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WAVY airs thirty hours of local news a week. It operates its own weather radar, called "Super Doppler 10", at its studios.It was the first in the area to air a local morning broadcast at 5:30 a.m., beginning in 1992, and added weeknight newscasts at 5 p.m. in 1989 and 5:30 p.m. in 1994. [32]
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Charlottesville: 19 32 WCAV: CBS: Ion on 19.4, Fox on 27.1 : 29 2 WVIR-TV: NBC: WeatherNation on 29.2, CW on 29.3, True Crime Network on 29.5
NBC 10 may refer to one of the following television stations in the United States: ... WAVY-TV in Portsmouth/Norfolk/Newport News, Virginia; WBIR-TV in Knoxville ...
Chesapeake Television is a subsidiary of Sinclair Broadcast Group that owns television stations in smaller markets. Chesapeake was founded in 2013, to acquire small-market stations purchased through Sinclair's run of acquisitions. As early as January 2013, Sinclair was looking at forming a new subsidiary group for its smaller-market stations. [270]
On July 21, 2008, the station's newscast and sports show started to be produced in high definition after WAVY made the upgrade. On February 2, 2009, WVBT added Fox 43 News at 7 on weekday mornings with local news, weather, and traffic updates along with various entertainment/lifestyle features. This morning show (which was essentially an hour ...
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
I noticed recently WAVY-TV and WTVZ-TV have just had a logo section added. I wonder when we will be able to access this for WVEC and the other Hampton Roads stations. WAVY 10WAVY 10 00:18, 29 April 2006 (UTC) Maybe they could switch to a version of the logo with the "Spirit of Hampton Roads" tag. WAVY 10 13:17, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
The Chesapeake Beach Railway (CBR), now defunct, was an American railroad of southern Maryland and Washington, D.C., built in the 19th century.The CBR ran 27.629 miles from Washington, D.C., on tracks laid by the Southern Maryland Railroad and its own single track through Maryland farm country to a resort at Chesapeake Beach. [1]