MASTV
Company type | Sociedad anonima de capital variable |
---|---|
Industry | Telecommunication |
Founded | 1989 |
Defunct | July 2014 |
Headquarters | México |
Products | Wireless cable television [citation needed] |
Parent | MVS Comunicaciones Dish Mexico |
Website | MASTV old site |
MASTV [clarification needed] was a Mexican wireless television company [citation needed]. The company belonged to MVS Comunicaciones. The company offered service to 11 cities in Mexico; Mexico City, Guadalajara, Leon, Mérida, Monterrey, Pachuca, Queretaro, San Luis Potosi, Toluca, Tuxtla Gutierrez, and Villahermosa.[1] The company closed operations in July 2014 [citation needed] [why?], and subscribers were migrated to parent operator Dish Mexico.
History
The system started operations on September 1, 1989 as MVS Multivisión in Mexico City. It later expanded to 10 other markets across Mexico. In 2002, MVS Multivision changed its name to MASTV [why?] [citation needed]. MVS and Echostar Corporation operate the DTH [clarification needed] system Dish Mexico.
Channels
Before the gradual shutdown of the company in 2014, the system offered 17 channels, including 5 of MVS own channels (52MX, Exa TV, Multicinema, Multipremier and Cinelatino) which are bolded on the list. All channels were transmitted either subtitled or in Spanish. MASTV distributes all these channels on the same number in all the cities it serves.[2]
CH | Network |
51 | Cartoon Network |
52 | TLC |
53 | Universal Channel |
54 | Fox Sports |
55 | TNT |
56 | 52MX |
57 | Exa TV |
58 | The Film Zone |
59 | Multicinema |
60 | Multipremier |
61 | History |
62 | Nick Jr. |
63 | Space |
64 | Cine Latino |
65 | TV Guide |
66 | SyFy |
67 | Utilisima |
References
- ^ What is MASTV? Archived 2011-12-31 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ MASTV channels Archived 2011-12-31 at the Wayback Machine
External links
- MASTV Web site (redirects to a video showing the end of the service) Template:Es icon
- Official website MVS Comunicaciones Template:Es icon