Australian Broadcasting Corporation ( ABC ) and the Special Broadcasting Service, more commonly known as SBS.
Television stations such as ABC, SBS, Prime7, WIN and SC Ten as well as digital multi-channels are broadcast into Echuca from other regions.
The three main commercial television networks ( Seven, Nine and Ten ) are all re-broadcast in the Latrobe Valley by their regional affiliates-Prime7 ( Seven ), WIN Television ( Nine ) and Southern Cross Ten ( Ten ).
Bundaberg is served by three commercial television stations ( Seven Queensland, WIN Television and Southern Cross Ten ) and publicly owned services ( ABC TV ) and ( SBS ).
Localised television stations available in Broome include GWN7, SBS, WIN Television Western Australia, ABC Television Western Australia and Goolarri media.
It was reported on 31 May 2012 that the Australian telecommunications company Telstra and WIN Television Network CEO, Bruce Gordon, are considering making a takeover bid for Nine Entertainment.
Nine Network programming is also carried into regional Australia by affiliate networks WIN Television, NBN Television, and Imparja Television.
Along with the rest of the state, the city has four free-to-air analogue television stations, including two government funded channels from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation ( ABC1 ), the Special Broadcasting Service ( SBS ONE ) and two commercial stations ; ( Southern Cross Tasmania & WIN ) These services are also available in digital format as well as eleven digital only stations, one carrying Network Ten programming ( Tasmanian Digital Television ), and nationwide digital-only stations ABC2, ABC3, ABC News 24, SBS Two, 7Two, Go !, 7mate ( HD ), GEM HD, One HD ( in high definition only ) and the new " Eleven " channel from Network Ten.
Of the three commercial networks, WIN Television ( previously GMV-6 and ' Television Victoria ') airs a 30-minute local news bulletin each weeknight while Southern Cross Ten produces Weeknights, an evening news magazine program from Monday to Friday.
Localised television stations available in Albany include GWN7, SBS, WIN Television Western Australia and ABC Television Western Australia.
This began when Murdoch's News Ltd purchased the Wollongong station WIN Television in the early 1960s, around the same time he bought Festival Records.
In 1977, frustrated by regulatory blocks that prevented him from expanding into the Sydney market, Murdoch sold WIN Television and purchased a 46 % share in Ten Sydney.
Channel Ten programming is also carried into other areas of regional Australia by various affiliate networks and stations including Southern Cross Ten, Southern Cross Television, Tasmanian Digital Television, Mildura Digital Television, Darwin Digital Television, Ten West and WIN Television.

WIN and is
TDT is a joint venture between Southern Cross and WIN.
WIN Television's bulletin is produced in Ballarat but features Albury-Wodonga region based content, and airs on delay at 6. 30pm.
Local news coverage of Bundaberg and the Wide Bay is provided on all three commercial networks with both Seven Queensland's Seven Local News and Win Queensland's WIN News airing 30-minute local news bulletins each weeknight.
There is an International High performance Tennis centre based on site managed by WIN Tennis.
NRL games are broadcast in prime time on WIN in New South Wales and Queensland on Friday nights, however prime time NRL is shown at the normal times on WIN's other channel GEM in Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania.
It publishes an annual peace calendar, the quarterly magazine WIN: Through Revolutionary Nonviolence, and other materials and is involved in a number of national peace and justice coalitions, including United for Peace and Justice and the National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee.
After the requisite skill is transferred, and provided that Joe is wearing special glasses containing hidden electrodes storing the expertise, he is able to execute such missions as operating fighter aircraft, blasting off into space and performing advanced neurosurgery, all the while appearing to be an innocent schoolboy to the enemies of WIN.
The pun of the " WIN " acronym for the World Intelligence Network is similar to that of WASP, the abbreviated name of the World Aquanaut Security Patrol that appears in Stingray.
WIN Television is an Australian television network owned by the WIN Corporation that is based in Wollongong, New South Wales.
The network's name, WIN is a reference to its original Wollongong station WIN-4, itself an acronym of Wollongong Illawarra New South Wales.
The new program schedule is a mixture of Seven and WIN programming and commenced broadcasting on 1 October 2007.
WIN Television is a sole Nine Network affiliate in most broadcast areas, with Network Ten affiliation in regional Western Australia ( combined with a predominant Nine Network affiliation ), and Seven Network affiliation in eastern South Australia.
WIN News is the network's local news service.
Although in most areas it is the only local news bulletin, WIN News may compete in some markets with Prime News, Seven Local News, GWN News, or Southern Cross Nightly News.
WIN also broadcasts in standard definition digital in areas where the transition has been completed, or is simulcast alongside analog if the transition is still in progress.
It is jointly owned by the WIN Corporation and Macquarie Media Group, and largely managed by WIN Television.

WIN and largest
WIN Television, Australia's largest regional network, produces a number of programs including sports magazine show Fishing Australia, cooking show Alive and Cooking, and travel shows Destinations and Postcards Australia.

WIN and regional
Both programs are produced from newsrooms in the city with both bulletins broadcast from studios in Maroochydore, with WIN also producing a late night statewide bulletin for regional Queensland.
Since it lies close to two TV boundaries, Mandurah also receives the GWN, WIN and Ten West stations that service regional and remote Western Australia.
In Australia, the Nine Network, and regional affiliates WIN and NBN, air Good Morning America on Tuesday to Fridays from 3. 30-5: 00am.
Commercial Melbourne based television networks such as the Seven, Nine and Ten networks are all re-broadcast in the Latrobe Valley by their regional affiliates, which are Prime7, WIN Television and Southern Cross Ten respectively.
Through its news division, WIN News, WIN Television broadcasts a half-hour news service to twenty regional markets.
The West Australian | The West Magazine reporting WIN Television as the second network in regional Western Australia.
In 1984, WIN became the first regional television station to transmit in stereophonic sound.
In 1990 WIN purchased Queensland station Star TV, shortly before regional Queensland was to be aggregated.
WIN became regional Western Australia's second commercial television network on 26 March 1999 after winning rights in 1997.
WIN Television has always produced regional programming, including the flagship local news service WIN News, that supplement programs sourced from affiliates.
NWS Adelaide and STW Perth, both owned by WIN Corporation, follow a schedule similar to that of the network's regional stations.
WIN News produces a half-hour bulletin incorporating national, international and regional news seven days a week.
Sunshine Coast is served by publicly owned television services ( ABC TV ), ( SBS ) Television and three commercial television stations ( Seven Queensland, WIN Television and Southern Cross Ten ), which are the regional affiliates of the Seven, Nine and Ten network stations in Brisbane.
Of the three main commercial networks, Seven Queensland and WIN produce 30-minute local news bulletins each weeknight ( both produced from local newsrooms, but broadcast from studios elsewhere in the state-Maroochydore and Toowoomba respectively ) with WIN also producing a state-wide late news bulletin for regional Queensland.
The profit warning lead to speculation of a potential takeover of STW-9, with PBL and regional network WIN Television indicated as potential bidders.
A localised edition of Nine Afternoon News is also produced and broadcast from STW-9 on weekdays at 4: 30pm and simulcast on WIN Television in regional Western Australia.
The bulletin was introduced on Wednesday 14 March 2012 following the axing of separate WIN News bulletins for regional Western Australia.

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