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Showstoppers! Great Women of TV Variety: November 28, 2024 [300] Willie Nelson's 90th Birthday Celebration [301] A Classic Christmas with the Bach Festival Society: Joyful Sounds: December 1, 2024 [302] London's New Year's Day Parade 2025: January 1, 2025 [303] Best of Rome New Year's Day Parade 2025 [304] Wes Montgomery: A Celebration Concert ...
The home of many children’s classic TV shows has launched PBS Retro, a free ad-supported channel that’s available via the Roku channel on Smart TVs, Roku devices, and web browsers. The channel ...
PBS Home Video was renamed PBS Distribution—PBSd in 2009, and became independent again in 2011. PBSd is jointly owned by PBS and the WGBH Educational Foundation . [ 4 ] It is currently distributing PBS programs and movies on DVD , Blu-ray , digital downloads , and video on demand and PBS Kids programs on DVD and digital downloads. [ 4 ]
WGVU-TV (channel 35) in Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States, and WGVK (channel 52) in Kalamazoo, Michigan, are PBS member television stations serving West Michigan.WGVU and WGVK are owned by Grand Valley State University and maintain studios in the Meijer Public Broadcast Center, located in the Eberhard Center on the GVSU Robert C. Pew Campus in downtown Grand Rapids.
KETC is known among viewers in St. Louis for preempting PBS programs to air library program content or less controversial pledge drive programs [citation needed], such as WQED-produced doo-wop specials, using the default network feed in late night to premiere those PBS programs instead, though St. Louis has traditionally had stations, commercial and non-commercial, preempt programming from ...
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WHRO-TV (channel 15) is a PBS member television station licensed to both Hampton and Norfolk, Virginia, United States.It is owned by the Hampton Roads Educational Telecommunications Association (HRETA), a consortium of 21 Hampton Roads and Eastern Shore school systems, alongside public radio stations WFOS (88.7 FM), WHRV (89.5 FM), and WHRO-FM (90.3).
Following the merger, WMEA-TV became the flagship station for a secondary PBS service, Maine Public Television Plus; [8] unlike the main network, this service expanded its over-the-air reach through the use of low-power repeaters—W39BQ in Lewiston, which signed on January 1, 1994, [9] and W30BF in Bangor, which launched on April 16, 1994. [10]