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From 2000 until the host's retirement in 2019, the News Center Maine stations aired human interest and outdoors program Bill Green's Maine; Green had gotten his start at WLBZ before moving to Portland and WCSH in 1981. [43] [44] [45] Reruns now air weekdays at 12:30PM, replacing Tegna's now-canceled in-house talk show Daily Blast Live.
WMED-TV: PBS: satellite of WCBB ch. 10 Augusta/Portland: Portland: 6 31 WCSH: NBC: True Crime Network on 6.2, Antenna TV on 6.3, Quest on 6.4 Portland: Poland Spring: 8 8 WMTW: ABC: MeTV on 8.2, Laff on 8.3 Augusta: 10 20 WCBB: PBS: Create on 10.2, World on 10.3, PBS Kids on 10.4 Portland: 13 15 WGME-TV: CBS: TBD on 13.2, Stadium on 13.3 ...
WPXT would not face any competition in the time slot until February 5, 2007, when current Fox affiliate WPFO entered into a similar arrangement with CBS affiliate WGME-TV. On November 6, 2008, WCSH moved the WPXT show to its second digital subchannel affiliated with NBC Weather Plus. As a result, WLBZ's production involvement in the newscast ...
This courtroom scene is not real – it is part of an episode of Wild Crime, a Lone Wolf Media and ABC News series, shot at York County Courthouse in Alfred on June 19.
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Once Upon a Time (TV series) episodes (8 C, 1 P, 33 F) Pages in category "Television episodes set in Maine" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
The 870 frequency is now WLVP and simulcasts an oldies format with WLAM while 106.7 FM is now WXTP, a non-commercial Catholic radio station. An earlier FM station with the WMTW call sign (the descendant of W1XER) was not connected to WMTW-TV (having predated the station by several years) apart from also transmitting from Mount Washington.
The show was videotaped in a 1,000-acre (4.0 km 2) isolated area near Machias, Maine, and featured colonists and several members of the current Passamaquoddy tribe of Maine. Historians from Plimoth Plantation and Maine historian and archaeologist Emerson Baker of Salem State College helped to make the setting as accurate as possible.