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WYFF (channel 4) is a television station in Greenville, South Carolina, United States, serving Upstate South Carolina and Western North Carolina as an affiliate of NBC.Owned by Hearst Television, the station maintains studios on Rutherford Street (west of US 276) in northwest Greenville, and its transmitter is located near Caesars Head State Park in northwestern Greenville County.
WNSC-TV: PBS: Create/The South Carolina Channel on 30.2, World on 30.3, PBS Kids on 30.4 55 25 WMYT-TV: MyNet ~Savannah, GA: Beaufort: 16 32 WJWJ-TV: PBS: satellite of WRLK-TV ch. 35 Columbia Create/The South Carolina Channel on 16.2, World on 16.3, PBS Kids on 16.4 Hardeeville: 28 26 WTGS: Fox: Comet on 28.2, Antenna TV on 28.3, TBD on 28.4
Thoms reached a deal to sell WANC-TV to Pappas Telecasting of Visalia, California, for $206,000 in June 1979. [6] The sale became effective September 14, and twelve days later, on September 26, the call letters were changed to WHNS. [7] WANC-TV's signal had only reached Asheville and did not extend beyond the South Carolina state line. [8]
TV: All games will be carried on Sinclair Broadcasting stations across South Carolina. Affiliates are WMYA (My40 Asheville-Greenville), WACH (57.2/1250/Columbia), WCIV (MyTV Charleston) and WWMB ...
The nominal main studio for WMYA-TV is the WLOS news bureau on Villa Road in Greenville, South Carolina; WMYA-TV's transmitter is located in Fountain Inn, South Carolina. Founded as WAIM-TV in 1953, the station primarily broadcast local network programming to the Anderson area, serving as an affiliate of ABC and CBS after 1956.
WGGS-TV (channel 16) is a religious independent television station licensed to Greenville, South Carolina, United States, serving Upstate South Carolina and Western North Carolina. Owned by Carolina Christian Broadcasting, it is sister to Hendersonville, North Carolina –licensed low-power Telemundo affiliate WDKT-LD (channel 31).
Three other stations in the Greenville market used the WFBC call sign: The original AM station owned by the Peace family, owners of the Greenville News and Greenville Piedmont, and broadcasting on 1330 kHz, now WYRD; television channel 4, signed on by the family in 1953, which used the calls until 1983 (when it became WYFF); and TV channel 40 ...
WLOS (channel 13) is a television station licensed to Asheville, North Carolina, United States, broadcasting ABC and MyNetworkTV programming to Western North Carolina and Upstate South Carolina. It is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group in an effective duopoly with WMYA-TV (channel 40) in Anderson, South Carolina.