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SonLife on 59.2, Corner Store TV on 59.3, Binge TV on 59.4 Quincy: Quincy: 10 19 WGEM-TV: NBC: CW on 10.2, Fox on 10.3, MeTV on 10.4 Quincy: Quincy: 16 32 WTJR: CTN CTN Lifestyle on 16.2, CTNi on 16.3, CTN on 16.4 Quincy: Macomb: 22 36 WMEC: PBS: satellite of WSEC ch. 14 Springfield. World on 22.2, Create on 22.3, PBS Kids on 22.4 Quincy ...
Get the Quincy, IL local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
WTJR (channel 16) is a religious television station in Quincy, Illinois, United States, owned and operated by the Christian Television Network (CTN). The station's studios are located on North Sixth Street in downtown Quincy, and its transmitter is located on Cannonball Road northeast of the city.
WGEM-TV's license was originally granted to Quincy Broadcasting Company, a subsidiary of the Herald-Whig; it was allotted channel 10.The station was originally affiliated with NBC and ABC, while being represented by Walker Representation Co. Quincy Broadcasting's president at the time was T. C. Oakley; Joe Bonansinga was the station's founding general manager.
Arts/Quincy – distributed and printed by the Quincy Society of Fine Arts; a black and white news article published every week about the culture, history, and art of Quincy Quincy Herald-Whig – the major newspaper in the region, printed by Quincy Newspapers and shipped throughout much of the Tri-State region
KHQA-TV (channel 7) is a television station licensed to Hannibal, Missouri, United States, serving the Quincy, Illinois–Hannibal, Missouri–Keokuk, Iowa market as an affiliate of CBS and ABC. The station is owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group , and maintains studios on South 36th Street in Quincy; its transmitter is located northeast of ...
Pages in category "Television stations in the Quincy–Hannibal area" ... WGEM-TV; WQEC; WTJR This page was last edited on 5 March 2019, at 15:44 (UTC). ...
In January 1982, the Convocom television station project was revived by a federal grant, which, together with local matching funds totaled $745,000, would provide for construction of transmitters to serve the most populous area of the country without public television; [11] two years later, the first phase of the communications network was in service, connecting schools in Peoria, Springfield ...