CNN Türk

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CNN Türk
CNN Türk logo.svg
Launched October 11, 1999
Owned by Doğan Media Group (50%)
Turner Broadcasting System (50%)
Picture format 16:9 (576i, SDTV)
Country Turkey
Language Turkish
Broadcast area Turkey
Headquarters Istanbul
Sister channel(s) Kanal D, Dream TV
Website www.cnnturk.com
Availability
Digiturk Channel 42
D-Smart Channel 30
Turksat 3A 11804 V 24444 5/6
Cable
Turksat Kablo TV S22
Teledünya Channel 49
Satellite radio
Turksat 3A 11804 V 24444 5/6
IPTV
Tivibu Channel 59
Streaming media
Watch live http://video.cnnturk.com/canli-yayin

CNN Türk is the Turkish version of the popular cable news channel CNN. CNN Türk is a nationwide channel broadcasting exclusively in Turkey, owned by Doğan Medya Grubu, broadcasting since October 11, 1999. Its headquarters are in Istanbul.

Programmes

  • News

Şirin Payzın'la 360 Derece, Nevşin Mengü'yle Ana Haber, Bugün 12:00, Bugün 14:00, Güne Merhaba, Haber Toplantısı, Pınar Esen ile Haftasonu Keyfi

  • Debate

5N1K, Cüneyt Özdemir ile Soruyorum, Dört Bir Taraf, Eğrisi Doğrusu, Gelecek Gündemde, Medya Mahallesi, Ne Oluyor?, Tarafsız Bölge

  • Sport

NBA games until 2015, Çift Kale, Maçın Yıldızı, Spor Bülteni, Spor Masası, Spor Toplantısı, Spor Vizyon

  • Talkshow

Burada Laf Çok

  • Economy

İşte Gündem, Özel Sektör, Parametre, Paranın İzi, Sanayi Rotası

  • Others

Afiş, Arda'nın Mutfağı, Burada Hayat Var, Check Up, Ebru ile Pazarlık, Hava Durumu, Hayat Gezince Güzel, Işıltılar, Kokpit, Reklamın İyisi, Yeşil Doğa, Yol Üstü Lezzet Durakları

Notable anchors

Controversy

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CNN Turk was one of the Turkish news channels which were criticized for not covering the 2013–14 protests in Turkey. On June 2, 2013 at 1am, CNN Turk was broadcasting a documentary on penguins while CNN International was showing live coverage of the protests in Turkey.[1]

"[On the afternoon of Friday, May 31, 2013] CNN Turk was broadcasting a food show, featuring the “flavors of Niğde.” Other major Turkish news channels were showing a dance contest and a roundtable on study-abroad programs. It was a classic case of the revolution not being televised. The whole country seemed to be experiencing a cognitive disconnect, with Twitter saying one thing, the government saying another, and the television off on another planet."[2]

In 2014, it showed a documentary on bees as Turkish Kurds undertook major protests about Ankara's refusal to support Kurdish fighters battling Islamic State in Kobanê.[3]

References

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  2. The New Yorker, 01 June 2013, Occupy Gezi: Police Against Protesters in Istanbul
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External links