List of United States Cable and Satellite Television Networks/Arts - News

News

Name HD feeds Owner Notes
ABC News Now No Disney/ABC
Bloomberg Television Yes Bloomberg L.P. (English) and (Spanish) audio feed
CNBC Yes NBCUniversal
CNBC World No
CNN Yes Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner)
CNN Airport Network No Available only in airports
CNN en EspaƱol No (Spanish) audio feeed
CNN International Yes
C-SPAN Yes National Cable Satellite Corporation covers the United States House of Representatives
C-SPAN 2 Yes covers the United States Senate and airs Book TV on weekends
C-SPAN 3 Yes covers other live events and airs archived historical programming
Current TV No Al Jazeera
Euronews No SOCEMIE
Fox Business Network Yes News Corporation
Fox News Channel Yes News Corporation
Free Speech TV No Independent Public, non-profit channel
HLN Yes Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner) formerly CNN2, CNN Headline News and Headline News. HLN HD is currently carried on various Time Warner Cable systems.
The Local AccuWeather Channel No AccuWeather Carried via digital cable and over-the-air digital television
Link TV No Link Media, Inc. formerly World Link TV
MSNBC Yes NBCUniversal
MundoVision No MundoVision Corporation of America (Spanish) audio feed
NOAA Weather Radio No Content depends on city, state, & region. NOAA / National Weather Service
(U.S. Government)
Some cable systems may have local radar with audio, text messages with audio, or audio only.
Pentagon Channel American Forces Network (US Government)
RT No International news channel from DC with Russia twist.
The Weather Channel Yes
WeatherStar HD / IntelliStar HD in beta testing
  • Weather Channel
  • Weather Channel On Demand
NBCUniversal (English) and (Spanish) audio feed
Weatherscan No NBCUniversal

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Famous quotes containing the word news:

    Where village statesmen talked with looks profound,
    And news much older than their ale went round.
    Oliver Goldsmith (1728–1774)

    The village appeared to me a great news room.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    The technological landscape of the present day has enfranchised its own electorates—the inhabitants of marketing zones in the consumer goods society, television audiences and news magazine readerships... vote with money at the cash counter rather than with the ballot paper at the polling booth.
    —J.G. (James Graham)