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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.
6 19 WPSD-TV: NBC: Cozi TV on 6.2, Antenna TV on 6.3 29 23 WKPD: PBS: satellite of WKLE. PBS Encore on 29.2, Kentucky Channel on 29.3, PBS Kids on 29.4 49 25 WDKA: MyNet: Charge! on 49.2, TBD on 49.3, The Nest on 49.4, Dabl on 49.5 Pikeville: 22 23 WKPI-TV: PBS: satellite of WKLE. PBS Encore on 22.2, Kentucky Channel on 22.3, PBS Kids on 22.4 ...
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, ...
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.
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.
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 ...
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]