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WCVE-TV (channel 23) is a PBS member television station in Richmond, Virginia, United States. Owned by the VPM Media Corporation (formerly known as the Commonwealth Public Broadcasting Corporation), the station maintains studios and a transmitter at 23 Sesame Street in Bon Air , a suburb of Richmond.
Charlottesville: 19 32 WCAV: CBS: Ion on 19.4, Fox on 27.1 29 2 WVIR-TV: NBC: WeatherNation on 29.2, CW on 29.3, True Crime Network on 29.5 41 26 WHTJ: PBS: PBS Plus on 41.2, World on 41.3, PBS Kids on 41.4, Create on 41.5 Charlottesville: Culpeper: 41 26 WNVC: PBS: satellite of WNVT. PBS Plus on 41.2, World on 41.3, PBS Kids on 41.4, Create on ...
This is a list of member stations of the Public Broadcasting Service, a network of non-commercial educational television stations in the United States.The list is arranged alphabetically by state and based on the station's city of license and followed in parentheses by the designated market area when different from the city of license.
New Beginning TV Network Clarksburg: Cedarville: 9 28 W28DR-D: WSWP-TV: PBS: satellite of WVPB-TV. West Virginia Channel/World on 9.2, PBS Kids on 9.3 Keyser: 24 16 W16DT-D: WNPB-TV: PBS: satellite of WVPB-TV. West Virginia Channel/World on 24.2, PBS Kids on 24.3 Huntington: Charleston: 3 27 W27EF-D: WSAZ-TV: NBC
WVPT (channel 51) is a PBS member television station in Staunton, Virginia, United States, serving the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia and West Virginia.It is a full-time satellite of Richmond-licensed WCVE-TV (channel 23) which is owned by the VPM Media Corporation.
Public broadcasting in the U.S. has often been more decentralized, and less likely to have a single network feed appear across most of the country (though some latter-day public networks such as World Channel and Create have had more in-pattern clearance than National Educational Television or its successor PBS have had). Also, local stations ...
WNVT first signed on March 1, 1972, on channel 53 as PBS member station "Northern Virginia Public TV". [7] The station, licensed to Goldvein, was owned by the Northern Virginia Educational Television Association, which had been formed in 1965, and served the Virginia side of the Washington, D.C., television market.
The VPM Media Corporation, formerly known as the Commonwealth Public Broadcasting Corporation and Central Virginia Educational Television Corporation, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that is the group owner of Public Broadcasting Service member public television stations and National Public Radio member stations in central and western Virginia.