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South Jersey: Atlantic City: 4 4 WACP: TCT: Lone Star Channel on 4.2, Heartland on 4.3, Shop LC on 4.4, Jewelry TV on 4.5, Infomercials on 4.6 Wildwood: 40 36 WMGM-TV: True Crime Network: GetTV on 40.2, Univision on 40.3 (simulcast of WUVP-DT 65.1) Atlantic City: 44 13 WMCN-TV: Infomercials Jewelry TV on 44.4 62 34 WWSI: TEL: TeleXitos on 62.2 ...
NJ PBS (known as NJTV prior to 2021) is a public television network serving the U.S. state of New Jersey.The network is owned by the New Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority (NJPBA), an agency of the New Jersey state government which owns the licenses for all but one of the PBS member stations licensed in the state.
Television stations in New York City (52 P) Pages in category "Television stations in New Jersey" The following 35 pages are in this category, out of 35 total.
Television portal; The News 12 Networks are a group of regional cable news television channels in the New York metropolitan area that are owned by Altice USA.All channels provide rolling news coverage 24 hours a day, focusing primarily on regions of the metro area outside Manhattan, Queens, and Staten Island.
Conceived to replace WNTA-TV as northern New Jersey's commercial station and to provide specialty ethnic programming in the tri-state area, WNJU began broadcasting on May 16, 1965. It was the first new commercial TV station for the New York City area in 16 years. Within months, 60 percent of its programming was in Spanish.
WNET commenced broadcasting on May 15, 1948, from a transmitter located atop First Mountain in West Orange, New Jersey, as WATV, a commercial television station owned by Atlantic Television, a subsidiary of Bremer Broadcasting Corporation. [4] [5] Frank V. Bremer, the CEO, also owned two North Jersey radio stations, WAAT (970 AM) and WAAT-FM ...
WMGM was the only remaining New Jersey-licensed commercial television station that maintained its own news department; MyNetworkTV station WWOR-TV upstate in Secaucus controversially shut down its news department (which was kept in operation long after its 2001 acquisition by Fox Television Stations, which created a duopoly with Fox owned-and ...
Nearly all commercial TV stations serving New Jersey are based in New York City or Philadelphia; the only commercial VHF station in the state, Secaucus–licensed WWOR-TV, moved to UHF after the 2009 digital television transition. The FCC denied the request in a December 18, 2009, letter. [9]