SBS WorldWatch

SBS WorldWatch is an Australian free-to-air television channel owned and operated by the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS). The channel shows multilingual international news bulletins in more than 30 languages, as well as two local bulletins in Mandarin and Arabic.[1][2][3]

SBS WorldWatch
Logo used since 2022
CountryAustralia
NetworkSBS Television
Programming
Language(s)Various
Picture format576i SDTV
Ownership
OwnerSpecial Broadcasting Service
Sister channels
History
Launched23 May 2022; 23 months ago (23 May 2022)
Links
Websitewww.sbs.com.au/aboutus/sbs-worldwatch
Availability
Terrestrial
FreeviewChannel 35

History edit

In early 2022, SBS officially launched their own Arabic and Mandarin local news bulletins on SBS On Demand and announced the launch of the WorldWatch channel.[1] The channel would also offer non-English news bulletins in more than 30 languages from around the world; most of these were transferred from the World Watch programming block, which had aired on SBS and SBS Viceland.[4] The channel was launched on 23 May 2022 on channel 35, along with the SBS-produced Arabic and Mandarin bulletins.[2][3] Both SBS and SBS Viceland continued to air English news bulletins from international news channels in morning and midday timeslots under the current World Watch block.[4]

Programming edit

News bulletins edit

Local news bulletins edit

(aired on Weeknights)

  • SBS Arabic News
  • SBS Mandarin News

Repeat programs edit

(in English language with Arabic and Mandarin subtitles)

Current international news bulletins edit

LanguageCountry of originNetwork/BroadcasterProgram name
Arabic  FranceFrance 24باريس مباشر (Live from Paris)
Armenian  ArmeniaARMTV (Armenia 1)Լուրեր (Lurer)
Bengali  BangladeshChannel iসংবাদ (Sambāda)
Bosnian  Bosnia and HerzegovinaBHRT (BHT 1)Dnevnik
Croatian  CroatiaHRT (HRT 1)Dnevnik HRT
Dutch  NetherlandsNPO/NOS (NPO 1 via BVN)NOS Journaal
Filipino  PhilippinesABS-CBN (Kapamilya Channel, TeleRadyo Serbisyo), A2Z (via TFC)TV Patrol
French  FranceFrance Télévisions (France 2)Journal de 20 heures
German  GermanyZDFheute-journal
Greek  GreeceERT (ERT1/ERT News via ERT World)ΕΡΤ Ειδήσεις (ERT Eidiseis)
Gujarati  IndiaDD (DD Girnar)ઇવનિંગ ન્યૂઝ (Evening News)
HindiDD (DD News)न्यूज़ @ 10 (News @ 10)
Hungarian  HungaryMTVA (Duna/M1 via Duna World)Híradó
Indonesian  IndonesiaTVRI (TVRI Nasional)Klik Indonesia Petang
Italian  ItalyRAI (Rai 1 via Rai Italia)TG1
Japanese  JapanNHK (NHK G via NHK World Premium)NHK News 7
Korean  South KoreaYTN (via YTN WORLD)뉴스N이슈 (News N Issue)
Macedonian  North MacedoniaMRT (MRT 1)Dnevnik MRT
Malayalam  IndiaDD (DD Malayalam)വാർത്തകൾ (Vārttakaḷ)
Maltese  MaltaPBS (TVM)L-Aħbarijiet
Nepali    NepalNepal Televisionनेपाल टेलिभिजन समाचार (Nepal Television News)
Polish  PolandPolsat Group (Polsat/Polsat News)Wydarzenia
Portuguese  PortugalRTP (RTP1 via RTP Internacional)Telejornal
Punjabi  IndiaPTC NewsPTC News
Romanian  RomaniaTVR (TVR 1 via TVRi)Telejurnal
Serbian  SerbiaRTS (RTS1)Дневник 2 (Dnevnik 2)
Sinhalese  Sri LankaSLRC (Rupavahini)රූපවාහිනී ප්‍රවෘත්ති (Rupavahini News)
Spanish  SpainRTVE (La 1 via TVE Internacional)Telediario
Somali  SomaliaUniversal TVWarka
Tamil  IndiaPolimer TVசெய்திகள் (Ceytikaḷ)
Thai  ThailandThai PBSThai PBS News
Turkish  TurkeyTRT (TRT Haber)Öǧle Ana Haber
Ukrainian  UkraineSuspilne (Pershyi)United News
Urdu  PakistanPTV (PTV Home/PTV News via PTV Global)Khabarnama

Former international news bulletins edit

LanguageCountry of originNetwork/BroadcasterProgram name
Cantonese  Hong KongTVB (TVB Jade International)[a]TVB News Bulletin (overseas edition)
French  FranceTV5Monde[a]64' Le Monde en français
German  GermanyDW (DW Deutsch)Der Tag
Tamil  IndiaDD (DD Podhigai)[a]செய்திகள் (Ceytikal)

Late night simulcasts edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Currently available on SBS On Demand

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Quinn, Karl. "Australian news in Mandarin and Arabic? It's about to hit free-to-air TV thanks to SBS". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  2. ^ a b Song, Darcy (22 May 2022). "SBS launches free-to-air multilingual news channel, SBS WorldWatch". Mumbrella. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  3. ^ a b "SBS Just Launched 'WorldWatch', A Multilingual News Channel". Junkee. 30 May 2022. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  4. ^ a b "SBS WorldWatch". SBS Corporate. Special Broadcasting Service. Retrieved 23 May 2022.

External links edit