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WMBF-TV (channel 32) is a television station licensed to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, United States, serving as the NBC affiliate for the Grand Strand and Pee Dee regions of South Carolina. It is owned by Gray Media alongside low-power Telemundo affiliate WXIV-LD (channel 14).
Create/The South Carolina Channel on 23.2, World on 23.3, PBS Kids on 23.4 Myrtle Beach: 32 32 WMBF-TV: NBC: Bounce TV on 32.2, Circle on 32.3, Laff on 32.4, Grit on 32.5, Quest on 32.6, Ion Plus on 32.7 Myrtle Beach: Florence: 33 16 WJPM-TV: PBS: satellite of WRLK-TV ch. 35 Columbia Create/The South Carolina Channel on 33.2, World on 33.3, PBS ...
The station is owned by Nexstar Media Group, and maintains studios on McDonald Court in the unincorporated community of Socastee (but with a Myrtle Beach postal address); its transmitter is located near Dillon, South Carolina (across from the tower of ABC affiliate WPDE-TV, channel 15).
In the Myrtle Beach area, SCDOT has: A camera on Veterans Highway south of S.C. Highway 90 Two cameras on S.C. Highway 544 at Dick Pond Road and Windsor Bay Road
Beginning on November 10, 1996, channel 43 became the Fox affiliate for Florence and Myrtle Beach; With this, the station changed its call letters to the current WFXB. Florence–Myrtle Beach had been the only area of South Carolina, and one of the few in the Eastern Time Zone, without a full-power
TV stations formerly owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group; City of license / Market Station Channel Years owned Current ownership status Anniston, AL: WJSU-TV [ρ] 40: 2014–2015 [o] WGWW; Howard Stirk Holdings: Tuscaloosa, AL: WCFT-TV [ρ] 33: 2014–2015 [o] WSES; Howard Stirk Holdings Stockton–Sacramento, CA: KOVR: 13: 1997–2005: CBS News ...
CBS News 4 hours ago Maps show NOAA's spring weather outlook across U.S. Much of the country is forecast to see warmer-than-average temperatures and drought conditions this spring, according to NOAA.
WPDE currently broadcasts 31 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours of news per week (including 5 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours each weekday and three hours each on Saturdays and Sundays). Staff members used to produce and anchor up to one hour of news per day for Savannah-based WTGS, which had a Georgia-based team of reporters and a weekday meteorologist, until Sinclair decided to end the WTGS newscasts on May 31, 2024 ...