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WKMG-TV (channel 6) is a television station in Orlando, Florida, United States, affiliated with CBS and owned by Graham Media Group. The station's studios are located on John Young Parkway ( SR 423 ) in Orlando, and its transmitter is located on Brown Road near Christmas, Florida .
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Fort Myers: Fort Myers: 22 21 WGPS-LD: Cozi TV: getTV on 22.2, SBN on 22.3, Buzzr on 22.4, Laff on 22.5, Newsy on 22.6, Daystar on 22.7, TrueReal on 22.8, Defy TV on 22.9
Pages in category "Television stations in Orlando, Florida" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
ABP News is an Indian Hindi-language free-to-air television news channel owned by ABP Group. Initially launched as Star News in 1998, it was later acquired by the Bengali media group Anand Bazar Patrika (ABP). It won the Best Hindi News Channel award [1] in the 21st edition of the Indian Television Academy Awards in 2022.
A 20-year-old woman had been shot dead earlier on Wednesday, prompting a crew from a local news channel reaching the spot in the Pine Hills area to cover the incident on the same day, where a ...
CQTV-2 News Channel China: Chongqing Broadcasting Group: Chinese: FJTV-4 News Channel China: Fujian Radio Film and TV Group: Chinese: GRT-5 News Channel China: Guangdong Radio and Television: Chinese (Standard Chinese and Cantonese) GXTV-6 News Channel China: Guangxi Radio and Television Chinese and Zhuang: HainanTV-5 News Channel China: Hainan ...
The channel originally launched in October 29, [1] 1997 as Central Florida News 13; it was originally partnered with the Orlando Sentinel to help with 24-hour newsgathering operations and the channel was originally operated by Time Warner Cable, which relinquished cable television franchise rights in the Orlando metropolitan area to Bright House Networks in 2001.
As WLOF-TV was getting on the air, a scandal involving the FCC's decisions in several contested television station cases exploded into view. In January 1958, syndicated columnist Drew Pearson published a column alleging that FCC commissioner Richard Mack, a Florida native, had been influenced to switch the approval of channel 10 in Miami to a company affiliated with National Airlines. [24]