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Listed in local Detroit TV guides Stevenson/Wheatley-area transmitter Detroit, Michigan: CBEFT: Windsor: SRC: No CBEFT formerly an originating station on UHF 78, and later channel 54, that was listed in TV guides in metro Detroit. Station moved to analog channel 35 in 2011, but was decommissioned by CBC and went off the air in July, 2012. Port ...
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 WHPS-CD: 15 15 ShopHQ on 15.1 Detroit Live on 15.2, Shop LC on 15. ...
Pages in category "Television stations in Detroit" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
WPCH-TV (formerly known as WTBS-TV) is associated with the U.S. superstation TBS, formerly as an Atlanta feed of the aforementioned superstation, but was relaunched as a local station geared towards the Atlanta market in 2007. As such, the channel does not air nationally in the United States.
CBC Television, a national public network owned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC).; Citytv, a privately owned television network owned by Rogers Media, with stations in Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia.
CBC Television is a Canadian English language public television network made up of fourteen owned-and-operated stations. Some privately owned stations were formerly affiliated with the network until as late as August 2016. This is a table listing of CBC Television's stations, arranged by market.
A dark blue background indicates a station that acts as the flagship of a television network (CBC, Ici Radio-Canada, TVA, CTV, Citytv and Global) or a television system (CTV 2, CBC North and Omni). Note that in recent years most Canadian television stations affiliated with a network are generally no longer identified by their call letters on ...
The most-watched television broadcast in Canadian history was the gold medal game of the men's hockey tournament at the 2010 Winter Olympics, played between the United States and Canada in Vancouver, with an average minute audience of 16.6 million Canadians watching the game, roughly one-half of Canada's population in 2010. [1]