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WABI's final logo under Diversified ownership; the logo was replaced on WABI's website with the current logo in May 2017, following the sale to Gray, but WABI continued to utilize this logo on-air and in newscasts until December 2017. WABI-TV was the first television station in Maine and the first in northern New England.
WABI-TV 5 (previously with CBS (secondary) from 1953-1955) Swapped affiliations with NBC affiliate WABI-TV due to WLBZ-TV's association with WCSH-TV, the NBC affiliate in Portland. Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: KBMT 31 (now on channel 12) 1954-1955 ABC KFDM 6 Lost CBS affiliation upon the sign-on of KFDM-TV. Ceased operations in 1956 due to the ...
This was followed a month later with a deal to carry University of Maine sports; as a result, WFVX and WVII replace WABI-TV as the television flagship of the Black Bear Sports Network. As part of the deal, Black Bear sports telecasts will also be seen on Fox College Sports , and production will be handled by Pack Network (WABI had produced its ...
This changed in 2020, [2] however, with the sign-on of NBC affiliate WWPI-LD by CBS/Fox/CW+ affiliate (and sister station of rival WABI-TV) WAGM-TV. [3] In addition to its main signal, WLBZ operates low-power digital repeater WGCI-LD on VHF channel 4. Licensed to Skowhegan, this station has a transmitter in Norridgewock's Larone section.
WBGR has aired local programming from local churches, civic organizations and high school sports at various times during its history. The station also carried late afternoon college football games from CBS, as WABI-TV (channel 5) chose to preempt football in order to air a
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]
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When Sunbeam took over, having not assumed much of WLVI's staff, a 10 p.m. newscast from WHDH began to air on channel 56. In its first sweeps period, it attracted less than a quarter of the viewership of WFXT. [81] However, the program endured. In 2009, the newscast was the first in Boston to have a permanent lineup of two female anchors. [82]