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WOFL's local news programming is also broadcast on co-owned WOGX, serving Ocala and Gainesville. Channel 35 in Orlando went on the air as WSWB-TV on March 31, 1974. Built by Sun World Broadcasters, WSWB-TV was Orlando's first independent station. After facing 19 months of construction delays, it suffered from financial difficulties within ...
Channel 51 joined the Fox network in May 1991, bringing the network to Gainesville for the first time. The Meredith Corporation, then-owner of WOFL, bought WOGX-TV from Wabash Valley Broadcasting in January 1996 and immediately moved to consolidate operating functions with WOFL. The station debuted a local newscast in 1998, including an edition ...
WRBW (channel 65), branded on-air as Fox 35 Plus, is a television station in Orlando, Florida, United States, serving as the local outlet for the MyNetworkTV programming service. It is owned and operated by Fox Television Stations alongside Fox outlet WOFL (channel 35).
Used from 1989 to 2003; first identified as Action News 10 when it was an NBC affiliate, then identified as Fox 10 Action News when it was a Fox affiliate; currently identifies as Fox 10 News: Knoxville, Tennessee: WBIR-TV: NBC No Used Action 10 News 1970–1974 and 1978–April 2004; has identified as 10 News since April 2004 Lexington ...
WSEE-TV in Erie, Pennsylvania; WSLF-LD in Port St. Lucie, Florida; WSPF-CD in St. Petersburg, Florida; WWKH-CD in Uniontown, Pennsylvania; WWLF-LD in Syracuse, New York; WWTO-TV in La Salle, Illinois; WYLN-LP in Hazleton, Pennsylvania; WZCH-LD in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina; The following stations formerly operated on virtual channel 35, but ...
Shortly after the station signed on, WFTV began producing a nightly half-hour 10 p.m. newscast for WRDQ (this resulted in the discontinuance of a prime time newscast in that same timeslot that WFTV had produced for then-UPN affiliate WRBW [channel 65] under a news share agreement); this program competes with an in-house newscast that runs for an hour on Fox owned-and-operated station WOFL ...
WOFL believed Press Broadcasting had illegally controlled the channel 18 permit and that the two facilities did not serve the same area. Also objecting was a low-power TV station on channel 19 in Orlando, fearing displacement from the proposed WKCF facility in the Orlando-market tower farm at Bithlo .
Fox Sports Net's sister subsidiary Fox Television Stations had earlier purchased WRBW (then a UPN affiliate) in Orlando in 2001, followed by its purchase of Fox affiliate WOFL (channel 35) in 2002. On paper, this gave News Corporation – the corporate parent of the Fox Sports Networks at the time – the right to require Bright House to carry ...