There isn't an inch of this Flat Earth that doesn't have transmission towers and repeaters everywhere. They're even floating in the ocean, they're on planes circling the pie plate, balloons hoovering above us. There's metallic nano particles being sprayed everywhere to place a metal layer that stays afloat almost a year so we can bounce data signals across great distances.
Sat dishes are pointed at towers in the southern area because transmissions are pointed north..RIGHT !
Sorry, this just doesn't add up in the real world.
I'm old enough to remember, in the UK, the days of (1) analogue TV broadcasting in the UK, the switch to (2) terrestrial digital b/casting, and to (3) satellite.
In (1), the country had a network of TV transmitters, and these were typically on high ground. The broadcast spectrum was divided into channels, and each broadcast channel was allocated to one of the spectrum channels. In order to avoid interference at the receiver from adjacent transmitters on the same spectrum and broadcast channel, the broadcast channels were allocated different spectrum channels on adjacent transmitters.
Point of note; TV aerials pointed at their nearest or most visible transmitter, which was not always to the South of the household.
Come (2), the same transmitter network is used, but now each digital multiplex is allocated to each spectrum channel, and because of the nature of the signal, cross-transmitter interference is less of an issue. Receivers which use this system still use the same transmitter network
Point of note; TV aerials still pointed at their nearest or most visible transmitter, which was not always to the South.
Come (3), every satellite dish in the land points South, without exception. Even those on the south coast of the land.
Point of note; If this was being done from land-based transmitters, then it's clearly not being done from the existing transmitter network that took decades to build across the land. Satellite TV was, in practical terms, available overnight from the launch date, with no apparent construction of a new transmitter network, and, in marked contrast to the previous systems, no need to point dishes at either high ground, nor at the nearest local transmitter.
Sorry, but merely claiming that it's done from towers all over the land does not compute. Where would the towers be for the dishes on the south coast? They point south, too. Out to sea.
The English Channel is one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world, if there were TV transmitters there, someone would have noticed by now. There would be images online. They would be on shipping charts.
Where would you suggest they would be? France? Spain? How would that work? Would these countries allow the UK to site their transmitters there? Is there any proof they have?
If your next suggestion is that the signal comes from cell towers, that doesn't wash either. Sat dishes don't point at cell towers.
What's left? Metal particles in the sky? Sorry, that would have sat dishes pointing in different directions.
Inescapable conclusion; all these satellite dishes are pointing at a satellite (group) in geostationary orbit.