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The Ohio Channel is a service of Ohio's public broadcasting stations that operates out of the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio.The Ohio Channel, on behalf of its parent company Ohio Government Telecommunications, produces gavel-to-gavel, unedited video coverage of official sessions of the Ohio Senate, the Ohio House of Representatives, and the Supreme Court of Ohio.
Fun Roads on 13.2, Best of ShopHQ on 13.3, Ace TV on 13.4, One America Plus on 13.5, AWE Plus on 13.6, Infomercials on 13.7, Bark TV on 13.8, Right Now TV on 13.9, FTF Sports on 13.10, MrtSpt1 on 13.11 Cleveland: Cleveland: 48 13 W13DS-D: Silent Dayton: Maplewood: 16 25 W25FI-D: WPTD: PBS: PBS Encore on 16.2, PBS Life on 16.3, Ohio Channel on ...
WCBZ-CD was founded as W22AE in Marion, Ohio, on April 17, 1989.The station then changed its call letters to WBKA-LP in 1995. In 2004, the station was acquired from low-power broadcaster Crawford Broadcasting by Metro Video Productions, and was granted Class A status, thus changing its callsign to WBKA-CA.
WBNS-TV (channel 10) is a television station in Columbus, Ohio, United States, affiliated with CBS. It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside the company's sole radio properties, WBNS (1460 AM) and WBNS-FM (97.1). The stations share studios on Twin Rivers Drive west of Downtown Columbus, where WBNS-TV's transmitter is also located.
Channel cards were mailed to customers with each change in the channel line-up. Customers would remove the old guides and slide in the new ones. On the top of the remote was a hole in which a "key" (really just a magnet in a proprietary plastic holder) was inserted to unlock viewing of pay-per-view programming, which could be billed in much the ...
WCMH-TV (channel 4) is a television station in Columbus, Ohio, United States, affiliated with NBC and owned by Nexstar Media Group.The station's studios are located on Olentangy River Road near the Ohio State University campus, and its transmitter is located on Twin Rivers Drive, west of downtown Columbus.
WSFJ-TV began operations on March 9, 1980. Originally licensed to Newark, 30 miles (48 km) east of Columbus, it was the first independent television station in Columbus, and the first new commercial station in the area since 1949. On paper, Columbus had grown large enough to support an independent station as far back as the late 1960s.
Originally licensed to Mansfield, Ohio, this station took to the air on May 7, 1990, as W50BE. [1] [2] An extension of locally owned WVNO-FM and WRGM, W50BE was an independent station boasting a lineup of local newscasts and community programming for the Mansfield–Ashland–Bucyrus region, [1] [3] nearly equidistant from both the Cleveland and Columbus markets. [4]