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The following is a listing of affiliates for Antenna TV, [1] a classic television network, which was launched on January 1, 2011, by Tribune Broadcasting [2] and is now owned by Nexstar Media Group. [ 3 ]
Channel 2: WGRZ - - Buffalo, 2 On Your Side.Originally WGR prior to 1983. Channel 4: WIVB-TV - - Buffalo, News 4.Call letters stand for We're IV 4 Buffalo; originally WBEN-TV until 1977
Mork & Mindy (now on Antenna TV and Rewind TV) Mr. and Mrs. North; Movin' On; The Munsters Today; My Bedbugs; Mystery Science Theater 3000 (now on IFC and Z Living) The New Zorro; Night Gallery; O'Hara, U.S. Treasury; Perry Mason (now on MeTV) Peter Gunn (now airs on MeTV) Police Surgeon; Susie* Quincy, M.E. Racket Squad* Rawhide (now on MeTV ...
(WBTS-CD transmits over full-power WGBX-TV's spectrum, but is excluded as it is classified as a low-power license). A blue background indicates a station transmitting in the ATSC 3.0 format over-the-air; details about the station's alternate availability in the original ATSC format are contained in its article.
Formerly known as Electronic Program Guide, Prevue Guide, Prevue Channel, TV Guide Channel, TV Guide Network and TVGN Rewind TV: Nexstar Media Group: 2021 Yes-----Classic TV series RFD-TV: Rural Media Group: 2000 --Yes-- TBS: Warner Bros. Discovery: 1967 -Yes: Yes 91,671,000: Formerly known as WJRJ-TV, WTCG-TV, SuperStation WTBS and TBS ...
It was the first commercially successful UHF station in Western New York; previous efforts on the UHF dial, including WBES-TV (channel 59), WBUF-TV (channel 17), and WNYP-TV (channel 26) all had failed within a few years of their debuts. Ultravision Broadcasting sold the station to Whitehaven Entertainment Corporation in 1977.
WGRZ-TV studios in downtown Buffalo, New York as seen in August 2021. The station first signed on the air on August 14, 1954, as WGR-TV, owned by the WGR Corporation, along with WGR (550 AM). [4] WGR-TV started out as an NBC affiliate sharing the 184 Barton Street studios of UHF outlet WBUF-TV (Channel 17).
Sales of TV Guide began to reverse course with the 4–10 September 1953, "Fall Preview" issue, which had an average circulation of 1,746,327 copies; by the mid-1960s, TV Guide had become the most widely circulated magazine in the United States. [9] Print TV listings were a common feature of newspapers from the late-1950s to the mid-2000s.