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Listed in local Detroit TV guides Stevenson/Wheatley-area transmitter Detroit, Michigan: CBEFT: Windsor: SRC: No CBEFT formerly an originating station on UHF 78, and later channel 54, that was listed in TV guides in metro Detroit. Station moved to analog channel 35 in 2011, but was decommissioned by CBC and went off the air in July, 2012. Port ...
Start TV on 62.2, Dabl on 62.3, Fave TV on 62.4 Detroit: ... This is a list of broadcast television stations that are licensed in the U.S. state of Michigan.
WPCH-TV (formerly known as WTBS-TV) is associated with the U.S. superstation TBS, formerly as an Atlanta feed of the aforementioned superstation, but was relaunched as a local station geared towards the Atlanta market in 2007. As such, the channel does not air nationally in the United States.
CBET-DT (channel 9) is a CBC Television station in Windsor, Ontario, Canada.The station's studios are located on Riverside Drive West and Crawford Avenue (near the Detroit River) in Downtown Windsor, and its transmitter is located near Concession Road 12 in Essex.
Digital television in Canada; Multichannel television in Canada; List of Canadian stations available in the United States; List of United States over-the-air television networks; List of TV markets and major sports teams; List of the Caribbean television channels; Lists of television stations in North America; List of radio stations in North ...
The Detroit television market is the 14th largest in the United States, [2] and it has additional viewers in Ontario, Canada (Windsor and its surrounding area on broadcast and cable). Detroit is home to owned-and-operated stations of CBS, Fox, and Daystar and two station duopolies owned by Paramount Global and E.W. Scripps Company.
WTVS is one of five Detroit television stations available in Canada on cable through Shaw Broadcast Services and on satellite provider Shaw Direct; it began to be distributed by Cancom (now Shaw Broadcast Services) in 1983 as the PBS station signal for Canadian cable television systems too distant to receive a border station over-the-air. Since ...
CKLW first came on the air on June 2, 1932, [3] as CKOK on 540 kilocycles, (which until 2013 was the long-time home of today's CBEF [4]) with 5,000 watts of power.The station was built by George Storer [5] and was sold to a group of Windsor-area businessmen led by Malcolm Campbell, operating as "Essex Broadcasters, Ltd." CKOK became CKLW (and moved to 840 kHz) [6] in 1933, when Essex ...