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Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Abilene: Abilene: 9 29 KRBC-TV: NBC: Grit on 9.2, Laff on 9.3, Bounce TV on 9.4 : Abilene: Sweetwater: 12 20 KTXS-TV: ABC: CW on 12.2, Comet on 12.3
Formerly known as Electronic Program Guide, Prevue Guide, Prevue Channel, TV Guide Channel, TV Guide Network and TVGN Rewind TV: Nexstar Media Group: 2021 Yes-----Classic TV series RFD-TV: Rural Media Group: 2000 --Yes-- TBS: Warner Bros. Discovery: 1967 -Yes: Yes 91,671,000: Formerly known as WJRJ-TV, WTCG-TV, SuperStation WTBS and TBS ...
Katz Broadcasting president and CEO Jonathan Katz based the demographic-targeted concept of Escape and Grit after Bounce TV, a network Katz co-founded with Martin Luther King III and Andrew Young in 2011 that is targeted at African-American audiences. Katz stated Grit and Escape are "the country’s first ever male-centric and female-centric ...
Channel 47.1 converted to general entertainment independent station upon disaffiliation, while 47.4 went dark; 47.1 and 47.4 are now affiliated with (respectively) Stadium and TBD: Green Bay, Wisconsin: WGBA-TV: 26.2: 14: E.W. Scripps Company: 2011–2022: Subchannel now Defy TV: Houston, Texas: KPRC-DT2: 2.2: 35: Graham Media Group: 2018–2021
The station's virtual channel number follows the call letters. For the table for the owned-and-operated outlets, the number in parentheses that follows is the station's actual digital channel number; the digital channel number is listed as a separate column in the list of private affiliates. The article also includes a list of its former ...
KFAA-TV (channel 29) is an independent television station licensed to Decatur, Texas, United States, serving the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex. It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside Dallas-licensed ABC affiliate WFAA (channel 8). KFAA-TV's offices are located on Gateway Drive in Irving, and its transmitter is located in Cedar Hill, Texas.
Ion Television is a television network based in the United States made up of 44 owned-and-operated stations and 194 network affiliates, 164 of which broadcast as digital subchannels. [1]
The channel was then rebranded as Fox Sports Net Southwest in 2000, as part of a collective brand modification of the FSN networks under the "Fox Sports Net" banner. In 2004, the channel shortened its name to FSN Southwest , through the networks' de-emphasis of the brand, before reverting to the Fox Sports Southwest moniker in 2008.