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Area served City of license Call Sign VC RF Network Notes Detroit: WHNE-LD 3 3 Light TV: getTV on 3.2, Corner Store TV on 3.3, HSN2 on 3.4, SBN on 3.5, Movies! on 3.6, Retro TV on 3.7, Jewelry Television on 3.8, NewsNet on 3.9, Rev'n on 3.10, Fun Roads on 3.11, Heartland on 3.12
WTVS (channel 56) is a PBS member television station in Detroit, Michigan, United States, owned by Detroit Public Media.Its main studios are located at the Riley Broadcast Center and HD Studios on Clover Court in Wixom, [2] with an additional studio at the Maccabees Building in Midtown Detroit. [3]
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Sparton Corporation, a Jackson-based radio manufacturer, won the license for channel 13 in June 1953 was assigned the call letters WWTV. [3] In November 1953, Sparton sent advertising agents and "queens" to New York to drum up advertising by tell the "Northern Michigan Story" with programming expected to start on December 15. [4]
Andrews Broadcasting Corp. Classical WAVC: 93.9 FM: Mio: West Central Michigan Media Ministries: Religious WAWB-LP: 107.3 FM: West Branch: West Branch Seventh Day Adventist Broadcasting, Inc. Christian WAWL-LP: 103.5 FM: Grand Haven: Tri-Cities Broadcasting Foundation: Classic Rock News Sports WAWM: 98.9 FM: Petoskey: Educational Media ...
Download QR code; Print/export ... This is a list of United States television stations which broadcast using the ATSC 3.0 ... ME: WPFO: 17 WMTW: ABC: 8: WCBB: PBS:
The station signed on the air on August 15, 1949, as WLAV-TV, originally broadcasting on VHF channel 7; it was the fourth television station in Michigan and the first located outside of Detroit. The station was originally owned by Grand Rapids businessman Leonard Adrian Versluis, who in 1940 had also signed on Grand Rapids' second radio station ...
In 1969, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) began to impose restrictions on the common ownership of print and broadcast media in the same market.The combination of the Detroit News and WWJ-AM-FM-TV was given grandfathered protection from the new regulations, but by the mid-to-late 1970s, the Evening News Association was under pressure to break up its Detroit cluster voluntarily.