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WKNX-TV (channel 7) is an independent television station in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States. It is owned by Lockwood Broadcast Group alongside Fox affiliate WTNZ (channel 43). The two stations share studios on Executive Park Drive (along I-75 / I-40 ) in Knoxville's Green Valley section; WKNX-TV's transmitter is located on Sharp's Ridge ...
Category: Television stations in Knoxville, ... The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. WATE-TV; B.
The stations are owned by the East Tennessee Public Communications Corporation and broadcast from studios and offices on East Magnolia Avenue in downtown Knoxville. WETP-TV, licensed to Sneedville, Tennessee , is broadcast from a transmitter atop Short Mountain near Mooresburg , while WKOP-TV's transmitter is situated on Sharp's Ridge in North ...
It is owned by Lockwood Broadcast Group alongside independent station WKNX-TV (channel 7). The two stations share studios on Executive Park Drive (along I-75/I-40) in Knoxville's Green Valley section; WTNZ's transmitter is located on Sharp's Ridge in North Knoxville.
WBIR also begin producing a weekday morning news show at 7 a.m. that begin in June 2012 for that station. Both stations' newscasts began airing in high definition on June 1, 2011, making WBIR and WTNZ the second and third stations in Knoxville to make the upgrade. [21] On October 28, 2013, WBIR expanded its noon newscast from 25 minutes to a ...
WBXX-TV is the only full-powered Knoxville-market station to be licensed in a city in the Central Time Zone; Cumberland County (where Crossville is located) and Fentress County are the only two counties in the market that observe Central Time, while Knoxville proper is in Eastern Time. However, while CW network programming is promoted with both ...
Harold H. Thoms and J. Horton Doughton, doing business as Television Services of Knoxville, applied with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on August 25, 1952, to build a new television station on Knoxville's channel 26; the application for a construction permit was granted on March 25, 1953, after W. R. Tuley—who had filed a competing bid for the channel [2] —merged his ...
Journal Communications acquired the WQBB stations in 1998, doubling its holdings from two stations to four in the Knoxville area. [8] Journal split the FM station off and flipped it to country. [ 9 ] In 2002, after WTXM-AM -FM "The Team" dropped its sports format, WQBB flipped to sports talk and picked up many of the same Fox Sports Radio hosts ...