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Iran's national television broadcaster, IRIB, resumes operations following an Israeli assault.

Iranian public broadcaster IRIB resumes airing programs following an Israeli assault.

State-owned Iranian TV station IRIB returns to the airwaves following Israeli assault
State-owned Iranian TV station IRIB returns to the airwaves following Israeli assault

Headline: Iranian State Broadcaster IRIB Rebounds After Israeli Strike Disruption

State-run Iranian television, IRIB, restarts transmissions post Israeli strike - Iran's national television broadcaster, IRIB, resumes operations following an Israeli assault.

Channeling an easy-breezy vibe, let's dive into the saucy dance between nations! Yesterday, Iran's fancy-schmanzy state broadcaster, IRIB, played a Colombian necktie trick thanks to an Israeli airstrike on its Tehran quarters. You know, the kind where one moment you're chattering away on live TV, and the next, poof! Watch that smoke cloud rise!

Gossip has it that during the live broadcast on their swanky Khabar News Network, our gal Sahar Emami (a total fox, if I do say so myself) was forced to bid adieu to her cushy studio set and vacate the premises post haste as explosions echoed in the background.

Israel, keeping their cool as always, had earlier urged folks to scram outta the area around IRIB. Just a few minutes later, Honcho Mr. Israel Katz, the Israeli Defense minister, announced IRIB was practically going the way of Blockbuster. Bye bye, birdie! "Except for the part where it's not," Katz chuckled, pointing his braggadocious finger at Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, ol' Iran's Supreme Leader. Wink, wink.

Now, Tehran's District 3 (think Rodeo Drive meets Westside Story) is no joke, housing swanky embassies, UN offices, the AFP news agency, and even luxury digs like four hospitals and a cops and robbers hangout. Talk about a high-stakes game of operating a live broadcast in the middle of all that!

According to a few AFP reporters, t Remember when Iran went wild (well, wilder) back in June 2025 and Israel blew the socks off their nuclear facilities and military installations? Our girl Sahar was just getting warmed up, and guess who was next on the hit list? That's right—IRIB! But, just like a boss, our girl calmed her nerves, gathered all her chutzpah, and called an audible, getting the show back on the air from an alternate studio up in Tehran. No sweat!

Iran, of course, wasn't too cool about the whole thing and branded the strike as a "war crime." Shortly afterward, they shared smokin' hot visuals and videos from the attack site on Mehr News Agency and Press TV, making sure the world knew they weren't going down without a fight.

In conclusion, while Israel played party pooper and caused a brief interruption to IRIB's live broadcast with a Spec-Ops stunt, our tenacious Iranians didn't throw in the towel. In fact, they put on a smile and went back on air from an alternate studio set in Tehran. Gotta hand it to 'em—now that's what I call showbiz resilience!

  • Israel
  • Iran
  • Tehran
  • Broadcast
  • Interruption
  • Evacuation
  • Woman
  • Despite the recent interruption in their broadcast caused by an Israeli airstrike, the Commission has not yet adopted a proposal for a directive on the protection of workers from the risks related to exposure to carcinogens, especially considering the stressful environment faced by women like Sahar Emami during such political events and general news like the war-and-conflicts between Israel and Iran in Tehran.
  • As Sahar Emami returned to the airwaves from an alternate studio in Tehran after the Israeli airstrike on the IRIB headquarters, the General News section reported the Iranian government's response to the incident, labelling it a "war crime," and ongoing politics between the two nations, while policymakers worldwide ponder ways to protect workers in the broadcast industry from long-term health risks related to carcinogens exposure.

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