Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"State: West Virginia". TV Query Broadcast Station Search. Washington DC: Federal Communications Commission. "Cable Television". West Virginia Encyclopedia. Charleston, WV: West Virginia Humanities Council. "Satellite Television". West Virginia Encyclopedia. Charleston, WV: West Virginia Humanities Council. West Virginia Broadcasters Association
The following television stations operate on virtual channel 68 in the United States: [1] KPXD-TV in Arlington, Texas; KTLN-TV in Novato, California; W18EN-D in Sion Farm, St Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands; WABM in Birmingham, Alabama; WBPX-TV in Boston, Massachusetts; WDTJ-LD in Toledo, Ohio; WEFS in Cocoa, Florida; WFUT-DT in Newark, New Jersey ...
The station's programming is relayed on two satellite stations: WAGV (channel 68) in Harlan (which shares transmitter facilities with WLFG) and WLFB (channel 40) in Bluefield, West Virginia (with transmitter atop East River Mountain, south of Bluefield, Virginia). WAGV was the first to broadcast exclusively in digital following a malfunction at ...
Cocoa, Florida: WEFS 68 (now WBCC 68) (independent since 2012) Daytona Beach, Florida: WDSC-TV 15 (independent since 2011) Tampa, Florida: WUSF-TV 16 (defunct as of 2017) Culpeper, Virginia: WNVC 41 (currently a World Channel member station since 2020) High Knob, Virginia: WSBN-TV (March 30, 1971 - March 27, 2017; satellite station of WBRA-TV)
Below are the primetime rankers for broadcast, cable and premium cable networks in 2023, among total viewers (as well as the top 50 list in adults 18-49).
The donation of the channel 18 license was contingent on permitting a swap with another station. That station, WKCF, began broadcasting on channel 68 in 1988. After objections from several Orlando TV stations, WKCF moved to channel 18 in October 1991; simultaneously, WRES switched to channel 68 and changed its call sign to WBCC.
By May 1985, the FCC had eight applications on file for the channel, [3] which the commission awarded to Channel 68 Inc. in October 1986. This group was a 13-investor consortium presided by Clermont councilman Nestor Cole and with Norris Woolfork—publisher of The Orlando Times , the city's Black newspaper—as a partner. [ 4 ]
During World War II, the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion — nicknamed the Six Triple Eight — was the first and only unit of color in the Women’s Army Corps (WAC) stationed in Europe.