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On weeknights, channel 22 showed Spanish-language fare, and weekends included shows in Korean, Japanese and Chinese. [19] Coast reached a deal to sell KWHY-TV to Zenith Electronics in 1971; channel 22 would have served as the Los Angeles-area outlet for its Phonevision pay television system. [20] The sale application was dismissed the next year ...
KWHY-TV → KSCN-TV: 22.1 Independent Spanish language programming Scientology Network: The struggling Meruelo Media, which has been selling off its assets in the last year, announced the sale of KWHY-TV to Sunset Boulevard Broadcasting, the broadcast arm of the Church of Scientology, on July 29, 2024 for $30 million.
The newscasts air weekdays from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m., weekends from 4 to 5 p.m., daily from 7 to 8 p.m. and daily from 10 to 11 p.m. (Pacific Time) on KWHY-TV 22. [2] During 2012, Milenio Television began broadcasting on Digital Television on 12.2 of XHAW-TDT; until 2015 it moved to 12.2 of XHSAW-TDT. In 2017, it changes to channel 13.2.
KBEH then reached a channel sharing agreement with KWHY-TV (channel 22); Hero Broadcasting also agreed to sell the KBEH license to KWHY's owner, Meruelo Television, for $10 million. It was the first "zombie" station—a license without a channel—to be sold after the auction. [51]
KWHY-TV: 22.1: 42: 2012: Meruelo Group: Reverted to a Spanish independent station on December 1, 2016 Sacramento: KSAO-LD: 49.1: 49: 2012: Cocola Broadcasting: Switched to Azteca on December 1, 2016 Santa Barbara: K46GF: 46: 32: 2012: Meruelo Group: Translator of KWHY-TV/Los Angeles Templeton (San Luis Obispo−Santa Maria) KMBY-LD: 19.1: 19: ...
From Las chicas del cable (Cable Girls) to La Casa de Papel (Money Heist), keep reading for 20 binge-worthy Spanish TV shows you can start watching right now. 1. Las Chicas Del Cable (Cable Girls)
SelecTV began broadcasting July 23, 1978, on KWHY-TV channel 22 in Los Angeles. [1] By November, SelecTV had signed up 5,000 subscribers. [2] The service expanded to Milwaukee on WCGV channel 24 on June 27, 1980, [3] and it began broadcasting to Philadelphia over WWSG-TV channel 57—a new-to-air station—on June 15, 1981.
Spanish outlet Movistar Plus+ says it will “stop working” with Germán Burgos following a derogatory comment he made about 16-year-old Barcelona star Lamine Yamal.