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WWNY-TV (channel 7) is a television station licensed to Carthage, New York, United States, serving as the CBS affiliate for the Watertown area. It is owned by Gray Television alongside low-power , Class A Fox affiliate WNYF-CD (channel 28).
WNYF-CD. / 43.95417°N 75.72889°W / 43.95417; -75.72889. WNYF-CD (channel 28) is a low-power, Class A television station in Watertown, New York, United States, affiliated with the Fox network. It is owned by Gray Television alongside Carthage -licensed CBS affiliate WWNY-TV (channel 7).
WWNY added a TV station in 1954, Channel 7 WCNY-TV. Because the TV station is licensed to Carthage, New York, outside Watertown, the two stations did not have the same call sign. When the FCC relaxed the rules, the TV station switched to WWNY-TV. (The WCNY-TV call letters are now used on a PBS television station in Syracuse, New York.)
WPBS-TV (channel 16) is a PBS member television station in Watertown, New York, United States, owned by the St. Lawrence Valley Educational TV Council. The station's studios are located on Arsenal Street in Watertown, and its transmitter is located on St. Lawrence County Route 194 in Denmark, New York . WNPI-DT (channel 18) in Norwood operates ...
Channel 2: WCBS-TV - ( CBS) - New York City, CBS New York or CBS 2. Channel 4: WNBC - ( NBC) - New York City, NBC 4 New York. Channel 5: WNYW - ( FOX) - New York City, FOX 5, WABD when it was the Flagship station of the DuMont Television Network, became WNEW before 1986. Channel 7: WABC-TV - ( ABC) - New York City, ABC 7 or Channel 7.
The Watertown market is served by four commercial television stations. The oldest is Carthage-licensed, CBS-affiliated WCNY-TV (channel 7), put on the air in 1954 by the publishers of the Watertown Daily Times. The station changed its call letters to WWNY-TV in 1965.
This is a partial list of affiliate stations of the DuMont Television Network, which operated in the United States from 1946 to 1956. At its peak in 1954, DuMont was affiliated with around 200 TV stations. [1] In its later years, DuMont was carried mostly on poorly watched UHF channels or had only secondary affiliations on VHF stations.
WXXA-DT began airing on VHF channel 7 on December 20, 2005. A combination of objections from analog co-channels WABC-TV (in New York City) and WWNY-TV (in Watertown), whose signals reach the fringes of the Albany area, was the primary reason for