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Pete McTee's Clubhouse was a Saturday morning television series that originally aired from September 15, 1990 [1] until 2004 on WPMT Fox-43 in York, Pennsylvania. The show starred Pete McTee (Lou Castriota, Sr.) and featured an ensemble cast including Professor Noodles (Tom Ensminger), Captain Cool (Don Schaller, 1990-2001; Michael Ovadia, 2001 ...
WPMT (channel 43) is a television station licensed to York, Pennsylvania, United States, serving as the Fox affiliate for the Susquehanna Valley region. Owned by Tegna Inc. , the station maintains studios on South Queen Street in Spring Garden Township (with a York mailing address).
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... York: 43 36 WPMT: Fox: Antenna TV on 43.2 Red Lion: 49 10 WLYH: Lighthouse TV Philadelphia: 3 30
Fox 43 may refer to one of the following television stations in the United States: KTMJ-CD, Fox affiliate in Topeka, Kansas; WFXB, Fox affiliate in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina; WPMT, Fox affiliate in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; WTNZ, Fox affiliate in Knoxville, Tennessee; WVBT, Fox affiliate in Virginia Beach, Virginia
The Fox Broadcasting Company is a television network based in the United States made up of 18 owned-and-operated stations and over 227 network affiliates. [1]Stations are listed in alphabetical order by city of license.
The Fox Broadcasting Company (Fox) is an American broadcast television network owned by Fox Corporation which was launched in October 1986. The network currently has 18 owned-and-operated stations , and current affiliation agreements with 227 other television stations.
Even after WPMT joined Fox in 1986, it was still mostly programmed as an independent (as was the case with most Fox stations until 1993). Even without this to consider, Philadelphia's WPHL-TV and WTAF-TV (now Fox O&O WTXF-TV), had been available on cable for years. These two factors made Gateway balk at the added cost of buying an additional 16 ...
The Hershey Community Center was WITF-TV's first home, used from 1964 to 1981. In 1963, the Pennsylvania Educational Network proposed the introduction of a series of new noncommercial television allotments in the state: channel 3 at Clearfield, channel 36 at Altoona, channel 39 at Allentown (then a commercial channel), channel 65 at Harrisburg, and channel 68 at Scranton. [2]