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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 ...
In 1958, WTWO was sold to the Rines family's Maine Broadcasting System, owner of WLBZ radio (620 AM), WCSH-AM-TV in Portland, and WRDO in Augusta. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] The new ownership changed the station's call letters to WLBZ-TV that June to match its new radio sister (which the Rines had owned since 1944). [ 9 ] (
1. Maine shootings. At least 16 people were killed in two mass shootings in Lewiston, Maine, on Wednesday, according to multiple law enforcement sources. Hundreds of officers are searching for a ...
WPXT (channel 51) is a television station in Portland, Maine, United States, affiliated with The CW. It is owned by Hearst Television alongside Poland Spring–licensed ABC affiliate WMTW (channel 8). The two stations share studios on Ledgeview Drive in Westbrook; WPXT's transmitter is located in West Baldwin, Maine.
A young girl injured in a mass shooting at a Maine bowling alley asked a heartbreaking question during a live TV interview. Zoey Levesque, 10, was attending practice with her youth league at Just ...
It was the first station in Portland, and one of the earliest in Maine, signing on the air on July 13, 1925. WCSH was a charter affiliate of the NBC Red Network . [ 4 ] It carried NBC's schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows and big band broadcasts during the " Golden Age of Radio ".
The Desert of Maine is a natural curiosity and privately owned tourist attraction whose main feature is a 20-acre (8.1 ha) expanse of barren glacial sand in the town of Freeport, Maine, United States. The area was de‑vegetated by poor farming practices in the 19th century.