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WEZY may mean: WEZY (FM) , a radio station (105.7 FM) licensed to serve Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, United States WEZY-LD , a low-power television station (channel 18, virtual 11) licensed to serve Delphi, Indiana, United States; see List of television stations in Indiana
WEZY (92.7 FM, "La Mas Grande") is a Regional Mexican formatted radio station licensed to Kewaunee, Wisconsin, that serves the Green Bay area. The station is owned by Magnum Broadcasting. WEZY's main signal can be heard from Sturgeon Bay, where the station's main office is located, south to Manitowoc and west to the Green Bay metropolitan area.
KQEG-CD has two translators of its own: WPDR-LD (channel 35, formerly WEZY-LP), located in Tomah, Wisconsin; and WBDL-LD (channel 18, formerly WBOO-LP), licensed to Elk Mound, Wisconsin. WBDL-LP was silent due to the station's former frequency (UHF 45) placement in the 600 MHz band that was cleared during the 2016 FCC spectrum auction . [ 5 ]
Free TV Networks is an American specialized digital multicasting and advertising-supported video on demand network media company. The company owns and operates three broadcast television networks. The company was founded and is led by broadcasting veteran Jonathan Katz, who previously launched what is now the Scripps Networks division of ...
Channel 23 (Madrid, HD) Squirrel is a Spanish free-to-air film-centric channel with a general format undefined by any certain film era owned by Squirrel Media. The channel was launched on 7 January 2025, replacing Disney Channel in Spain on DTT .
Chris Morisse Vizza, a 10-year veteran of WLFI-TV, was WPBY-LD's first news director. Sarah Blakely was the station's inaugural news anchor, broadcasting from a Waypoint-owned studio in Little Rock, Arkansas , [ 15 ] airing segments from Lafayette-based reporters. [ 16 ]
Free TV (Italy), an Italian regional television channel; FreeTV Australia, the industry body representing free-to-air Australian TV networks; Free TV Alliance, a collaboration between four European free digital satellite television broadcasters to promote free satellite TV; Free TV Networks, an American digital multicasting and video-on-demand ...
At the end of 2011, the launch of DMAX, a specialty irritation television channel on documentaries and factuals fully owned by Unidad Editorial, was announced. The new channel replaced Veo TV on digital terrestrial television. [1] DMAX began broadcasting on January 12, 2012. [2]