Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
WWNY-TV (channel 7) is a television station licensed to Carthage, New York, United States, [a] serving as the CBS affiliate for the Watertown area. It is owned by Gray Media alongside low-power , Class A Fox affiliate WNYF-CD (channel 28).
Call letters stand for We're IV 4 Buffalo; originally WBEN-TV until 1977; Channel 7: WKBW-TV - - Buffalo, 7 Eyewitness News; Channel 15: WNBF-CD - TCT) - Buffalo. Channel 17: WNED-TV - - Buffalo; Channel 23: WNLO - - Buffalo, CW 23. Originally independent and WNEQ , formerly UPN 23; Channel 29: WUTV - - Buffalo, FOX 29. Independent until the 1980s
WNYF-CD (channel 28) is a low-power, Class A television station in Watertown, New York, United States, affiliated with the Fox network. It is owned by Gray Media alongside Carthage-licensed CBS affiliate WWNY-TV (channel 7).
Listed in local Windsor TV Guides, reception is fair to poor in downtown Windsor, dropped in early 2009 as part of the Digital Transition in the United States. Toledo, Ohio WTOL-DT 11.2: MeTV: Partial Added to Windsor-area TV Guides on October 17, 2009, replaces WJW from Cleveland. Dropped from listings in August of 2011 Toledo, Ohio WTVG
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Albany: Glens Falls: 8 31 WNCE-CD YTA TV: Cobleskill: 14 26 WYBN-LD Buzzr: Cozi TV on 14.2, This TV on 14.3, France 24 on 14.4, Rev'n on 14.5, Retro TV on 14.6, Action on 14.7, NewsNet on 14.8
City of license / Market Station Years owned Current status Albany, Georgia: WALB 1590 1946–1960 [M]: WALG, owned by First Media Services : Quincy, Illinois: WGEM 1440 : 2021–2023 [G]
WWNY added a TV station in 1954, Channel 7 WCNY-TV. [5] Because the TV station is licensed to Carthage, New York, outside Watertown, the two stations did not have the same call sign. When the FCC relaxed the rules, the TV station switched to WWNY-TV. (The WCNY-TV call letters are now used on a PBS television station in Syracuse, New York.)
The Watertown Daily Times of Watertown, New York, sold WWNY-TV for $8.2 million in 1981; [2] the national media chain Lee Enterprises sold KEYC-TV in Mankato, Minnesota, in 1977. In the 21st century, UCC added its last two properties, founding WNYF-LP , a low-power television station in Watertown, New York , in 2001, and a year later buying the ...