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WLFI-TV (channel 18) is a television station in Lafayette, Indiana, United States, affiliated with CBS and The CW Plus. Owned by Allen Media Broadcasting , the station maintains studios on Yeager Road in West Lafayette ; its transmitter is located on County Road 700 in rural northwestern Clinton County (southwest of Rossville ).
Chris Morisse Vizza, a 10-year veteran of WLFI-TV, was WPBY-LD's first news director. Sarah Blakely was the station's inaugural news anchor, broadcasting from a Waypoint-owned studio in Little Rock, Arkansas , [ 15 ] airing segments from Lafayette-based reporters. [ 16 ]
This is for television stations in Lafayette, Indiana. Pages in category "Television stations in Lafayette, Indiana" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
First serve starts Saturday at 1 p.m. Streaming on IHSAA TV or follow on Twitter. Here's where to buy tickets. More: IHSAA girls volleyball: Faith Christian, Harrison, West Lafayette win sectional ...
From 1953 until WPBI's 2016 launch, WLFI-TV had been the only "Big Three" (ABC, CBS and NBC—or, including Fox, "big four") network television broadcaster in the Lafayette market. In July 2021, Waypoint announced that it would sell nine of its television stations, including WPBY-LD and WPBI-LD, to Cumming, Georgia –based Coastal Television ...
First Christian Church, also known as the Wabash Christian Church, is a historic Disciples of Christ church located at Wabash, Wabash County, Indiana. It was built in 1865, and is a rectangular, brick Romanesque Revival style church. It has a gable roof and features a domed tower rising from the slightly projecting center pavilion at the front ...
Police flattened a concentrated area of woodland and dug a number of holes near a remote reservoir in Portugal as part of their three-day hunt for evidence in the Madeleine McCann case. Huge piles ...
The new WISH tower was objected to by WLFI in Lafayette, Indiana. Like WISH, WLFI was a CBS affiliate, and WLFI feared that WISH would encroach on its territory to its detriment. [17] During this time, WTIU began broadcasting in March 1969, but Indianapolis was still the largest city in the nation without an educational station. [18]