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YurView Louisiana (previously Cox 4) is an American local cable-only public, educational, and government access (PEG) cable TV station in Baton Rouge, New Orleans, and Lafayette owned by Cox Communications. It first signed on as Cox 4 in 2001. In February 2017, Cox rebranded the channel as YurView Louisiana and began offering the channel in HD. [1]
Family Vision TV 20 21 K21OM-D: Ion Mystery: Jewelry TV on 20.2, Defy TV on 20.3, Blank on 20.4, True Real 20.5, Newsy 20.6 Lafayette: Opelousas: 22 22 KDCG-CD: H&I: Get 22.2, Buzzr 22.3, Twist 22.4 soon Lafayette: 32 30 KXKW-LD: NewsNet: Antenna TV on 32.2, Stadium on 32.3, True Crime Network 32.4/Twist 32.5 soon Lafayette: Iowa: 36 36 K36QM-D ...
Cox 22 Features live sports programming from the Wichita State University. YurView Las Vegas Las Vegas: Cox 96 (2004-2017) Carries San Diego Padres games produced by MLB Network [5] Also broadcasts live sports programming from University of Nevada, Las Vegas. YurView Louisiana: New Orleans Baton Rouge Lafayette: Cox 4 (2001-2017) YurView New ...
WFOX-TV: 30.2: 14: Fox: Cox Media Group: Primary affiliation with a secondary MyNetworkTV affiliation; Me-TV programming airs in select time periods on weekdays, and 24 hours a day on weekends. Miami/Fort Lauderdale: WPLG: 10.2: 10: ABC: BH Media: Naples/Fort Myers: WZVN-TV: 26.2: 28: Montclair Communications, Inc. (Hearst Television) Panama ...
Pages in category "Television stations in Lafayette, Louisiana" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
After being located on cable channel 8 since sign-on, KADN moved to channel 6 on August 15, 2006, as part of a lineup restructuring of the Cox Communications Greater Lafayette system. Archived March 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. In June 2006, owner ComCorp filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. ComCorp said in a press release viewers ...
WDSU-TV became the first television station in the New Orleans market to telecast its programming in color in 1955. WDSU-TV was the ratings leader in New Orleans for over a quarter century, largely because of its strong commitment to coverage of local events and news.
On August 1, 2015, the station added Grit and Escape (now Ion Mystery) as subchannels; they are also available on Cox Cable channels 128 and 129 in the Baton Rouge market. On June 28, 2021, WBXH-CD2 assumed the MeTV affiliation from WLFT-CD , pushing Grit and Court TV Mystery each down a subchannel.