Cebu Catholic Television Network

Cebu Catholic Television Network (CCTN Channel 47)
Launched December 17, 2002
Owned by Archdiocese of Cebu
Fil-Products Group of Companies
Slogan "Usa ka Pagtuo, Usa ka Tingog, Usa ka Katawhan" (English: "One Faith, One Voice, One People" Tagalog: Isang Pananampalataya, Isang Tinig, Isang Sambayanan)
Country Philippines
Website www.cctn47.com
Availability
Terrestrial
Analog Channel 47 (UHF)
Cebu City
Analog Channel 47 (UHF)
Roxas, Capiz
Digital TBA (ISDB-T)
Cebu City
Cable
SkyCable Channel 36
(Cebu City)
Cablelink Channel 97
(Metro Manila)
Cebu Cable Channel 98
(Cebu City)
Streaming media
CCTN47.com Streaming Live

Cebu Catholic Television Network (CCTN) is a broadcast television channel owned by the Archdiocese of Cebu and Fil-Products Group of Companies in the Philippines. The station's studios are located at the CCTN Broadcast Center, Cardinal Rosales Avenue, Cebu Business Park, Cebu City. CCTN 47 now operates 24/7 for cable operators and 18 to 19 hours on free-to-air UHF TV.

History

Cebu Catholic Television Network Channel 47 (CCTN) was created from the vision of its founder, Nonito “Dodong” Limchua. After his stint in the cable business he started family relationship programs that promote Gospel values and bring the Catholic Church message to the people. Since he and wife Diana are devout Catholics, they have been involved in Walking with Jesus Seminars. Together, they shared their vision with the Archbishop of Cebu, Ricardo Cardinal Vidal and he supported them in their desire for others to see the face of Christ through professional coverage of events, documentaries and issues concerning the Catholic Church.

CCTN stations

Branding Callsign Ch. # Power (ERP) kW Location
CCTN 47 Cebu DYCC-TV TV-47 50 kW 347.1 kW ERP Metro Cebu
CCTN 47 Roxas* DYCR-TV TV-47 5 kW Roxas

* Inactive

CCTN on Cable/Satellite TV

Cable/Satellite Provider Ch. # Coverage
SkyCable 36 Cebu City
Tacloban City Cable Network TBA Tacloban

-with several cable TV stations and affiliates in Cebu, Central Visayas, Eastern Visayas, and across the Philippines.

Affiliates

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.