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WPSD-TV shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 6, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 32, [4] using virtual channel 6.
Paxton Media Group of Paducah, Kentucky, is a privately held media company with holdings that include newspapers and a TV station, WPSD-TV in Paducah. David M. Paxton is president and CEO. The company owns 32 daily newspapers and numerous weekly newspapers, mostly in the southern United States. Daily circulation totals 350,000.
Local 6 can refer to the moniker used by the following stations: WKMG-TV channel 6, a CBS affiliate in Orlando, Florida (used from 2001 to 2015) WPSD-TV channel 6, ...
From 2006 to September 30, 2010, NBC affiliate WPSD-TV (owned by the Paxton Media Group) produced a nightly prime time newscast for KBSI through a news share agreement. [14] When the WPSD newscast started, KBSI competed with another nightly half-hour newscast at 9 p.m. on the area's low-powered CW affiliates WQTV-LP/WQWQ-LP. That newscast ...
Jason Lindsey aka "Mr. Science" is a science teacher, author, meteorologist, and one of only seven STEM-Certified Master Trainers in the US.. [1] Lindsey produces and hosts a popular television segment called Hooked on Science.
He also spent a short stint as a sports anchor at WBBJ, before moving to WPSD-TV in Paducah, Kentucky in 1989 as weekend news anchor/meteorologist. [1] Jetton is a second cousin of the late Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Nat Caldwell of the Nashville Tennessean. Jetton left local television in 2007 to concentrate on music.
On January 19, 1951, WKYB moved to 570 kHz; this allowed it to operate at night. [6] Paducah Newspapers sold WKYB to Bruce Barrington, owner of WEW in St. Louis, in 1957; the sale came as the company prepared to launch television station WPSD-TV. [7] WKYB, along with WKYB-FM 93.3, was sold to Arthur C. Shofield for $140,000 in 1962. [8]
This is a list of full-service television stations in the United States having call signs which begin with the letter W. Stations licensed to transmit under low-power specifications—ex., WOCV-CD, W16DQ-D and WIFR-LD—have not been included.