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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 ...
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.
WeatherNation TV is an American television network owned by WeatherNation, Inc., which features mainly local, regional, and national weather forecasts.The following article is a list of current and former affiliates of the network, which primarily consist of digital subchannels.
WVII has spent most of its history as a distant third place in the Nielsen ratings behind WABI and WLBZ, at point in its early existence not registering any measurable or identifiable audience in one of the smallest media markets in the U.S. [7] Since the early 2010s, it is quickly catching up with WLBZ in the Eastern Maine market. [31]
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
A weather map, also known as synoptic weather chart, displays various meteorological features across a particular area at a particular point in time and has various symbols which all have specific meanings. [1] Such maps have been in use since the mid-19th century and are used for research and weather forecasting purposes.
Originally called "Weather 3.2", and later "WCAXtra", it featured news updates and live local weather along with the FCC-required three hours of E/I-compliant children programming per week. On weekends, if sports events ran long, the news could be found on the secondary channel, though that practice ended a few years later.
While many other media outlets embraced computer weather maps and graphics in the 1980s for weather forecasting use, A.M. Weather held back on fully embracing computer graphics until 1991, although the program did adapt to such graphics for satellite and radar maps in the late 1980s. The show's trademark yellow pointer was a mainstay of the ...