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It is owned by the Western New York Public Broadcasting Association (doing business as Buffalo Toronto Public Media) alongside NPR member WBFO (88.7 FM) and classical music radio station WNED-FM (94.5). The three stations share studios in Horizons Plaza at 140 Lower Terrace in downtown Buffalo; WNED-TV's transmitter is located in Grand Island ...
WBFO (88.7 FM) is a non-commercial, listener-supported, public radio station in Buffalo, New York.It is owned by the Western New York Public Broadcasting Association, doing business as Buffalo Toronto Public Media.
WNED-FM (94.5 MHz) is a non-commercial radio station licensed to Buffalo, New York.WNED-FM offers a classical music format. It is owned by the Western New York Public Broadcasting Association (formerly the Western New York Educational TV Association), doing business as Buffalo Toronto Public Media.
Western New York Public Broadcasting Association: Public radio: WUFO: 1080 AM: Amherst: Visions Multi Media Group – WUFO Radio LLC: Classic hip hop: WUMX: 102.5 FM: Rome: Galaxy Utica Licensee LLC: Hot adult contemporary: WUNY: 89.5 FM: Utica: Public Broadcasting Council of Central New York: Classical: WUSB: 90.1 FM: Stony Brook: State ...
Western New York Public Broadcasting Association 30.3 WSKA (satellite of WSKG) Corning: WSKG Public Telecommunications Council 21.2 WLIW: Garden City: WNET.org 21.3 WXXI-TV: Rochester: WXXI Public Broadcasting Council: 4:3: 17.3 WMHT: Schenectady: WMHT Educational Telecommunications 16:9: 24.2 WCNY-TV: Syracuse: Public Broadcasting Council of ...
The station changed formats and owners (one of which was the Buffalo Courier-Express) in the early 1970s until the Western New York Public Broadcasting Association, who had owned WNED-TV since 1959, bought WEBR and sister station WREZ-FM (now WNED-FM) in 1975. WEBR adopted an (almost) all-news format a year later (although an evening and ...
The station signed on the air as WNEQ-TV on May 13, 1987, and was the second public television outlet serving the Buffalo market.It was operated under an educational license and was sister station to WNED-TV (channel 17), which had a commercial license but operated as an educational station (WNED-TV operated on channel 17 because of the donation of equipment to it by WBUF-TV, a defunct ...
Channel 49 was added to Buffalo in lieu of channel 76 in February 1966 as part of a national overhaul of UHF channel allocations. [3] The Beta Television Corporation obtained the construction permit that June, [4] but despite attempts to sell the permit to Evans Broadcasting Corporation and New York City's WPIX, [5] [6] as well as a call sign change from WBAU-TV to WBBU-TV, [7] the ...