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Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Alpena: 6 24 WCML: PBS: Satellite of WCMU-TV ch. 14 Mount Pleasant. PBS Kids on 6.2, Create on 6.3 11 11 WBKB: CBS: NBC on 11.2, ABC on 11.3, Fox/MyNetworkTV on 11.4 Detroit: Ann Arbor: 31 24 WPXD-TV: Ion: Court TV on 31.2, Grit on 31.3, Defy TV on 31.4, TrueReal on 31.5, getTV on 31.6 ...
On September 15, 1968, WXON-TV began broadcasting on channel 62. [3] Licensed to nearby Walled Lake, Michigan, WXON-TV operated on channel 62 for four years.In 1970, it purchased the construction permit of WJMY, a channel 20 station that was built out but which its owner, United Broadcasting, had no financial resources to operate, for $413,000 in United's expenses related to the permit. [4]
WKBD-TV (channel 50), branded as CW Detroit 50, is a television station in Detroit, Michigan, United States, affiliated with The CW. It is owned by the CBS News and Stations group alongside WWJ-TV (channel 62), a CBS owned-and-operated station .
Popular and controversial TV and radio personality Ron Cameron, who was one of the first voices of Detroit sports talk, died Tuesday at age 79.
Father killed his four children (ages 10 months to 8 years) by driving station wagon into the Detroit River: Royal Oak post office shootings: Royal Oak: 1991-11-14: 5: Former employee opened fire at the Royal Oak Post Office, killing four employees, then himself: 1997 Detroit shootings: Detroit: 1997-03-11: 4
1992-2017 (O&O satellite of WCCO-TV) Defunct Satellite station of CBS O&O WCCO-TV/KCCW-TV. Left the air December 30, 2017 as a result of the sale of its spectrum in the FCC's spectrum auction; CBS then signed a contract with Selective TV, Inc. to provide a WCCO-TV/KCCW-TV translator for the area. Missoula, Montana Kalispell, Montana
The Detroit television market is the 14th largest in the United States, [2] and it has additional viewers in Ontario, Canada (Windsor and its surrounding area on broadcast and cable). Detroit is home to owned-and-operated stations of CBS, Fox, and Daystar and two station duopolies owned by Paramount Global and E.W. Scripps Company.
WHPS-CD was the Detroit area's first Black-owned TV station since WGPR (channel 62, now WWJ-TV) became a CBS affiliate. The station was owned until 2015 by R. J. Watkins, who, between 1988 and 1996, hosted and produced a dance program for WGPR-TV, The New Dance Show, which moved to WHPS-CD in 1995 [2], and reruns still air on the station at various evening timeslots.