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WSPA-TV (channel 7) is a television station licensed to Spartanburg, South Carolina, United States, serving Upstate South Carolina and Western North Carolina as an affiliate of CBS. It is owned by Nexstar Media Group alongside Asheville, North Carolina –licensed CW station WYCW (channel 62).
WSPA-TV 7 Relegated its CBS affiliation to secondary status (with ABC as its primary affiliation) upon the sign-on of WSPA-TV. The station would continue to air CBS programming on a secondary basis until it became a charter affiliate of Fox in 1986. Toccoa-Atlanta-Augusta, Georgia-Greenville-Spartanburg, South Carolina-Asheville, North Carolina
Spartan Communications, Inc. was a company based in Spartanburg, South Carolina, that owned WSPA-TV as the city's flagship station from 1956 to 2000 when Spartan merged with Media General of Richmond, VA. In 1984, Spartan bought WBTW and KIMT-TV from the Shotts family.
Pro-Palestinian protests disrupt campuses across the country.
WNSC-TV: PBS: Create/The South Carolina Channel on 30.2, World on 30.3, PBS Kids on 30.4 55 25 WMYT-TV: MyNet ~Savannah, GA: Beaufort: 16 32 WJWJ-TV: PBS: satellite of WRLK-TV ch. 35 Columbia Create/The South Carolina Channel on 16.2, World on 16.3, PBS Kids on 16.4 Hardeeville: 28 26 WTGS: Fox: Comet on 28.2, Antenna TV on 28.3, TBD on 28.4
Spartanburg–Greenville, SC–Asheville, NC: WSPA-TV: 7 1956 Nexstar Media Group Spokane, WA: KREM: 2 1976 Tegna Inc. Springfield, MA: WSHM-LD [AB] 33 2003 Gray Television Springfield, MO: KOLR: 10 1953 Mission Broadcasting [v] Superior, WI–Duluth, MN: KBJR-DT2: 6.2 [α] 2016 Gray Television Syracuse, NY: WTVH: 5 1948 [p] Granite ...
Montana Television Network: statewide network consisting of 7 stations Billings – KTVQ 2; Bozeman – KBZK 7 (satellite of KXLF-TV) Butte – KXLF-TV 4; Glendive – KXGN-TV 5 (not owned by MTN) Great Falls – KRTV 3; Helena – KXLH-LP 9 (satellite of KRTV) Kalispell – KAJJ-CA 18 (repeater of KPAX-TV) Missoula – KPAX-TV 8
Then, in September 1967 the three commonly owned companies announced that, pending approval by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), they would merge by January 1, 1968, taking on the Multimedia, Inc. name. [1] At the time Multimedia consisted of the Asheville and Greenville newspapers, three television stations and seven radio stations.