Comcast to Launch E! News Asia in Hong Kong
By wchung | 20 Mar, 2026
One of America’s best-known entertainment news shows is launching an Asian edition.
Los Angeles-based E! Entertainment Television will launch a weekly half-hour edition in Asia that combines both Hollywood and regional entertainment news in the second quarter of 2010, the international media arm of U.S. Internet and cable TV operator Comcast Corp., said in a statement sent Tuesday.
“E! News Asia” is part of a new push for localized content in Asia, Hong Kong-based Comcast International Media Group said.
E! Entertainment Television has already launched local editions of “E! News” in Italy, France, Germany, Poland and Latin America. The company will also add subtitles to more of its shows that air in Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand, the statement said.
“The Asia-Pacific region is one of the global media industry’s most exciting areas of growth … The expansion of our activities to include local production is the next stage of our business’ evolution as viewership reaches critical mass,” Christine Fellowes, the Asia-Pacific managing director for Comcast International, was quoted as saying in the statement.
E! programming is seen in more than 120 countries, reaching 600 million homes, according to Comcast.
11/3/2009 3:49 AM MIN LEE, AP Entertainment Writer HONG KONG
Articles
- Netflix to Livestream Saturday BTS Concert from Seoul
- Tesla to Buy $2.9 Billion Worth of Chinese Solar-Panel Production Equipment
- OpenAI to Combine ChatGPT, Codex and Browser into One Superapp
- Jeff Bezos Seeks $100 Billion to Transform Manufacturing with AI-Based Automation
- Americans Think Trump Lying About Not Sending Ground Troops to Mideast
- The Real Difference Between Luxury Living in New York and China
- Takaichi Pressed to Join Hormuz Escort Service with Pearl Harbor Comparison
- Xiaomi's Lei Jun Quadruples AI Budget to $8.7 Billion As MiMo-V2-Pro Excites Developers
- Samsung to Supply HBM4 Chips for OpenAI's Custom Processor Project
- OpenClaw Craze Turns Ordinary Chinese into 'Lobster' Farmers
