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These stations span across 112 designated market areas in the United States ranging from as large as New York, New York, to as small as Quincy, Illinois, and Traverse City, Michigan. [1] [2] These stations have no local operations and rely almost entirely upon outsourced programming from third parties or the 24-hour feeds of digital multicast ...
Light TV (joint venture with Mark Burnett, Roma Downey and MGM Television, sold to Allen Media Group and rebranded as TheGrio TV) Litton Entertainment (absorbed into Hearst Media Production Group ) Litton Worldwide Distribution
TV Query Broadcast Station Search. Washington DC: Federal Communications Commission. December 10, 2015. "Illinois: News and Media: Television". DMOZ. AOL. (Directory ceased in 2017) Illinois Broadcasters Association "Illinois- Television Stations". Station Index. "Illinois TV stations". Newslink. "Illinois TV Stations". Mondo Times.
City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Alpena: 6 24 WCML: PBS: Satellite of WCMU-TV ch. 14 Mount Pleasant. PBS Kids on 6.2, Create on 6.3 11 11 WBKB: CBS: NBC on 11.2, ABC on 11.3, Fox/MyNetworkTV on 11.4 Detroit: Ann Arbor: 31 24 WPXD-TV: Ion: Court TV on 31.2, Grit on 31.3, Defy TV on 31.4, TrueReal on 31.5, getTV on 31.6, Scripps News ...
Bay City-Midland, Michigan: CBMT-DT: Montreal: CBC: Yes Not carried in Flint/Saginaw areas, which have CBET instead Alpena, Michigan: CBMT-DT: Montreal: CBC: Yes Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan: CJIC-TV: Sault Ste. Marie: CBC: No Eastern Upper Peninsula only, later CBLT-TV-5, shut down on July 31, 2012 due to budget cuts. Replaced on EUP cable ...
Weigel Broadcasting Co. is an American television broadcasting company based in Chicago, Illinois, alongside its flagship station WCIU-TV (Channel 26), at 26 North Halsted Street in the Greektown neighborhood. It currently owns 25 television stations, seven digital over-the-air television networks (most notably MeTV), and one radio station.
The following is a list of over-the-air affiliates of the Home Shopping Network in the United States. The network itself owns several low-power stations throughout the United States, usually under its broadcast division Ventana Television.
As WWOR-TV, the station carried a secondary affiliation with NBC (WWOR-TV was an independent station) from 1953 until it went dark in 1955, clearing network programming not cleared by NBC's then-affiliate WBZ-TV. Then in 1958, it resumed programming as WJZB-TV, a satellite of Springfield-based NBC affiliate WWLP. WJZB-TV broke from the ...