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WESH (channel 2) is a television station licensed to Daytona Beach, Florida, United States, serving the Orlando area as an affiliate of NBC. It is owned by Hearst Television alongside Clermont -licensed CW affiliate WKCF (channel 18).
"United States AM Stations: Florida", Yearbook of Radio and Television, New York: Radio Television Daily, 1964, OCLC 7469377 – via Internet Archive + FM Stations on the Air: Florida External links [ edit ]
This is a list of broadcast television stations that are licensed in the U.S. state of Florida. ... WESH: NBC: MeTV on 2.2, Story Television on 2.3 Orlando: Orlando: 6 26
WESH 2 Sunrise viewers can look forward to seeing a brand-new face in the mornings beginning next week, as Meaghan Mackey is joining the morning team as the first warning traffic anchor and ...
Between Daytona Beach station WESH (channel 2) moving its tower closer to Orlando, making it the NBC affiliate for both cities, and the launch of WLOF-TV, Central Florida at last had three stations airing the programming of the three major networks; ABC programs migrated from Orlando's WDBO-TV (channel 6) and WESH in the weeks that followed ...
Daytona Beach/Orlando: WESH: 2.2: 11: NBC: Hearst Television: Airs Matter Of Fact Saturday Mornings at 7:30AM. Gainesville: WCJB-TV: 20.3: 16: ABC: Gray Television: January 30, 2018: Jacksonville: WFOX-TV: 30.2: 14: Fox: Cox Media Group: Primary affiliation with a secondary MyNetworkTV affiliation; Me-TV programming airs in select time periods ...
Orlando, Florida: WDBO-TV 6 (now WKMG-TV) 1954–1957 (secondary) CBS WESH 2 Secondary affiliation, with CBS as its primary affiliation. Lost NBC affiliation when Daytona Beach-based NBC affiliate WESH boosted its signal to cover Orlando. Melbourne-Orlando, Florida: WIRB-TV/WOPX-TV 56 (now on channel 48) 1993–1998, 2003–2005 (secondary)
Press Broadcasting and Brevard Community College then approached the FCC with the proposal to swap WKCF to channel 18 and WRES to channel 68. Two Orlando stations vehemently opposed the switch: WMFE-TV (channel 24), Orlando's public television station, and WOFL (channel 35), the market's established independent outlet. Both feared that the ...