Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
WTVR-TV's West Broad studios is located directly next to the tower. The station used a graphical version of the tower in its news opens for several years in the 1980s and early 1990s. The tower is also the namesake of the Tower Building, a National Register of Historic Places-listed structure located across the street. [8]
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Charlottesville: 19 32 WCAV: CBS: Ion on 19.4, Fox on 27.1 : 29 2 WVIR-TV: NBC: WeatherNation on 29.2, CW on 29.3, True Crime Network on 29.5
WTVR-TV (channel 6) is a television station in Richmond, Virginia, United States, affiliated with CBS and owned by the E. W. Scripps Company.Its studios are located on West Broad Street on Richmond's West End, and its transmitter is located in Bon Air near the studios of PBS member stations WCVE-TV and WCVW. [2]
WTVR-FM (98.1 MHz) is a radio station licensed to Richmond, Virginia. WTVR-FM serves Central Virginia with an adult contemporary music format. The station is owned and operated by Audacy, Inc. with studios and offices located north of Richmond's city limits on Basie Road in Dumbarton . [ 4 ]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate; Pages for logged out editors learn more
For the first two Sundays of 1989, WBBL turned on WLEE's transmitter two more times to air services; it then began to rent time from WTVR (1380 AM) and other stations. [30] WBBL never returned to the air and was deleted on March 14, 1994, [31] marking the definitive end of the oldest station in Richmond and the second-oldest in Virginia. [32]
WTVR-TV in Richmond, Virginia; WTWV in Memphis, Tennessee; WUNC-TV (DRT) in Oxford, North Carolina, on virtual channel 4; WUSI-TV in Olney, Illinois; WVSN in Humacao, Puerto Rico, on virtual channel 68; WVUA-CD in Tuscaloosa/Northport, Alabama; WWHO in Chillicothe, Ohio, an ATSC 3.0 station, on virtual channel 53; WWJX in Jackson, Mississippi
The WBNS TV Tower is a 839 ft (256 m) [1] tall free-standing lattice tower with a triangular cross section used by WBNS-TV in Columbus, Ohio. When originally completed in August 1948, the tower stood 595 ft (181 m) tall [ 2 ] making it one of the tallest freestanding towers in the United States at that time.