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Significantly viewed signals permitted to be carried 47 U.S.C. § 340 or the Significantly Viewed list (SV) is a federal law which allows television stations as determined by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to be carried by cable and other multichannel video programming distributor (MVPD) providers outside their assigned Nielsen designated market area (DMA). [1]
In February 1929, funding was allocated to the Radio Division of the Department of Commerce for the construction of a constant-frequency monitoring radio station. The location of Grand Island, Nebraska was chosen due to both its proximity to the geographic center of the United States and the favorable radio conditions provided by the flat terrain.
Bryan—College Station, Texas: 16 Houston: 60 Buffalo—Niagara Falls, New York: 4 Buffalo—Rochester: 61 Burlington, Iowa: 12 Des Moines—Quad Cities: 62 Burlington, North Carolina: 5 Charlotte—Greensboro—Greenville—Raleigh: 63 Burlington, Vermont: 30 New York: 64 Butte, Montana: 43 Spokane—Billings: 65 Canton—New Philadelphia ...
This is a list of licensed full-service analog television stations in the United States.Mere presence on this list does not indicate that a station is on the air. This list does not include low-power stations, or full-power stations operating with a construction permit or under special temporary authority.
At analog shutdown, the FCC assigned to each digital station the call sign its associated analog station had used. (with a -TV suffix if the analog station had this suffix, without the -TV suffix if the analog station didn't have it). Stations could optionally choose to keep the -DT suffix. [9] Most stations did not keep the -DT suffix. [10]
Radio Broadcast Stations (FCC) State/city Radio Broadcast Stations (FCC) 1/1/1938 Call letters: Radio Broadcast Stations (FCC) Linked site is missing the last two pages Frequency: Radio Broadcast Stations (FCC) State/city: Radio Broadcast Stations (FCC) 1/1/1939 Call letters Radio Broadcast Stations (FCC) Frequency Radio Broadcast Stations (FCC ...
The All-Channel Receiver Act of 1962 (ACRA), commonly known as the All-Channels Act, was passed by the United States Congress in 1961, to allow the Federal Communications Commission to require that all television set manufacturers must include UHF tuners, so that new UHF-band TV stations (then channels 14 to 83) could be received by the public.
The facility ID number, also called a FIN or facility identifier, is a unique integer number [1] of one to six digits, [2] assigned by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Media Bureau [1] to each broadcast station in the FCC Consolidated Database System (CDBS) and Licensing and Management System (LMS) databases, among others.