azumanga said:mleach said:In the DC market there is also Northern Virginia's WNVT/WNVC ( though little PBS is on them )
I don't think they're PBS members anymore -- today they are known as "MHz", an ethnic programming service.
mleach said:If either WNVT or WNVC...really wanted to, could they have went down the commercial route?
e-dawg said:New York City - WNET 13 (Main), WLIW 21 (Secondary), WNJN 52 (Secondary), WNYE 25 (Secondary)
Tim L said:Cleveland WVIZ-25 Akron/Canton/Youngstown WNEO-WEAO 45/49 (45/49 simulcast 100%).
Why were there so many secondary affiliates? I think here in Louisville, WKPC was initially a station for the local school system. Meanwhile, KET (Kentucky Educational Television) set up many transmitters throughout the state (including WKMJ-68 as their Louisville outlet). In the early days many times these stations had the same programming until videotape allowed them to timeshift programs.e-dawg said:Can someone give me a list of seconardy PBS affiliates?
KyDXIn said:I think in our local TV Guide, public television was listed as N.E.T. prior to it being called PBS. This would have been around 1968. Was this a feed of WNET?
Thanks for the info. Wow, I didn't know of the fiery history of NET until I checked out their wikipedia entry.azumanga said:No -- NET was "National Educational Television", an educational / public network which was replaced by PBS in 1970. Prior to 1970, WNET was WNDT, until the owners of NET bough the station around that same time.KyDXIn said:I think in our local TV Guide, public television was listed as N.E.T. prior to it being called PBS. This would have been around 1968. Was this a feed of WNET?